Saturday, December 28, 2013

HEALTHCARE IS A PERSONAL THING

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 12.28.13

Healthcare is a personal thing.  It is primarily an individual’s responsibility to determine how it should be paid for.  In addition, it is appropriate for society and government to render assistance if it so chooses.

What it is not is an employer’s responsibility, although employer’s may choose to provide assistance if they wish.

Healthcare is not only about insurance. Insurance is a tool that people, society and governments may choose to use to help manage the cost of healthcare.  Until now this tool has worked reasonably well in that individuals and businesses could purchase as much or as little of it that they wished.  Insurance companies are in the business of providing indemnification based on risks. Purchasers tell the insurers what they what and they are given a price for that product which is based on the insurer’s assessment of the risk involved.  The government has no business setting down minimum (“mandated”) coverage requirements.  The market will take care of that quite well. In addition, the government’s involvement upsets the business model of insurer’s such that they became pawns of the government because they cannot price their products based on their assessment of risk.

Given my beliefs about healthcare, it is totally inappropriate for the government to require (“mandate”) any person or any company to purchase an insurance policy relating to healthcare.  If the government or society as a whole thinks someone should have an insurance policy they should provide it and not put it on the backs of employers. Moreover, the mandate only applies to certain employer's, those with 50 or more employees, which leave out millions of employees.  They are essentially own their own.

On top of everything else they have put the IRS in charge of enforcing the law.  That will insure that only law abiding taxpayers will be subject to enforcement.  Those who do not file will be out of the reach on the IRS and will, therefore, not be subject to the law.  

Until now there has never been a government requirement for an employer to provide an insurance policy for healthcare just as there is no legal requirement to provide employees with vacation days, sick days or paid holidays.  The market determines what benefits an employer provides and it is pretty efficient in doing so.  Before you know it the government will be mandating other benefits that have never before been their concern.

No one seems to like insurance companies and they think that premiums are too high.  With respect to health insurance, high premiums result because purchasers are not allowed to buy policies across State lines, frivolous malpractice lawsuits and the multitude of duplicate tests that physician’s order just to cover their behinds.  And that is not to mention the fraud and rampant manipulation (gaming) of the system that health care providers engage in.

In addition, if individuals had to pay for their healthcare services and file a claim with their insurance company in order to be reimbursed prices would go down. This is simply because the insured would know the cost of the service and would balk if the price seemed out of line. So why not increase the pay of every employee and let them purchase the insurance that suits their need in an open (50 state) market. The way it is now the insureds do not know (or care) what the cost of a service is because the health care provider bills the insurance company directly. So there is no oversight by the insured and the provider's tend to over bill. In order to prove my point, the next time you visit your doctor ask what the price will be using your insurance then ask for a cash price-the latter will be lower every time illustrating that the provider is going to over bill the insurance company.

If we could address the above issues the cost for health insurance would go down and be more reasonable.  You see, we purchase life insurance, auto insurance and home owner’s insurance on a national basis (across State lines) and we do not see continuing year after year double digit increases in their cost.

Obamacare has approached the issue of reducing the cost of healthcare (and at the same time providing coverage for everyone) in an entirely inappropriate manner.  It does not address the costs that provider’s incur in providing services (including malpractice insurance required to protect against lawsuits) competition across State lines, fraud or the fact that the providers bill the insurance companies rather than their patients.

Further, the people and businesses in America are independent minded and they do not like mandates from the Federal government.  The policy will not succeed in it current form because the people will not be mandated to do what is necessary for it to be successful.



FEDERAL DEBT

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 12.24.13

See this new exhibit showing the federal debt.  Link here  Note specifically the unfunded liabilities.  This represents the dollar amount of promises made to people for payments to be made it the future. As a result of accounting gimmicks, unfunded liabilities are not included in the first number ‘United States National Debt” (which has increased by $4.939 trillion since Obama took office) but it is real and someone is going to have to pay for it-your children or grand children or theirs-otherwise the County will go bankrupt. 

Well, the fact is, under normal accounting procedures (those used by companies in the private sector) the Country is insolvent (bankrupt).


Source: http://www.commonsenceconservative.net

AMERICA'S MINIMUM WAGE DEBATE

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 12.28.13

I do not object to increasing the minimum wage but I think is best handled at the State and local level.  The Feds should butt out. California in not like New York or Texas so how can FedGov set a wage that is fair all across the 50 States? They can not. Let the States do as they so choose and get FedGov out of the picture. In addition, there is some evidence that suggests raising the minimum wage actually eliminates jobs. I mean is there no job in America that is worth less than $10.10 per hour. If there is, some jobs will be eliminated if the minimum wage is increased to that level.

