Wall Street Weekly | 10/30/2009 12:00 pm
Liz Peek: Grandiosity, Not Common Sense, Drives Health-Care Bill

Bears, Bulls, Chickens and Pigs: wOw’s Wall Street Weekly with Liz Peek (Week of 10/26)
Editor’s Note: Liz Peek is a financial columnist.The stock market cheered the resurgent economy yesterday, after losing ground for four days in a row. The 3.5% gain in real GDP was welcome but, since nearly half of the improvement came from the Cash for Clunkers program, I wouldn’t break out the bubbly quite yet.
ISI Group notes that economic recoveries historically mirror the extent of the downturn; the worse the falloff, the faster the bounce-back. They say that, given the recession-caused 3.8% collapse in GDP, the quarter should have jumped 10%. No one was looking for that kind of pop, given the debt load and job anxieties still weighing on Americans. Indeed, today’s report that consumer spending sank 0.5% in September (the biggest drop in nine months) underlines the fragility of the recovery. For further proof, just ask the 530,000 newly laid-off Americans that went looking for unemployment insurance last week.
HSBC’s economists had forecast 4% growth for the quarter. They were too bullish because they overestimated the government’s stimulus spending. The shortfall was in outlays from the cities and states, which unexpectedly turned down. This raises an interesting question, no doubt being asked by the 26 million Americans looking for full-time jobs. What ever happened to the stimulus program?
| We do not have to risk fundamentally weakening the health care currently found satisfactory by nearly 80% of Americans. |
If you’re wondering where our $787 billion went, visit the Recovery.gov website. The quick answer is … nowhere. Out of the entire program, only $173.2 billion has been paid out. Of the $14 billion in federal contracts awarded so far, for example, only a little over $2 billion has been received. There are some terrific projects that have received funding, though. My particular favorite is the $219,000 spent on a study of the sex lives of freshmen women at Syracuse University. You might prefer the "Week Mapping Radioactive Rabbit Feces With Detectors Mounted on a Helicopter Flying 50 Feet Over the Desert Scrub," which cost $300,000. If you’re a golfer, you’re probably thrilled with the $5,500 tax credit being applied to the purchases of golf carts.
Some of these projects make me chuckle, but the failure to create jobs for Americans is no laughing matter. A story in today’s Financial Times points out that "more than 8 out of 10 U.S. stimulus dollars spent on wind energy farms have gone to foreign companies." Cash that has gone to wind farms has funded 4,500 jobs overseas. Oops.
Well, after all, it’s the government, and no one expects perfection, or timeliness, or accountability. Then why in heaven’s name are we about to allow the government to interfere in our health care? It is inconceivable to me that Democrat leaders in the House and Senate and the Obama administration are bulling ahead with health-care legislation that Americans do not want, that we cannot afford and that is likely to detract seriously from the most pressing issue before us: putting people back to work.
Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and President Obama have reinvigorated the so-called "public option" based primarily on a couple of recent polls that say that Americans favor a government-run insurance program. Everyone should look up the actual WSJ/NBC poll that supposedly "green lighted" the public option. Early on, respondents are asked if the country is headed in the right direction. Over half (52%) say no, up from 43% in April. The sixth question asks people whether they approve (43%) or disapprove (48%) of the way Obama is handling health-care reform. In answering question No. 10, 48% of those surveyed say the government is doing too many things, while 46% say it is not doing enough. Responding to question 26, 42% said they think the president’s health plan is a bad idea, versus 38% who think it is a good idea, and in the follow-up 40% think that the legislation will make their health care worse (vs. 21% who think it will get better) and 47% think the cost will go up, while 13% think it will go down. Does this group sound enthusiastic about more government involvement?























268 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
CUBA?!?! You can not be serious here Maggie.
It it amusing how some people will suspend their common sense to believe stats that have no base in reality . Reality is that murder and accidents are not figured in those stats. They do not drive, nor eat as Americans do. They have just enough food to live and no abiltiy to travel or get into accidents!
Perhaps some like to parrot their trumped up infant-mortality stats…considering that the world looks at infant mortality rates as one of the most important measures of a health care system.
At the first sign of possible trouble with a fetus, Cuba aborts. " a major Cuban health care issue is the prevalence oauabortion, largely because abortion has been used as a means to minimize the incidence of infant mortality…and is the county’s favorite birth control method" - Sergio Diaz-Briquets, Cuban Communism 11th edition.
Unlike other countries that manipulate their infant mortality rates by using birth weights or size, or fail to register those that die on the day of birth, America counts counts a baby that shows any signs of life as a live birth.
When very pre term babies are considered the U.S. ends up with infant-mortality rates which is among the lowest rates on the planet.
When you consider murder and accidents, things that have nothing to do with the quality of health care, the U.S. is among the leaders in health care quality.
