I don't know. Do you have data to support that?
No, just that we're a more left-leaning society, so seems reasonable to assume.
Anyway, I'm saying it seems the attitude in the UK is to rely more on the government. Am I wrong? If not, then, as I said, it's a two edged sword.
It wouldn't seem to be a two-edged sword rather than seemingly being irrelevant to the level of savings: in the UK we have more reliance on the government, yet we see higher savings among the less wealthy than in the US where there is less reliance on the government. So either the idea is wrong that higher reliance on government reduces ones tendency to save as much, and actually it
increases the amount (*) - or it's simply irrelevant.
(*) - For example, if someone knows that the government will provide for a basic level, they may save more knowing that it will be for the luxuries (holidays etc). Whereas if someone thinks the government won't provide for the basic, or, say, that a small level of savings will make not the blindest bit of difference to their standard of living, then why save anything at all.
There are many people with poor financial planning skills. Do you disagree with that? There are many people who make enough to save (the majority) and if they don't, it's a personal issue. They either don't save for a rainy day (what's new) or they literally respond that they have no "savings" when it's all put way in investment accounts.
Sure, but now you've moved it to one of financial planning skills, not of government reliance.
I haven't had a "savings" account since I was 6 years old. We know, in the US, that unemployment is low and the economy is "good" so what is the problem?
The problem is that a large number of people can't seem to earn enough to have more than $500 in savings. A larger proportion in the US than in the UK when, as you've argued above, due to reliance on government it should be the other way round.
If the unemployment is low, and the economy is good, then why is it that so many people are unable to save even $500? So what is the problem? There clearly is one. Sure, education. But then if the average IQ is 100, roughly 50% of the population are going to be lower than that. And what does the IQ need to be to be able to save? Or maybe it's the lack of jobs that pay well enough to save, compared to the cost of living?
Is the solution in the UK, for example, that taxes need to be higher so that those without savings can be provided with savings? What exactly is your position on this?
Solution to what? We are certainly not averse to raising taxes for the higher paid while reducing them for the lower paid.
Will there ever be a situation involving a human society where those at the bottom all have plenty of savings for emergencies?
Who can say what the future will bring.
Why do you think things are so expensive? Is it because of the government debasing the currency due to overspending? What would the solution be? If it's because things are so expensive as you seem to suggest, should be lower prices or give people more money?
I would favour cutting their taxes, and increasing the tax burden on the higher earners to compensate. This wouldn't resolve the issue of savings, though. If you even see it as an issue, that such a large proportion of your country, where you argue that there is less reliance on the gov't, have less than $500 in savings.