What about young people looking for summer jobs? What about the entry level jobs that allow people get work while they progress to higher paying positions?  After all, the minimum wage was not supposed to be a pay rate for an entire career.  It seems that the proponents are looking at it as if it was a minimum rate for a career, in which case, maybe there should two rates, one for young people/entry level and another for a job held for a couple of years.

I have a very simple theory- if a product or service cannot be made/rendered profitably given the prevailing wages (minimum wage, union wage or economic value) then that product or service simply will not be made/rendered in this country.  It will be outsourced or simply not be made/rendered at all.

It is as simple as that. 

I would be happier if people would take responsibility and acquire a skill or education so that they can command $50 per hour or more.  It is a personal responsibility/decision and we ought to be teaching this concept to our children. 

I believe that anyone in this country who desires to attain such a skill or education can do so and that there are plenty of government programs that will render aid to that individual.  I know it is harder for us older folks but our children and future generations must be taught that it is their responsibility and that the rest of us are not going to subsidize their poor decisions.  And that their poor decisions, i.e., not graduating from high school and acquiring a skill or higher education will result in long hours and low pay.

We live in a high tech global world.  It is not the same as it was for many of us when we were young or for our parents.  We do not have the same type of jobs that existed many years ago. Young people are going to have to get educated in order to have a job in the U.S. (one of the few exceptions is WalMart which is the largest employer in the country). See where the jobs are coming from?

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

OBAMACARE II

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 12.24.13

Obamacare specifically states that any health insurance policy issued (effective) after December 31, 2013 must contain all of the mandated essential benefits (see list below) required by Obamacare.  The one exception is the so called “grandfathered plans.”  These are plans issued prior to March 24, 2010, which have not changed since issuance, with minor exceptions.

Since health insurance policies routinely change provisions, some times annually, in order to manage costs, e.g., changing deductibles, out of pocket costs and prescription coverage, among other things, very few, if any, policies will be grandfathered.

Take my situation as an example, I have a small group plan and it renews April 1, each year.  So, my plan was in effect on March 23, 2010 and was subject to being grandfathered.  My plan renewed on April 1, 2010, April 1, 2011, April 1, 2012 and April 1, 2013 so there have been four opportunities for the plan to be changed (in the slightest) and bust out of the grandfather provisions.

I received a letter from our provider dated November 12, 2013, saying that our plan was a non-grandfathered plan and would no longer be available. It further stated that we would be offered a new plan that contained all of the provisions of Obamacare. No quotation was provided but I expect it any day.

So, somewhere along the line our plan was changed on one or more of the renewal dates by us or the insurance company so that our plan was considered a non-grandfathered plan.  You can see that given the many opportunities to bust the grandfather provisions during the last four years during which time we were not aware that the regulations that came out severely restricted the changes that could be made to a plan.

This fact has become abundantly clear to the individual and small business markets already.  The large group market received an unconstitutional waver/delay by President Obama.  Those plans will not feel the effect of Obamacare until 2015 which is conveniently AFTER the next major election cycle in November 2014.  But, believe me, they will be adversely affected just as my group plan was.

You see that almost everybody (150,000,000 people or more) who currently have health insurance will be affected by Obamacare when it is fully implemented.  It would have been so much more cost effective and less disruptive to the public if we had just said that the 30,000,000 or so uninsured would be provided free or low cost insurance by the Feds leaving the vast majority of folks alone.

But no, leave it the Feds to screw things up.  So far about 6 million people have lost the coverage they once had (including my group) while about 1.2 million people have signed up for Obamacare.  Of the 1.2 million approximately 960,000 have opted for the Medicare route.  You see, the requirements to qualify for Medicare were loosened by Obamacare so that many more people qualify for free coverage (more welfare).  Of the other 240,000, the majority qualify for "subsidies" which are a reduction of income taxes or an increase in refunds--more welfare.  If you pay income taxes you are paying for the insurance for these people.

In essence, what we will end up with is another massive entitlement program intertwined with a massive bureaucratic government controlled program that affects 1/6 of the economy and hundreds of millions of people when it could have been limited to only the uninsured.

The essential health benefits include at least the following items and services as well as unlimited dollar amount of life time coverage and coverage of preexisting conditions:
·             Ambulatory patient services (outpatient care you get without being admitted to a hospital)
·             Emergency services
·             Hospitalization (such as surgery)
·             Maternity and newborn care (care before and after your baby is born)
·             Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment (this includes counseling and psychotherapy)
·             Prescription drugs
·             Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices (services and devices to help people with injuries, disabilities, or chronic conditions gain or recover mental and physical skills)
·             Laboratory services
·             Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management
·             Pediatric services

You will pay for these essential benefits no matter you age or gender. In, other words, whether you need them or not.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Book review of "Why John Roberts Was Wrong About Healthcare..."

