Tuesday, July 11, 2017

The Republican healthcare plan has a formidable foe: economics - Guardian


The Republican healthcare plan has a formidable foe: economics
Joe McLean
Tuesday 11 July 2017 22.54 AEST
Having sworn for six years to “repeal and replace” Obamacare, Senate Republicans, unable to pass a plan before their summer recess, recently got their first taste of how the homefolks feel about it. While many ducked those messy town-hall meetings, they couldn’t avoid hearing the angry voices during Fourth of July parades, picnics and fireworks.
Why are regular people so angry, even in deep Red States? Because voters instinctively understand the irreconcilable conflict between political rhetoric, conservative dogma and the hard reality of economics.
On one hand, the devotees of Ayn Rand, (Paul Ryan, Rand Paul, etc.) are on the talk shows explaining that laissez faire capitalism and free-market competition are the answers for better care and lower costs – plus tax cuts for the rich of course.
On the other hand, Republican moderates recognize the disastrous impact of kicking tens of millions of Americans off their health insurance and rightly fear voters’ backlash. But both camps have chosen to ignore some pretty basic facts they should have learned in “Economics-101.”
This is not a new problem. We’re in this mess because politicians’ historically “kick the can” down the road. In 1986 President Reagan signed the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, (Emtala) mandating emergency services regardless of the ability to pay. Back then, Republicans and Democrats overwhelming agreed that nobody should be left to die because they couldn’t afford to go to the doctor – but unsurprisingly, no one ever dealt with how to pay for it.
Ever since, there has been a bitter, ongoing political fight about who deserves what care and who pays. Progressives and Democrats think health care should be a basic human right. Republicans, and Atlas Shrugged conservatives say everybody should pay their own way. We all want better care and lower prices. But the Republicans now controlling our entire government can’t craft a workable plan because they ignore at least four immutable economic principles.
First, health care markets don’t obey Adam Smith “invisible hand” of supply and demand. As any economist will tell you, certain sectors of a capitalist economy, such as agriculture and health care, are “price-inelastic.” “Inelasticity” is just a fancy term meaning the demand for a good or service does not go down when the price goes up.
Why is this so? Because everybody wants their sick child to get well, and they expect modern medicine to do whatever it takes and damn the expense. This “price-inelasticity of demand,” is what makes health costs so hard to control
To deal with the effects of price-inelasticity in our everyday lives, we use on health insurance. Insurance works because not everybody gets sick at the same time. So if everyone buys insurance policies, the risk and the costs are spread out over time, and the price is affordable for everybody.
Here’s where Republicans ignore the concept of “homo economicus” or “economic man.” By definition, homo economicus makes consistently rational and self-interested decisions. Millions of working families choose to pay for food, shelter, clothing, school and transportation before they pay for health insurance. They reason that the risk is worth the savings. For many young and healthy folks this makes good economic sense.
Behavioral economists call this the “free-rider” phenomenon, and it’s the third economic principal conservatives tend to misinterpret. But when free-riders inevitably get sick or old, the law (and simple decency) demand we take care of them. So who gets stuck with their bills? You do. When hospitals and doctors can’t collect from the free-riders, they pass those costs along to the rest of us, and our insurance premiums go up.
Conservatives say it’s wrong to force people to pay for something they don’t want, and that’s a compelling argument. But the flip-side of that coin is, “Why should I have to pay for the free-riders? I’m homo economicus too!”
Finally, health care isn’t even a true free market. On the supply side there are huge barriers to entry - exhaustive educational requirements and strict state and federal exams and license regulations – as there should be.
Who wants an ignorant, negligent doctor? On the demand side, most consumers don’t have the medical knowledge or judgment to make the kind of “free and informed” decisions required in a truly free market. Besides, when you get sick, you don’t really have a choice. Going to the hospital is not like deciding to buy a new smart phone is it?
Obamacare was designed to deal with all of these economic realities. The law addresses price-inelasticity by paying doctors for making you feel better, not just for doing a lot of stuff. That’s called “outcome-based pricing.”
Obamacare covers annual physicals and preventive care, so the need for exorbitantly expensive emergency room visits is dramatically reduced. The law requires that doctors and hospitals publish outcome statistics so consumers have quality-of-care information for comparison shopping.
Taking a carrot-and-stick approach to homo economicus, the law gives subsidies to working families who can’t afford expensive individual premiums, and levies penalties on free-riders.
All these are pretty solid, conservative, market-based, Republican ideas. In fact, the plan which became Obamacare was conceived by economists at the conservative Heritage Foundation. It was a free-market response to the Democrats’ proposals for universal single-payer, or “Medicare for All.”
Obama may have co-opted the plan, but it’s chock full of traditional conservative dogma. The only reason I can think of that Republicans didn’t embrace their own plan was because Obama proposed it.
But now, having campaigned for six years on “repeal and replace,” Republicans find themselves hoist by their own petard. To disguise their lack of a workable plan, they willfully ignore the laws of economics and pontificate on the virtues of free market capitalism as the cure for all ills.
Paeans to American capitalism might sound great in political speeches, but 20 million-plus people will lose their health insurance in order to give 1% another big tax cut. Real people will die. Homo economicus understands this all too well - and that’s why Republican lawmakers will continue getting an earful from the folks back home, including Republican base voters.
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Donald Trump Jr was told that material on Hillary Clinton offered by a Russian lawyer was part of a Russian government effort to help his father's election - BBC NEWS

