A city’s infant mortality rate indicates the general health of a population, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That is especially the case in Philadelphia, which has the highest infant mortality and poverty rates among the nation’s 10 most populous cities. In their f...
250 x 22 months (gestation + 1 year) x 1000 = $5,500,000/yr... plus whatever overhead/administration costs are needed for that. where are they going to get the extra money? a $3.5 mllion grant is mentioned - do they expect the public to cough up $2+ million? just for a trial program?
a 2021 study indicates that approximately 22,000 women give birth each year in Philadelphia - assuming that the program expands to include the percentage described as "non-hispanic black" (presumably, the metric valued by the article referenced in the post, though it's just "black" and "white" in the bar graphs) - 43% (9460 births), that'd be $212,080,000 per fiscal year - probably more since it's a 22 month program.
Sure. Tax the rich, tax the corporations, revoke all religious exemptions and let the IRS enforce it (so no more fancy bookkeeping and hidden offshore accounts).
Heck just the amount of tax money we know the US billionaires are currently failing to pay (~$160,000,000,000 / year)[1,2] would cover more than 754 Philadelphias using your math, to say nothing of what a fairer tax rate could do.
Idk why Americans are always pretending to be poor, it's the will that's lacking, not the funds.
Fascinating how you have the ability to apply logic to the maths in question but not to what has caused the empty coffers.
Can humanity afford to prosper if it lets go of the overly greedy? Absolutely, mate. We have a wonderful, rich world and the ingenuity to use the resources wisely. What we lack is good governance.
Then you have to question what is the lost productivity from all the sick kids who didn’t die, when they become adults. What about the loss of product of their parents now for sick or death.
Then you have to consider the health costs associated. It’s not as black and white as you think. Sure, it’s expensive, but lots of worthwhile things are.
How much could we cut spending on the arts, defence, politicians, other government programs for the needy to compensate?