Book Review by Rick Adamson
© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 11.18.13

Why John Roberts Was Wrong About Healthcare: A conservative critique of the Supreme Court’s Obamacare Ruling by Senator Mike Lee, 2013

Senator Lee is from the State of Utah.  He is a lawyer and a Constitutional scholar.

The Supreme Court rendered its ruling on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA), known to many as Obamacare on Thursday, June 28, 2012.  When I heard the news I was very disappointed because I thought the Court would find the law to be unconstitutional.  As I heard more about it I was happy that the Court found that under the Commerce Clause ACA would be unconstitutional thus limiting the Federal Government’s ability to regulate certain activity.  In this case, inactivity, the government cannot regulate inactivity (failure to purchase health insurance) by the authority of the commerce clause.  However, the Court found it to be constitutional under other provisions of the Constitution.  I was somewhat dumbfounded.

Then I stumbled across this book of less than 100 pages that explained very concisely what the Court did.  I was astonished.

Senator Lee explains in his introduction to the book  “During Chief Justice Roberts’s first seven terms on the Supreme Court of the United States, he distinguished himself as a fair-minded jurist and a true constitutional scholar— a man seemingly committed to the rule of law and to core constitutional principles. That hard-earned distinction was turned on its head when, on June 28, 2012, the Chief Justice— writing for a five-to-four majority in National Federation of Independent Businesses v. Sebelius, 567 U.S. __ , 132 S. Ct. 2566 (2012) (“ NFIB”)— essentially rewrote key provisions of the Affordable Care Act in order to uphold the law against a constitutional challenge.”

1.  Senator Lee explains that the Court unanimously concluded (to the surprise of almost no one) that those who fail to comply with the ACA’s individual mandate (the fine people have to pay if they do not purchase health insurance) will face a penalty, and not a tax, such that a challenge to the mandate is not barred by the Anti-Injunction Act. This simply means that the Court cannot rule on a tax that is not in effect.  If the mandate (effective in 2014) was a tax, the Court would have had no authority to rule on it until 2014 when it would become effective.  So, the Court chose to view the mandate as a penalty which was not subject to the Anti-Injunction Act.

2.  Then Senator Lee then explains that the Court noted in enacting the ACA, Congress relied on the Constitution’s Commerce Clause as the source of its authority to require individuals to purchase health insurance and penalize those who fail to comply. The Court concluded that Congress has no authority to impose such a mandate under the Commerce Clause because the Commerce Clause does not authorize the regulation of inactivity, in this case, the failure to commit the act of purchasing health insurance.

A separate majority, nonetheless, sustained the ACA’s individual mandate as a valid exercise of Congress’s authority to impose taxes.  This majority then concluded that because Congress could have enforced the mandate by means of a tax, the Court would treat the penalty attached to the mandate as if it were a tax.

3.  Senator Lee goes on to explain that in a third issue considered by the Court, ACA’s Medicaid-expansion provisions, they concluded that the ACA’s Medicaid-expansion provisions, as written, would unconstitutionally coerce the states into expanding their Medicaid programs and was therefore unconstitutional.

However, rather than invalidating the Medicaid-expansion provisions as one would expect in light of the Court’s coercion ruling, the majority effectively rewrote them by categorically ordering the government not to exercise its right to “withdraw [from states] existing Medicaid funds for failure” to expand their Medicaid programs.

Senator Lee concludes that the Court basically rewrote (completely circumventing the legislative process) the law as follows:

In the first instance, they concluded that the mandate was a penalty and not a tax thereby giving them the authority to hear the case, in the second instance concluding the mandate was a tax and, therefore, constitutional pursuant to the power to tax and lastly concluding that the Medicaid-expansion provisions were unconstitutional but were to be ignored and not enforced by the Government.

The law stands as written (has not been changed) leaving within it numerous references to taxes and penalties as they were intended by Congress.  The mandate provisions do not contain references to taxes but rather to penalties as intended by Congress.  In areas meant to be taxed, such as the tax on medical devices and the so called “Cadillac plans” the law speaks of taxes.  Further, ACA still contains the unconstitutional Medicaid-expansion provisions which the Court instructed the Government not to enforce.

Senator Lee  states “By arrogating to itself the power to legislate— fundamentally altering a law passed by Congress, and in effect passing a new law— the Court overlooked the distinct and narrow role of the judiciary.”

So we have a law, which, because the Court altered it, is a law that was not passed by Congress.