Donald Trump Jr was told that material on Hillary Clinton offered by a Russian lawyer was part of a Russian government effort to help his father's election campaign, the New York Times has said.
Publicist Rob Goldstone, who arranged the June 2016 meeting with the lawyer, stated this in an email, it reported.
Mr Trump Jr has defended attending the meeting, saying the promised damaging information did not materialise.
US officials are investigating alleged Russian meddling in the US election.
What is in the latest New York Times article?
The paper reports that three people with knowledge of the Goldstone email said it indicated the Russian government was the source of the potentially damaging information on Mrs Clinton.
But the paper says there was no mention in the email of any wider effort by the Russian government to interfere in the election, nor was there any indication of a link to the hacking attack on the Democratic Party that was first reported a week after the meeting.
Mr Goldstone has previously denied any knowledge of involvement by the Russian government.
Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told MSNBC that the New York Times report was "a very serious development".
"It all warrants thorough investigation. Everyone who was in that meeting ought to come before our committee."
Mr Trump Jr's statement on the matter on Sunday did not indicate he had been told of any Russian government involvement.
Lawyer Alan Futerfas, hired by Mr Trump Jr to represent him in the Russia-related investigations, described reports of the meeting as "much ado about nothing" and said his client had done nothing wrong.
The president's son said he was "happy to work with the committee to pass on what I know".
When was the meeting and how did it come to light?
It took place on 9 June 2016 at New York's Trump Tower, just two weeks after Donald Trump secured the Republican nomination.
It is thought to be the first confirmed private meeting between a Russian national and members of President Trump's inner circle.
Jared KushnerImage copyrightREUTERS
Image caption
The president's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, was also at the meeting
The president's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and then-campaign head, Paul J Manafort, also attended.
After the New York Times first reported the meeting on Saturday, Mr Trump Jr released a statement which confirmed that it had taken place but did not mention whether it was related to the presidential campaign.
Who's who in the Trump clan
Jared Kushner's dizzying array of portfolios
Russia: The cloud over the White House
However, another Times report, on Sunday, said Mr Trump Jr had agreed to the meeting after being offered information that would prove detrimental to Mrs Clinton.
In his statement on Sunday, Mr Trump Jr said he had been asked to meet "an individual who I was told might have information helpful to the campaign".
What was discussed at the meeting?
Mr Trump Jr's statement continues: "The woman stated that she had information that individuals connected to Russia were funding the Democratic National Committee and supporting Mrs Clinton.
Donald Trump, Jr places a hand on the shoulder of his father, Donald Trump, during a rally on the final night of the 2016 US presidential electionImage copyrightAFP/GETTY IMAGES
Image caption
Mr Trump Jr has denied issuing conflicting statements on the matter
"Her statements were vague, ambiguous and made no sense. No details or supporting information was provided or even offered. It quickly became clear that she had no meaningful information."
Is this a smoking gun, and other Trump Jr questions
WATCH: Did Russian meddle? No-one knows, says Trump
Mr Trump Jr said the lawyer then changed subject to the Magnitsky Act and "it became clear to me that this was the true agenda all along".
Adopted by Congress in 2012, the Magnitsky Act allows the US to withhold visas and freeze financial assets of Russian officials thought to have been involved in human rights violations.
Ms Veselnitskaya is married to a Moscow government official and her clients include companies and individuals said to be close to the Kremlin. She has been at the forefront of a campaign - backed by the Russian state - to overturn the act.
But she has denied ever working for the Kremlin and on Saturday said that "nothing at all was discussed about the presidential campaign" at the meeting.
Trump-Russia scandal: How did we get here?
In an interview on Monday, Mr Goldstone backed Mr Trump Jr's version of the meeting, saying Ms Veselnitskaya offered "just a vague, generic statement about the campaign's funding" which was "the most inane nonsense I've ever heard".
On Monday, Mr Trump Jr tweeted sarcastically: "Obviously I'm the first person on a campaign to ever take a meeting to hear info about an opponent..." He also denied issuing conflicting statements.
And he linked to a piece in the New York Post headlined "The Times 'exposé' on Donald Trump Jr is a big yawn".
A spokesman for President Trump's legal team said the president was "not aware of and did not attend" the meeting.
Analysis: A grim situation for Trump Jr
Anthony Zurcher, BBC North America reporter
Whether by plan or happenstance, Donald Trump Jr is stumbling into an increasingly dire situation.
The pattern has been set. The New York Times runs a story, Trump Jr issues his response, then the noose tightens.
First he said the meeting with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya was about adoption issues. Then the Times reports that Trump Jr thought he would learn damaging information about Hillary Clinton.
The presidential son says he was conducting routine opposition research. Then the Times reports that he was told it was the Russian government itself that was coming to his father's aid.
In a traditional campaign, a foreign government's attempt to offer incriminating information about an opponent - or even the hint of such an overture - would set off all kinds of alarms. The FBI would have been notified. Senior staff would have insulated themselves from incrimination.
The Trump team was not a conventional campaign. And time and time again, it made novice mistakes or, more ominously, took unprecedented risks.
Its candidate prevailed, but it has led to countless political headaches. Now it appears the president's own family, and his presidency itself, could be in peril. They have only themselves to blame.