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"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up."

Arthur Koestler 

Entries in Economics (326)

Wednesday
Jul272011

Does The President Have A Plan?

 

No, he doesn't. I do not understand why Obama has no published plan, everyone else does. This is excruciating to watch. Sorry to inflict it one you. 

The legend, probably apocryphal, is that Nero played a fiddle while Rome burned. Obama refuses to produce a plan because it is his perception that it benefits him politically. 

We need his proposal now. 

Saturday
Jul232011

My Medical Bill

I just received my medical bill for a procedure that was done one year ago. The delay was an accounting error. But this does give me an opportunity to talk about medical expenses. The bill was for $835. The insurance paid about $375. I paid $85. Where is the rest of the bill, you might ask? Well the $835-$375-$85 leaves $375. This is the amount of a deduction I get because I have insurance. It is called the contracted rate. If I do not have insurance, I pay the full amount of $835.

This highlights a big problem in our medical system. The poor pay more than everyone else—that is, the poor who are working and do not qualify for Medicaid. A bill like this is just not going to be paid by someone without insurance making $17,000 for one night in the hospital!minimum wage. The fact this bill is not paid by this kind of patient is factored into the price, and then everyone pays for it. It is a vicious circle. What would the cost be if insurance, the hospitals, and yes, even us patients, were not gaming the system? No one knows, but my guess is that it would be less than $400-maybe a lot less.

If I could actually pay the discounted amount on all my medical bills it would be cheaper than my insurance bill is every month. Of course I would still need catastrophic insurance-but maybe not. When I had cancer surgery, the bill for my Hospital stay was $17,000. This was for one night. Since I was at a hospital that was in my network, they dropped it to $2000. In the year I was the sickest, my medical bills, if they had been at the free market rate, would have been less than my insurance bill every year. The whole system is corrupt.

So for our very expensive health care, do we receive good value?

Chart from Zero Hedge

There are many reasons for the expense of our system and our relatively low life expectancy—the way things are measured, for example, make things look worse than they are. But the structure of our health system is to blame. No doubt the people in the system are doing the best they can, but the system itself makes progress difficult.Health Care 2015?

In our system the young do not get the care they need, and the old get too much. I am not sure I would go as far as former Colorado Governor Lamb who said the old had a duty to die, but this is a problem that is not being addressed. Sarah Palin was wrong, we do need death panels. If we don't eventually have them, the whole system will collapse like a proverbial house of cards. 

One final note: In any other industry, charging such violently different rates would be illegal—and the people that did it would go to jail.

Friday
Jul222011

The Gang Of Six

I was pleased with the Coburn proposal I mentioned here a few days ago. Alas, Coburn has succumbed to the dark side and rejoined the gang of six, which sounds like a title to a bad Kung Fu movie, and their proposal is absolutely terrible. Rather than spend the time to write it up, I thought I would share a very good critique of the plan. 

Here is a summery of Keith Hennessey's critique of the plan:

1. It provides no discretionary spending totals.

2. It cuts defense spending while hiding the ball on nondefense spending.

3. The promised deficit reduction is both overstated and less than is needed.

4. It is a huge net tax increase.

5. It’s a far worse trade than Bowles-Simpson.

6. It trades a permanent tax increase for only a temporary respite on spending.

7. It’s an unfair deal on CPI.

8. It precludes structural reforms to Medicare and Medicaid.

9. It does almost nothing to slow health spending growth, and even the $115 B of additional health savings are bracketed.

10. It leaves the core trillion dollar ObamaCare health entitlement in place..

11. It makes it harder to do Social Security reform, drops the specific Social Security reforms of Bowles-Simpson and increases Social Security spending.

12. It sets the wrong bar for Social Security reform and tilts reform toward tax increases.

13. It locks in the net tax increase, then hopes to deliver on the stated tax reform policies.

14. It undoes most of the benefits of last December’s tax policy battle.

15. It sets up a tradeoff between marginal income rate cuts and capital tax rates.

16. The rate cuts are over promised because the Gang overestimated the revenue that would be raised from reducing tax expenditures.

