It's not so much incentives as support - if you do have six children, it's going to be hard for you to provide for them, and they're the ones who will suffer for it if you can't.
It shouldn't be conditional on you 'not breeding excessively' or spending prudently .
i agree with everything you said except the spending prudently part. I think don't think the state should be required to step in if you don't spend prudently. Now if you spend cheaply as possible just to live with the bare minimum, then that is where the state holds a responsibility to step in.
Making it profitable to breed excessively will encourage it to happen.
Don't make it profitable to breed excessively then. Which it is in the UK at least.
A good line of thinking, but I can't help but feel that the very concept of community is meaningless in a society numbering in the tens of millions. There's little reason or ability to empathize with strangers you know nothing about and whom you'll never meet or get to know, so it's easy to feel no connection or willingness to help them.I don't like that line of reasoning; it's basically coming from the perspective that social security is something that 'we' the taxpayers pay to 'them' the receivers of it as a matter of charity, and we get to use it as a carrot to make 'them' act in accordance with 'our' morals. Firstly, it shouldn't be like that at all; it's more of a collective insurance plan or a union membership that we pay into when we can so that we can have it when we hit hard times - the people paying taxes today may well be drawing benefits tomorrow, or indeed doing both at the same time. Most of us pay more than we'll ever get back to the NHS because a few of us will end up with some horrible and horribly expensive disease and need to count on the rest of us to hold them up. Secondly, and more to the point, I don't think it should be seen as charity or something given out of good grace - we are a community, and if you live among us you should be entitled to a basic standard of living and comfort just as a right. It shouldn't be conditional on you 'not breeding excessively' or spending prudently - since the state is able to avoid doing so, if it leaves anyone without enough money to live decently on then it's failing in its duty.
It's not profitable to have children; the point of child benefits is that they cover the cost of having children. If they paid more than that cost, then it would certainly create a perverse incentive, but if anything the reverse is true, and having a child is still a major financial cost. You hear a lot of people say 'let's wait until we have a stable home and income before having children', never 'let's have children to give us a stable home and income.'
Well, I politely disagree. I don't think child benefit covers the bare minimum cost of feeding/clothing/providing for the child, it also gives some excess over this. Which is reasonable of course, but if the excess is significant, and if it stacks up with each child, it can incentivise more breeding. And of course it doesn't actually have to be very much to be "significant" if you're talking about the sort of families/couples/people who would be pretty much on the breadline and struggling to start with. Plus it opens up extra doors and safeguards when it comes to social housing options as well. Again, I know there are families like this because I am again related to some, and have friends who belong to them. And yes you do hear people saying 'let's have children to give us a stable home and income', just perhaps not all that brazenly openly in case the DSS are listening (although you'll see a few more brazen examples on Jeremy Kyle).
I'm not scaremongering or saying this is a rampant problem mind you, but it is something that's real. It's also wandering a fair distance off topic as well so I apologise.
It's not so much incentives as support - if you do have six children, it's going to be hard for you to provide for them, and they're the ones who will suffer for it if you can't.
[£20 a week for the first and £14 for any more. There's no way that covers food, school costs, bills, clothes, occasional childcare... it helps, but you definitely won't make money out of having children.
EDIT: That's under $800 a year if my maths is right (assuming $1 is about £1.50).