Robert flip flopped from one side to the other on each of the above issues before finally siding with the liberals.  What motivated the switch? Most theories seem to focus (in one way or another) on the possibility that Roberts was motivated by a desire to protect the Supreme Court’s credibility as an institution. According to this theory, the Chief Justice might have been influenced by public statements. Or maybe to save not only the credibility of the Court, but also his own good name.

By his ruling, Roberts added hundreds of billions of dollars to the federal deficit, by way of his Medicaid ruling, forever tarnishing his legacy as a Justice.

This is a very informative book that I highly recommend.  You can get the digital version at Amazon for under $4.00.

Other reviews can be seen at:





Friday, October 18, 2013

Welfare II

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 10.14.13
  
Fox News commentator former Governor Mike Huckabee recently explained how the Obama welfare state works to undermine America's culture of self-reliance. According to Huckabee, the Senate Budget Committee reported that in fiscal year 2011, between food stamps, housing support, child care, Medicaid and other benefits, the average U.S. household below the poverty line received $168 a day in government support.

What's the problem with that much support?

According to Huckabee, the median household income in America is just over $50,000, which averages out to $137.13 a day.

To put it another way, being on welfare now pays the equivalent of $30 an hour for a 40-hour week, while the average job pays $25 an hour. And the person who works also has to pay taxes, which drops his pay to $21 an hour.

It's no wonder that welfare is now the biggest part of the budget, more than Social Security or defense. And, as Huckabee so sagely observed, why would anyone want to get off welfare when working pays $9 an hour less?

This is what happens when you start “helping” people.  It soon gets to where the “helping” is being used to buy votes and the number of people needing “help” increases to the point no one wants to work.  AND THAT my friends is the end of our country.  Only a fool or a Democrat can’t see that.


The federal government has “77 different means-tested social welfare programs.

To read a related article from the Washington Post, click here.

Obviously we need a safety net that helps people when they are down.  But those programs should not go own forever.  There should be work rules attached and retraining programs available.  No more of this multigenerational welfare or paying mothers to have more babies that they take care of.  And recipients should never never receive benefits that exceed the average pay for a working American.

Our entitlement programs are on track to consume 80+ percent of the entire budget by 2020, so we must get serious about reforming our systems by eliminating fraud, duplication and failing programs.  We should realize that the current systems have failed us (they have not reduced the poor population nor have they eliminated the ghettos in our major cities – despite spending approximately $14 trillion on welfare since the Great Society came into existence). Poverty today is about where it was in the 1960’s when many of the current programs were put in place. We need to try a new approach like developing programs that do not breakup families or encourage lifelong dependence.  

Too many of our citizens make bad decisions about their skills and/or education and have the expectation that the Government will take care of them.  Our politicians talk about the importance of education all of the time.  It is important but it is not something that can be fixed by throwing more and more money at it, especially from Washington.  If a person does not want an education (here I am thinking of the almost 30 percent high school drop out rate) we can not force it on them.  We hear a lot of talk lately about teachers, good teachers.  I think they are getting a bad wrap because if their students do not want to learn they will not.  What about the family’s responsibility?  

It is a cultural problem!        

We have to teach our folks that it is their personal responsibility to acquire a skill or an education so that the can take care of themselves and their children.  If they make bad decisions about acquiring a skill and/or education then there will be consequences and the rest of us are not obligated to take care of them. The consequences are long hours and low pay, it is each individual’s decision.  

Here is a video by John Stossel concerning welfare. Click here

Due to the rapid change in technology Fox news just reported that 47 percent of current jobs may be replaced by automation within 20 years. Now if that is true what do you suppose all of those people will be doing?  The will have to be retrained for the higher paying jobs like operating all of those robots. Or, they will be unemployed, maybe forever.

One might wonder what kind of jobs will be available in 20 years.  Well, I would guess:

The professions
Construction
Hospitality
Sophisticated design jobs (Apple)
Sophisticated manufacturing
Handy man including yard work
Government
Retail
And others

What ever is left, our folks must be trained in one of those areas or they will not have a job.  It is the individual’s responsibility to acquire the skills he or she needs to get the job they want.  The consequences of not doing so will be long hours and low pay.

It is truly a shame that we have to recruit highly qualified immigrants to fill many of our high skill jobs while so many of our citizens sit back and collect welfare.

We have a cultural problem!





Tuesday, October 8, 2013

OBAMACARE

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 9.26.13 
(see 11.3.13 update at the end)


Several fallacies with the law:

Failure to address the costs of practicing medicine in an effort to reduce costs

I think the whole approach was wrong.  If the idea was to reduce the cost of healthcare, as well as provide more people with insurance, it would seem logical that we study and determine the costs involved in providing health care services.  Then work on methods to reduce those costs. But, no, Congress simply relied on “capitation” or reducing the amount that healthcare providers receive for services.