17. The plan proposes a deficit trigger mechanism that might include automatic tax increases.

Hennessey is quite detailed and is a good read for those interested in the budget crisis. Click here to read

Wednesday
Jul202011

Artificial Discipline

Thinking about the chart I posted Monday has led me to rethink the current deficit troubles of the government. If a $2 billion cut in next year’s spending is the most Obama will agree to, then maybe we do need the discipline of a government shutdown. This does not need to lead to default as the government can still borrow money as its various bonds mature in order to replace them. It can also prioritize and make interest payments first. If the government defaults, it is because Obama has chosen to default.

We may discover if the Social Security trust fund really exists as a "lock box." There are government bonds in that lock box. They can be sold back to the government to pay the deficit that occurs right now in the tax receipts the government receives in Social Security taxes versus the amount it sends out. This money could be then be re-borrowed to pay the benefits. If Obama does not send out Social Security checks it will be because he chooses not to do so.

The same situation occurs with Medicare. If medical bills are not paid, it means that Obama chooses not to pay them.

The downside is that this will cause dramatic cuts in all other government programs. Or maybe that is the upside. Interest, medical payments, and pensions are about 50% of our spending. If these parts of the budget can not be touched, and since we are running a 40% deficit, that means a cut of 80% everywhere else if the government is forced to balance the budget by being unable to borrow-note that the military is in this category.  Is this the only way to end our wars? I am overwhelmed by the irony of an anti-war candidate becoming a war president. Military salaries can continue to be paid as the troops are brought home. The ending of our wars is enough by itself for me to want a government shutdown, even though it will hurt me financially as it will make selling houses impossible for a while as the government is providing most financing right now.

Finally, I have heard many times from the administration that the government has never defaulted before. While the government does not need to default now, in fact the government has defaulted many times in the past.  Here is a list:

The Continental Currency Default of 1779
The Default on Continental Domestic Loans
The Greenback Default of 1862
The Liberty Bond Default of 1934
The Momentary Default of 1979

The government also defaulted in 1973 when Nixon closed the gold window. The lack of the discipline that the gold standard brings is one reason we are in this mess. This is because under a gold standard if a country overspends gold leaves that country and the money supply drops. This allows industry to be more competitive as prices drop and deflation sets in. This forces austerity. It is a very painful process. 

We are rapidly approaching the point of no return. Michael Barone in his column had this to say:

In the process, the national debt as a percentage of gross domestic product has increased from a manageable 40 percent in 2008 to 62 percent this year and an estimated 72 percent in 2012. And it's headed to the 90 percent level that economists Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart have identified as the danger point, when governments face fiscal collapse.

Eric Anderson at Universe of Lies points out that Barone has underestimated the problem:

Barone is minimizing the problem here, counting only US marketable debt. The bonds issued to government trust funds are just as important, and we can’t ignore unfunded liabilities, either. The unfunded liabilities can be adjusted somewhat by changing the laws governing those entitlements, but the unmarketable Treasury debt is still debt, in precise dollars and cents. 

Current debt is $14.2 Trillion. Estimated 2011 GDP is 15.2 Trillion, so we are already at the 90% critical level.

Barone must read Eric's column as he updated his column and agreed that we were already at the danger level. 

A time will come where the government is unable to "kick the can down the road." Artificial discipline will be forced on the government either by the government reaching the point where it can not sell bonds or by a government shutdown.. A government shutdown is preferable to not being able to sell bonds. I see the tipping point for the government not being able to sell bonds as 3 to 8 years away if current trends continue.

If a government "shutdown" is the only way to introduce fiscal discipline, then bring it on.

Tuesday
Jul192011

The Number No One Will Talk About

 I saw this chart at an NPR blog and thought it worth repeating. 

In the debt-ceiling negotiations, politicians are debating how to reduce the federal deficit by $2 trillion to $4 trillion over the next 10 years.
One number that hasn't been mentioned much: $13 trillion. That's size of the federal deficit over the next 10 years, according to a recent projection from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.
Of course, this is just a projection. And there's always a lot of uncertainty in any economic prediction, particularly one that tries to look a decade into the future.
Still, given that the deficit-reduction plans being hashed out in Washington are supposed to play out over the next decade, $13 trillion seems like a useful bit of context. It suggests the current fight over the deficit is just the beginning.
Yes this is a problem that we have been building up to for at least 40 years. the deficit will get worse and worse as America's baby boomers get older. Since we have a dysfunctional medical system, that is where the focus soon will be. 
Look at the two circles. the problem is huge, but the solutions offered are meager.