Louis R wrote:I've seen him say that as well. In fact, doesn't Terekhov say as much to Van Dort in SOS?
One example of a non-transfer support of the lower-income population that comes up in one of the Pearls is that the cost of prolong therapy is subsidised for all citizens, at least.
There are many items like that, which you can subsidize for the population, which wouldn't necessarily be meaningful or useful to the rich. Free education is probably the best example - today the wealthy send their children to private schools and (depending on the local) forgo the state's payment of the free education, for what they expect to be, a better one. Even if free state run colleges are offered, those well enough off will send their children to better, private colleges in the hopes of giving them a leg up in the world.
I know in some countries with state run health care, the wealthy use private clinics and doctors to avoid the long waits and processing times in the public systems. Some small towns have a free "breakfast with the mayor" once a week, or offer free or cheap concessions at public holiday events. Transportation is always a good example - the poor have to use public transport like buses and subways subsidized by tax dollars, the middle drive themselves, the rich have private limos driven by others. Stadiums and theater have been great ways to mollify the masses for millennia - of course, those who can, purchase better seats - or better venues - than are offered to the masses.
The list of those "little" things is almost endless.