One big cost healthcare provider’s face is insurance.  The cost of insurance is driven by the threat of malpractice lawsuits.  Tort reform should have been addressed and limits should have been placed on the amount that could be recovered from such a lawsuit. In Texas there is a limit of $250,000.00.

In addition, the threat of lawsuits result in untold additional (cover my ass) tests and prescriptions which could be eliminated by such a limitation on lawsuits.

See this Wall Street Journal article Searching for the True Cost of Health Care.

The notion that 30-40 million people have no access to health care and that preexisting conditions and the like were not covered

People in Texas who have no insurance have access to County hospitals and emergency rooms. The cost of this care is paid for by the property taxes of property owners in the County. This benefit resembles that of many Countries who have socialized medicine.  So “insurance” is not always the answer.

In addition, there are many free or low cost clinics in most neighborhoods.

Therefore, no one in Texas is denied healthcare.  Some just do not have insurance.

I wonder if, when the Obama Care becomes effective and all of the uninsured get insurance, our property taxes will be reduced accordingly?  I submit they will not.

The notion that “insurance” is the answer and imposing minimum acceptable policy types on insurers

The requirement that insurers offer only minimum acceptable policy types will fundamentally change the business model of health insurers.  All of the mandated coverage requirements have been available for many years.  The insurance companies simply priced the policies based on the risk associated with each benefit provided for in each policy.  Just like automobile insurance (all insurance for that matter) higher risk policy holders have to pay more (e.g., 18 year old males pay more for automobile insurance than 40 year old males) because they use the policy benefits more. Similarly, females are charged more for health insurance than males. Why? Because they use the policy benefits more.  Pricing was based on risk!  That business model has been abandoned under The Affordable Care Act (the Act).

Under the Act enrolled individuals will pay the same based on age (rates will be higher for older people) for a few standardized policies.  This, therefore, raises the cost of low risk participants and lowers the cost for high risk participants.   This is just another example of redistribution of wealth and craters the insurance business model for health insurance providers. So much for competition and the free market system!

This is not to imply the insurance companies will be hurt financially because they will not.  They will figure out how to make money especially since they will have many more customers as a result of the Act’s mandate that everyone purchase a policy (e.g., millions of young people who currently choose not to purchase health insurance will be forced to buy a policy). These new policies will be highly profitable because they are of low risk (minimum use of benefits).  Some of these profits can be used to offset the high risk policy costs. 

Under the old business model, if a preexisting condition caused a person’s policy to be too costly or if the insurer simply decided it could not provide coverage, the State (at least in Texas) provided an insurance pool from which coverage could be obtained.

Therefore, no one in Texas is denied healthcare.  Some just do not have insurance.

Placing the burden of providing health insurance on employers

Prior to WWII few employers provided health insurance for their employees.  As a result of a shortage of workers some employers began providing insurance as a benefit to entice workers to come to work for them.  Over the years it has became the norm for employer to provide health insurance for their employees.

Until now, there was never a law requiring health insurance be provided just as there is no law requiring vacation days, holidays, or, for that matter, that any employer hire anyone.

There are laws requiring minimum wages, non- discrimination, a safe work environment, among others.

The effect of laws imposed on employers is very simple. Let’s take the minimum wage as an example. If a product or service cannot be produced profitably by workers earning the minimum wage that product or service simply will not be produced in this Country.  The job goes overseas or ceased to exist altogether.  The same holds true in places where unions require a certain wage.  If the product or service cannot be produced profitably by workers earning the union wage that product or service simply will not be produced in this Country.

This holds true in the private enterprise system but NOT in the public system.  Public unions can demand wages and benefits that are approved by politicians (without any profit motive) who soon leave office leaving the public to try to deal with their mistakes.  These mistakes have resulted in insolvency and even bankruptcy for many municipalities and States.

For this reason, public unions should be illegal, but that’s another story.

The bottom line is, if the Act results in a product or service not being produced profitably by workers earning their wages, plus the cost of the Act, that product or service simply will not be produced in this Country.

The Act requires that large employers provide health insurance with certain minimum provisions to their employees. The increased cost to the employer results if the employer had previously provided no insurance or if the provided coverage has to be upgraded to meet the mandatory minimum.

Obviously, employers will take what ever measures they can to reduce the cost of the Act before they go out of business such as limiting working hours, eliminating coverage for dependents, eliminating coverage altogether and hiring no more than 50 employees, among other things.

