Jul
8
2009

While politicians hammer out the details of healthcare reform legislation and debate some of the more “controversial issues” (which I put in quotes because they shouldn’t be as controversial as they are) surrounding healthcare reform, the administration is busy doing things that everyone should be able to happy about. Of course good news doesn’t draw as many readers as doom and gloom so its easy to miss some of these developments if you’re just clicking through a news website or taking in a bit of CNN, so I’ve highlighted a couple of the recent positive developments after the jump. Continue reading
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1 comment | tags: Congress, Deficit, healthcare, hospitals, Obama, pharmaceutical industry, reform | posted in Politics
May
11
2009

Well with finals over and done with you can expect to get a lot more posts from me in the coming weeks! And we start out today with some very exciting news. President Obama held a press conference today for what he called, “a watershed event in the long and elusive quest for health care reform.” The American Hospital Association, the American Medical Association; PhRMA; AdvaMed; America’s Health Insurance Plans, the SEIU, and the Greater New York Hospital Association and the California Hospital Association announced a new cooperative effort to drastically reduce the rate of growth of healthcare costs beginning immediately. They pledged to cut the rate of growth by 1.5%. This may not seem like a lot but this means a cut from about 7% to 5.5%, bringing us much closer to the annual rate of income growth which tends to hover around 4-5% but which has at times grown to near 6%. And that’s what really matters, that’s really our baseline here. If healthcare costs can be reduced such that their growth is equal to the rate of income growth in the US then the future of healthcare suddenly gets a lot rosier. And this commitment brings us much closer to that goal.
And this is also great news for America’s future financial security. Many people don’t realize the huge impact that rising healthcare costs have on our country’s national budget. The reasons why that is are a subject for another article but even a savings of 1.5% will mean much smaller deficits and less national debt. One Obama aid put it this way: Continue reading
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4 comments | tags: Budget, costs, Deficit, doctors, healthcare, insurance, Politics | posted in Current Events, Health, Politics
Apr
9
2009

Hey look, a timely article for a change! Finally I’m addressing a phenomenon before it happens and not days/weeks after it has passed. Anyway, you may or may not have heard about the “tea-party” anti-tax movement that’s developing around the country. This tea-party movement consists of people gathering in various cities on April 15th holding protests about the “terrible taxes burdening americans”, and what they see as America’s coming descent into socialism. Here’s a quote from one of the two fawning FoxNews articles that were up about it today. From one of the organizers of the tea party protests:
“People are getting killed — they’re getting hammered with taxes and it’s not the way this country is supposed to be run. … We want to fight back,”
Are people really getting hammered with taxes? I don’t challenge their right to gather and protest taxes or whatever they want, but they may want to check a few facts first. And to make it convenient for them, I’ve gathered the pertinent graphs and information after the jump. I should also note before I begin that not all tea-party participants are claiming taxes are too high and that some are doing this for other reasons (to protest the stimulus, just to express their anger that McCain lost etc), I’m not addressing those concerns here. But these tea-parties are being billed as “anti-tax protests” so this is a significant part of what they’re organizing for and this article will address that issue. Anyway, as best as I can deduce, here’s some relevant historical perspective… Continue reading
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14 comments | tags: anti-tax, Deficit, Income Tax, Poor, Protest, Rich, Sales Tax, tax protests, Taxes, Tea Parties, tea party, teabagging | posted in Current Events, Political Principles, Politics
Mar
24
2009
Just a few comments on President Obama’s press conference tonight, it will be quick because I’ve got a lot to study. I’ve got the whole thing posted at the end of this article but I wanted to highlight this clip where he addresses issues surrounding his proposed budget. Its short, and if you’re concerned at all about the 3.6 trillion budget the administration recently proposed its a good one to watch.
I’m probably going to do a larger post about the budget at a later date but I think he does a great job of hitting some of the common concerns head on. One thing he talks about is that, like with the stimulus plan and the bank bailout, we have to remember that it’s not a choice between increasing the deficit and not increasing the deficit! The deficit will increase over the next several years. Its a matter of choosing the path that will increase it the least. And we also have to remember that a slow-growing, or shrinking, economy reduces government inflows and increases our deficit significantly. The idea is to boost spending in ways that will stimulate the economy such that it offsets the costs of that spending.
So I don’t think we can just say, “why don’t we spend less to decrease the deficit?” Cutting valuable spending will likely
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2 comments | tags: 3.6 Trillion, Budget, CBO, Deficit, GDP, March, Obama, Press Conference, Spending, Stimulus, Taxes | posted in Current Events, Politics