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I feel like this starts with an agreeable premise. Some fraud is egregious, costly, and/or easy to detect. These low-hanging or high-impact cases are most worth pursuing. At some point you reach diminishing returns, where the amount of time / effort / capital you're putting in to eliminating fraud outstrips the losses from the fraud itself. I don't know that I agree with the ethical conclusion that the optimal amount of fraud is therefore non-zero. The leap from "anti-fraud efforts are expensive" to these sentences in the final paragraph was not, in my opinion, convincingly made here: >We should, as a society, accept non-zero amounts of benefits fraud. We should accept non-zero amounts of cheating on taxes. |
I’d much rather see a few people who didn’t need benefits manage to claim them than see people who do need them be left without. The first option costs tax payers a bit more money. The second results in people’s lives being made significantly worse, and in some cases in deaths.