For example, CNN Money recently reported “Several employers -- including UPS (UPSFortune 500), Delta (DALFortune 500) and University of Virginia -- have recently cited Obamacare as a source of increased costs. UPS and University of Virginia will no longer provide benefits for spouses with coverage options elsewhere. Trader Joe's and Home Depot (HDFortune 500) are shifting part-time workers to the Obamacare exchanges.”

If Congress and the President think that the Act is not hurting the job situation and the economy then they do not understand the free enterprise system.  Unfortunately, I think that is the case.  Just look at Mr. Obama’s background and also the resume of the Act’s author Ms. Pelosi.  Neither have experience in the free enterprise system.

The notion that the Act will result in 30-40 million uninsured becoming insured

It is true that many of the currently uninsured will have access to the new exchanges.  However, it I is not known how many will sign up.  It has been suggested that a large portion of that population do not want insurance and will not avail themselves of this service.

Many of those who do sign up will be eligible for Government subsidies to offset some of the costs.  This is another form of welfare which will have to be paid for by taxpayers.  Wealth redistribution?

Perhaps more importantly, employers who are faced with higher costs (do to the mandatory minimum style policies that must be offered) will make changes in their benefit programs resulting in fewer people being eligible for insurance at the company and this will offset any new people obtaining insurance through the exchanges.

Summary

The responsibility for health insurance should be that of the individual or if a Country so chooses, the Government, NOT the employer.  Imposing regulations and mandates on employers hurts jobs and the economy which is the life blood of our free enterprise system.  Unfortunately, there are those (progressives) who seem to think the Government is more important.  The Government produces nothing and will fail without a vibrant free enterprise system.  There are certain things that just cannot (or should not) be regulated in a free enterprise system.

The result of the Act will be more HMO type plans with very few healthcare providers.  Your doctor will not join the HMOs due to low reimbursement rates.  The providers will be of foreign decent (American born providers will either retire, became specialists, join cash only networks  or go to work for a hospital) and will practice in strip centers (compared to professional buildings) to reduce costs.  The few providers will be overwhelmed with patients so you will have long wait times.

Overall, quality of care will decrease.

Update 11.3.13


More thoughts about Obama care

The health insurance market is divided into two segments: the group insurance market and the individual market.

The group market relates to the employer sponsored segment. The individual market relates to individuals who are not covered by an employer e.g., a one man/woman shop which sells insurance, provides accounting or legal services, etc.

Historically, the purchaser of health insurance could tailor their policy to fit their needs and pocketbook.  For example, the purchaser could decide on the amount of life time coverage, deductibles, whether on not preventive care would be free or have a deductible or co-pay, whether the policy would cover maternity expenses, whether the policy would cover drug abuse treatment expenses, whether the policy would cover contraceptives, whether the policy would cover abortions, among other options.

Once all or the options were decided upon the insurance company would quote a price.

Now, under the Act, there is a requirement that all policies contain mandatory minimum provisions.  Individuals and groups now have no choice.  Even a 60 year old individual has to pay for contraceptive, maternity and abortion coverage which makes no sense.  What about a small group of six or seven who’s owner and all employees are over 50?  Why should that company have to pay for contraceptive, maternity, abortion and drug coverage if they do not want it?

If your policy provided coverage that does not meet the mandatory minimum then additional provisions have to be added in order to comply with the Act. Essentially, Obama is saying that you may need better coverage (in order to comply with the mandatory minimum provisions) and that it will cost less.  I don't know about you but I have found the argument that you can get more for less to be disingenuous.  It simply is not true, with the possible exception of housing.  You can get a bigger house for less in the suburbs and the further out you go the bigger the house but you increase you commute time.  So, there is a cost for that also. They just do not understand economics.

These added provisions cost money which results in higher premiums.  This is why many employers are complaining about the increase in insurance expense (some on the increased costs are being passed on to the employee resulting in employees complaining). This why Unions are complaining about the increase in insurance expenses.

This is why many individuals are being dropped by their insurance companies (some insurance companies have decided not to offer the mandatory minimum plan to individuals because after adding the additional provisions the policy would be too expensive).  The Act has decimated the individual market (about 25 million people) and it is estimated that up to 14 million individuals may lose their coverage.  The reason is that many of the individual policies contained bare bones coverage which suited the needs of the buyers.  In order to increase the benefits provisions to a level which would meet the mandatory minimums was considered impractical by the providers so they are being dropped.  New policies are being developed and offered to these individuals but after factoring in the added (unwanted) benefits the prices are double or triple what they were before.

The same is happening in the group market but to a lesser degree because most group policies already contained more benefits so them fewer increases in benefit provisions are needed.

