Crown Loyalist wrote:Haven had a problem that was much, much bigger than a simple welfare spending problem. Haven had, in addition to creating massive welfare state, absolutely gutted its education system such that the children of the people who grew up on the Dole would be unable to support themselves unless they received serious adult education.
In other words, they had not only created an incredibly expensive welfare program, they'd also created people who literally did not have the ability to support themselves in a modern Honorverse economy. They lacked the basic technological skills that are taken for granted in both Manticore and the Solarian League. There was no way to get these people off welfare without MORE short-term spending to give them the job skills that would allow them to contribute to the economy and earn a wage... and Haven simply did not have the money for it.
Thus, in order to escape its welfare trap Haven needed to make massive investments in education - investments that it didn't have the money for.
It was the war with Manticore that forced Haven to start educating its population, because the education gap - and the resulting technology gap - was the only reason Manticore was able to hold its own. Under wartime conditions, Haven could cut welfare and invest in education under the guise of wartime necessity. Rob S. Pierre did this brilliantly, actually.
Crown Loyalist pretty much nails it on the head with this post. Haven's problem wasn't welfare; it was dependency on welfare to the exclusion of anything else by the vast majority of the population, with - and this is critical - no way to change that.
The Committee may have bathed Haven in blood in the doing, but they really did do - or at least begin to do - what they set out to accomplish. They revitalised Haven's economy, began educating massively more of the Dolist class than had been done previously, and gave the nation as a whole a standard to rally behind. With all the love and respect in the world to Theisman, Pritchart &co, if it weren't for the reforms Pierre, St-Just, etc. had already instituted, the Grand Alliance wouldn't have been possible. The first thing that needed to happen for Haven to survive was to change the status quo, and the Committee did that - rather brilliantly, albeit far too bloodily for my taste.