Language tax

Under voice control is defined as a compensation, the country or language communities pay for it, that they benefit from learning their language in other countries and at the same time save on translation costs and language lessons for their own citizens.

Such compensation does not exist; however, since the economic benefits from sharing, especially the English language are growing enormously, such payments are sometimes suggested. Among the protagonists of such a system include the scientific side of the Belgian Philippe Van Parijs and the Swiss François Grin. Grin has claimed that the United Kingdom saved by the primacy of its language per year, about 6 billion euros of teaching costs, with France serves as an analogue country.

Van Parijs refers to Jonathan Pool, who wrote in 1991 about the subject, but rejects its proposal, only to spread the cost of language teaching according to the number decreases. Rather, the entire load must be evenly distributed through compensation.

Occasionally, the concept of voice control is also used in the reverse sense for the existing economic advantage that the proposed payments are intended to compensate. In this sense, therefore, pay the linguistically disadvantaged countries in the form of costs for language teaching.

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