President Obama promised that if you liked your current plan it would be “grandfathered” and you could keep your plan.  However, when regulations were written in the summer of 2010 the “grandfathering” was effectively eliminated.  Obama’s “guarantees” have proven to be untrue. 

The whole idea was to help the 30 to 40 million uninsured obtain insurance.  It has been estimated that up to 10 million of the uninsured will qualify for Medicaid as a result of changes in the eligibility requirements under the Act.  I wonder why the government did not simply provide an exchange or other method for these remaining folks to obtain insurance at little or no cost while leaving most other Americans alone.

What gives Obama and the Democrats the right to disrupt the entire system (1/6 of the entire U.S economy) and lives of millions of citizens lives (an estimated 93 million) when it would have been simpler to address the problem of the uninsured directly while not involving the vast majority of people who were happy with their coverage.  It’s called progressive (ism) which means that the political class and academics know better what the peons need than the peons do.  Progressives want to control your life because you are considered incapable of doing so.  Now, it is one thing for a government to prohibit companies and employers from harming its citizens but quite another to take over the citizens individual right to make their own decisions.

On top of all of the above the Government has delegated to the IRS the responsibility of enforcing the Act's provisions. What this means, among other things, is that the Act will apply only to law abiding taxpayers.  People who do not file tax returns will be beyond the reach of the IRS just as it is now. For example, lower income folks, people who deal only in cash like yard maintenance people, maids and the like, but also drug dealers and prostitutes, among others.  It is the typical Federal Government approach, go after the easy target which is taxpayers who file tax returns.

The Supreme Court has said that the Act is constitutional as it relates to the Government requiring citizens to purchase health insurance by calling it a tax.  (Obama promised not to raise taxes on anyone making under 250,000, another untruth).  It would not be constitutional under any other provision of the constitution e.g., the Commerce clause.  Issues yet to be decided include whether the government can impose the Act upon the 39 States that have elected not to set up exchanges and whether the Act is enforceable against those who object to certain provisions based on religious grounds, among others.  Read more…

As a side, I wonder what would prohibit a foreign entity from selling health insurance to U.S. citizens.  There are such companies already in existence.   It would seem that the purchase of insurance would be a private transaction beyond the reach of the Federal government.  I predict that this will happen with the results being more outsourcing to foreign Countries.

In the end, nothing will be accomplished except increasing the premiums on the 85 percent (93 million people) of the currently insured (who are happy with their current coverage), increasing the burden to the government (more Medicaid obligations and welfare subsidies for the lower income people who sign up) and totally upsetting the current system. Just look at the numbers:

30 million currently uninsured read more
-9 million put on Medicare read more
-7 million enrolling in Obamacare read more
+16 million who will lose their coverage or not sign up for coverage
=30 million still uninsured per the CBO read more

Friday, September 6, 2013

Understanding the Unemployment Rate in the US

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 9.6.13
The unemployment rate is calculated by tallying up all the people who are currently unemployed and dividing that number by the total number of people in the labor force.  For example,
No. of unemployed
No. of people in the labor force

So it is a simple equation in which the outcome can be affected by either the numerator or the denominator.
The definition of "unemployed" is very specific and means that the person is actively seeking employment but has been unable to land a job (derived by summing up all those receiving unemployment benefits).
The "labor force" consists of the number of Americans who are above the working age and below the retirement age and are employed or are seeking to be employed (derived by telephone surveys). Currently, the labor force represents only 63.2 percent of able bodied workers which is a 35 year low.
So, although the Government would like for you to only look at the monthly final published rate (currently 7.3 percent down from 7.4 percent last month) that’s not the whole story.  The participation rate decreased from 63.4 last month to 63.2 now which is about 300,000 workers.  About 169,000 workers were added to the work force in August so you can see that those dropping out affected the final figure more those getting jobs.
In summary, the decrease in the unemployment rate (between July and August) resulted not because so many people got new jobs but because so many people left the labor force (this has been the case for many months since the recession began).  The unemployment rate is therefore only an indicator.  It has worked well over the years but it becomes distorted in times like these.



Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Politics

By Rick Adamson 7.2.13
© 2013 Rick Adamson


It is normal for people who need help or cooperation of others to be kind to those who can provide the help.  It is normal for those needing help to cooperate with those whose help is needed.

For example, you want to add an additional room to your house but need approval from your subdivisions architectural committee.  Let’s say your next door neighbor is head of the committee.  It would be normal to make your desires known to your neighbor.  It is also normal to offer to assist your neighbor to accomplish his own endeavors in any sensible way you could. 

However, if you installed a swimming pool for your neighbor and paid for it with your employer’s credit card that would not be normal.  In fact, that would be illegal.