So shame on those that would manipulate and accept manipulated stats to bamboozle the masses into surrendering their freedoms over their own life and death.
Maggie…
"Last year, CIGNA commissioned a survey that revealed 61% of US workers said they came to work while coping with illness; they also said they were less productive on those days"
Did it occur to you that this probably has nothing to do with insurance and everything to do with being unable to take a day off due to staffing shortages, lack of paid time off, etc. I’ve worked while ill for years. I’ve even staffed a shift from my hospital bed because the pharmacist shortage was so severe that it was either do that or close down the hospital pharmacy…then what would have happened to the other 200 patients? The sad fact is that many folks are in "mission critical" jobs and cannot take off at the last minute. I’m currently the only pharmacist on a hospital night shift, noone to cover for me if I get sick. A few months ago I was actually admitted through the ER at the end of my shift. The day crew came in and took 1 look at me and wheeled me to the ER from my work terminal. Those folks that may not have "mission critical" positions, may also not have vacation and/or sick time and cannot afford to loose the pay.
Yes, I realize there are jobs where people cannot be relieved if they are ill. There are also jobs where people do not get paid when absent. There are also people who are never really well, including many children. They suffer from allergies, indigestion, migraines, etc, and try to remedy with over the counter meds that don’t always help. But that is all they know to do because they also cannot afford to go to a doctor and/or afford a prescription.
B Clark — the sad thing is, we are probably closer to this scenario than many realize. Corporations have been cutting back on employee health insurance benefits for years — every year employees cringe at the thought of Open Enrollment because they know that their premiums, co-pays, and deductibles are going to go up — while there wages stay stagnant.
Sadly, right now there are many who have a false sense of security because they think their employer run health insurance is "safe". Studies have shown the people who are satisifed with their health insurance are the ones who have never had to use it — anyone who has actually had to use their health insurance is very aware that the health insurance companies currently ration care.
Those of you on here clamoring for this ridiculous legislation deserve exactly the health care you are going to get…or more likely not going to get. You just want what you think you are entitled to at the expense of others and don’t give a damn how it is going to negatively impact the country and particularly future generations due to crushing debt.
This bill is a piece of crap and does more harm than good. Pity you can’t see it.
The states are already having problem paying Doctors for those on medicaid, the government proposed health plan is not going to reduce health care cost but shift burden to tax payers. When the cost becomes too much for the system to handle reimbursements to Doctors will be lowered and they in return will drop those on government plan in order to put food on their table. Also, Healthcare is not a supply and demand business, when people stop viewing it as such they will then be able to create a system that works.
I always wonder if health insurance had never been conceptualized maybe we would be better off. Then we just deal with our doctors and they with us. There is no or very little direct payment for the participant to the doctor so who cares how much it costs, and then the costs go up. The amount of people whose pay checks have to be paid to run insurance and healthcare make the costs go up. I don’t want anyone to lose jobs, but when you think about what really drives the costs it is overwhelming. They get yearly raises and my policy gets raised.
The new bill does not in any way shape of form deal with torte reform. California has limited medical malpractice torte reform which has made some changes, but it could go farther. Unfortunately, the new form of the bill, not only has no torte reform, if your state does have torte reform it will not be able to receive incentives payments unless they reject medical malpractice reform.. They have just turned it over to the lawyers.
Here is a link to the place in the bill that restricts torte reform:
Big Government » Blog Archive » Pelosi Health Care Bill Blows a Kiss to Trial Lawyers
"Where do we draw the line, Sherrie, in a free country on what is a commodity and what is a ‘service’ to be granted for free?"
You draw the line where corporate execs are allowed to get wealthy on the one thing that human beings ultimately have no real control over……….their health.
There is a lot people can do to prevent the preventable, but until we find a way to prevent all illness nobody should be allowed to gouge profits out of human suffering. No corporate health care facilities, not drug companies and certainly not insurance companies. These should in no way be for-profit industries. They should be non-profit organizations and if there is no other way to prevent greedy opportunists from taking advantage of other peoples’ suffering other than making them government run organizations so be it.
Do you realize how many people are employed byt the health industry? What incentive do companies have to spend the money ( profits they do make) in developing technology, proceedures and drugs if they must hand any profit they make over to the government who is telling them how much they can make, charge and keep for their investors??
Why stop there?… Why not regulate all commerce, industry, jobs etc.?? Because that is Socialism and this country was founded on Capitalism. There are plenty of other countries that suscribe to that philosophy for interested parties to move to.
Are Microsoft, Google and the entire Hollywood Entertainment making to much money as well???
Once and for all, I wanted to find out the real number of uninsured Americans (health insurance). Every source available showed the following:
(Per Census Bureau and Gallup):
Between 84% and 85.3% of Americans have health insurance.
It is incredibly stupid to think we should discomfit the large majority who are fine with their insurance, instead of addressing the small percentage who are not with some kind of "fix."
Talk about a tempest in a teapot!!