Unfortunate, President Obama and many of our politicians routinely operate in a manner describe in the preceding example.  But, rather than using a credit card they use taxpayer money.  Just look at the case relating to the recently passed immigration bill.  Votes were bought in exchange for pork projects for certain Senator’s States. See article here

And the Solyndra case where the Government issued $535 million in loan guarantees and structured the deal so that, in the case of failure, certain major investors in Solyndra (who also happened to be major fund raisers for Obama) could get their investment back before the Government’s money could be returned. See article here.

The Government has also issues loan guarantees to several other green energy companies that have failed. 

As an additional example, think about the $700 Million no bid contract given to CGI (a Canadian company) to build the Obamacare website.  It failed to work.  Moreover, many additional untold millions have been spent since October 1, 2013 in an 24/7 effort to fix it. Where did that money come from?

One should ask themselves what business the government has tying to pick winners and losers by directly loaning or guaranteeing loans for certain selected businesses.  Our system has provisions for funding viable entities including bank loans, equity markets and venture capital companies.

These types of activities happen on a daily basis and are a disgrace. They clearly show that  politicians have little regard for taxpayer’s money.

Judicial Watch Announces List of Washington’s “Ten Most Wanted Corrupt Politicians” for 2012

Thursday, March 28, 2013

ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 2.27.13

Candy Store

Who can really blame poor folks for trying to improve their situation by wanting to come to the United States?  Especially since we do not secure our borders and at the same time we appear to be a candy store offering a better way of life and abundant benefits.  We offer jobs even though it is against the law to hire undocumented workers. We offer to educate and feed their children for free, we offer citizenship to their children who are born here and we offer free emergency health care, among other benefits. If they commit crimes they are not punished like citizens, rather they are deported giving them an opportunity to come back and commit more crimes. Further, long waiting lines and high cost contribute the illegal immigration.

And it is not only the poor folks from Mexico and South America who are here illegally.  It has been estimated that up to 40 percent of our undocumented immigrants are here on expired visas.  Think 9/11, these terrorists were admitted legally but did not leave when their visas expired.



Length of Time and Cost to Legally Immigrate

Immigration to the United States is often a difficult process. In addition, there may be long delays due to backlogs.  In order to maintain an orderly immigration process, the U.S. has established a waiting list system.  While this makes for an orderly process, it can create backlogs of many years for certain countries and certain categories. For example:

"To emigrate is a very complicated process; it takes a lot of time, and it takes a lot of money," Isabel Rubio said. "Because of a close to 20-year backlog for residents of Mexico, people don't feel like they have 20 years to wait in line.[1] Long waits are why some come in illegally.[2]

The average wait time is 6-7 years.[3] The average cost is 5-7 thousand dollars or more depending on the category of the individual.[4]

See here for a brief description of the immigration process.[5]

We need major reforms which should include eliminating the automatic citizenship for children born to illegals in this country, eliminating all benefits for unregistered illegal aliens and their families, a guest worker program that allows registered aliens to come in to work and then return home, simplification of the legal immigration process (which is a mess) and a reevaluation of the total number of immigrants to be allowed in each year. We need more severe punishment for those who enter illegally. For the 12,000,000 or more illegals already here, we need to have them register, check their criminal history and put them in the guest worker program discussed above. The criminal components should be deported immediately. Those registered (and in the guest worker program) could then apply for citizenship in the normal way. Those apprehended, for one reason or another, who have not registered should be deported immediately.

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Federal Civilian Employees

© 2013 Rick Adamson
By Rick Adamson 3.1.13


The Federal Government employs approximately 2,841,143[1] people as of 2010 excluding uniformed military personnel (about 1,500,000).[2] A review of the referenced charts will give you an idea of how many people work in each department. They will also give you an idea of what they are paid – an average of $73,908 excluding the postal service that only averages $53,304. These numbers do not include benefits which could easily equal the wages paid resulting in a doubling of the above figures.

It makes me wonder what in the world all these people do! You may note that homeland security personnel was zero before 9/11 but now has 183,455 employees. Note also, that there are more people working are the veteran’s administration than at the social security administration which seems a little odd to me.

A 2011 Government Accountability Office[3] report gave a sampling of what could be cut or consolidated. It identified 44 overlapping job training programs, 18 for nutrition assistance, 82 on teacher quality, 56 dealing with financial literacy, more than 20 for homelessness, etc. Total annual cost: $100 billion-$200 billion. Nobody has taken the report seriously.

What we need is a good turnaround guy or gal to come in and eliminate waste and inefficiency. A good candidate would have been Mitt Romney. That is what the man did for a living. Too bad this administration has no experience in this area and, in fact, is not interested in cutting the size of Government.