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
Kim,
I am a lot like you, caught in the middle. We are self-employed so pay for our own insurance and they seem to charge more and more but pay for less and less. We also have a high deductible. It is insanity.
I think they must clean up Medicare. The fraud there is astronomical. Where has the government been? They don’t have a big enough oversight department. That is so stupid. What kind of stupid government established that guideline? OURS.
If you haven’t seen last week’s 60 Minutes segment called EAsy Money - it is a real eye opener into Medicare fraud.
Easy Money - 60 Minutes - CBS News
What about torte reform which is considered a 54 billion dollar industry for the trial lawyers which forces doctors to over test and since they have to pay enormous malpractice premiums, they pass it on to the patient and the insurer. The trial lawyers got a great deal from Pelosi and Reid in the new bill
Big Government » Blog Archive » Pelosi Health Care Bill Blows a Kiss to Trial Lawyers
Insurance companies have protected Anti-Trust status, which means they get larger and larger and eat up all the competition therefore the small companies can’t compete as well. How about removing that status and breaking up those companies? Opening up competition across state lines.
How about congress having the same type of insurance the rest of us do? Most of them only pay $503 per year for insurance. I pay about $16,000 per year for my families insurance. I have a pre-condition so cannot go without it.
Those industries that hire illegal immigrants should co-op and set up clinics for their workers. We all know they are here and no, many people will not do the work they do. Let’s get honest. Give them work status and let’s get honest about what is going on in the country.
Get the drug commercials off the TV. They just keep telling people they are sick. It is like hypnosis coming into your living room every night. I mute or turn the channel. They are wrong wrong wrong, and people haven’t gotten better with the number of them on the air, they have gotten worse and use more drugs.
If big Pharma has protected anti-trust status, they should be re-evaluated and let’s level the playing field.
Stacy
Yes, the OTCs should be off the air as well. The commercials that remind the public to get sick like "We know the cold and flu season is here." Setting everyone up to get sick. Psycho-somia.
Hey, I think you can have as many free pens as you want. Look what our congress people get - ….there oughta be a law….
Frannie Em, I completely agree. Something needs to be done, .. not what they are talking about though in the way that the government is talking. They are going to wind up only affecting 12%; it’s not the right 12%. The people who don’t have any coverage at all. I don’t know what the answer is, where you are coming from makes a lot more sense. I would also like a politictian to sit down with me and explain to me exactly how this bill will affect me personally and my family. I can’t look at all of the other crap at this point, what does it mean to me and then get further answers from there, they won’t do that because I don’t think any official could explain the bill as they don’t understand fully what it means.
Every single government personnel should have to use the same exact insurance we the public do. I also think if someone in a government position commits a fraud they should loose ALL of their benefits including pensions and so on. There are so many of these people who get away with so much and then have no reprecussions outside of loosing face. I’m frustrated with the issue that no forethought goes into any policy that is thought of. It’s let’s slap a bandaid when the dam is needing of patch work that is much greater than a bandaide! I’m extremely curious to see what happens if this is shoved down people’s throats and it backfires and we are all in worse than we were, it will cause a major revolution in how people choose to vote. I think we’ll see more people in the Reps and Dems flat out leave their parties to go to a different one that is considered 3rd party.
Kim,
I just think they have screwed it up royally. If they had waited and had a couple of "wins" under their belt, like propagated a better environment for job creation, they could have gotten healthcare passed at a later time. People would have been more conducive. Hillary Clinton tried right out of the gate to get it going, and it was wrong at that time as well. They needed more wins and a better approach.
I know that the bill does not go into effect until 2013 - after the 2012 elections. We will have to pay taxes in on it for the next 4 years for the start up so they can make it deficit neutral (which at this time is impossible), so during that time, my premiums will continue to rise while I am paying taxes for the other program so congress feels like they did something smart.
This is America, we should be able to take care of our poor and sick. I say - show me the money, where has it all gone? I would like to know what particulars our tax dollars are being spent on.
I like your idea if a congress person commits fraud (and any other crime I would add) they should lose all of their benefits.
I also think we the people should be the ones to vote on what benefits congress gets. They work for us,
Those of you self employed. My coverage is a group policy ( Healthnet) that accepts groups as small as tow persons. My husband and I are both employees of our S-Corp so we have two individual policies.
As a group policy they cannot refuse coverage based on health.
Small business should be able to group together to get better rates for all and that is one of the concepts the REp’s are proposing.
My son and his wife have individual policy with Regence Blue Cross/Blue Shield.
Both our plans are higher deductable but do cover regular office visits 50%.
The latest reports show that Pelosi plan will only help 2%
After all the fuss, govt health plan to cover few
WASHINGTON – What’s all the fuss about? After all the noise over Democrats’ push for a government insurance plan to compete with private carriers, coverage numbers are finally in: Two percent.
That’s the estimated share of Americans younger than 65 who’d sign up for the public option plan under the health care bill that Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is steering toward House approval.
The underwhelming statistic is raising questions about whether the government plan will be the iron-fisted competitor that private insurers warn will shut them down or a niche operator that becomes a haven for patients with health insurance horror stories.
Some experts are wondering if lawmakers have wasted too much time arguing about the public plan, giving short shrift to basics such as ensuring that new coverage will be affordable.
"The public option is a significant issue, but its place in the debate is completely out of proportion to its actual importance to consumers," said Drew Altman, president of the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. "It has sucked all the oxygen out of the room and diverted attention from bread-and-butter consumer issues, such as affordable coverage and comprehensive benefits."
The Democratic health care bills would extend coverage to the uninsured by providing government help with premiums and prohibiting insurers from excluding people in poor health or charging them more. But to keep from piling more on the federal deficit, most of the uninsured will have to wait until 2013 for help. Even then, many will have to pay a significant share of their own health care costs.
The latest look at the public option comes from the Congressional Budget Office, the nonpartisan economic analysts for lawmakers.
It found that the scaled back government plan in the House bill wouldn’t overtake private health insurance. To the contrary, it might help the insurers a little.
The budget office estimated that about 6 million people would sign up for the public option in 2019, when the House bill is fully phased in. That represents about 2 percent of a total of 282 million Americans under age 65. (Older people are covered through Medicare.)
The overwhelming majority of the population would remain in private health insurance plans sponsored by employers. Others, mainly low-income people, would be covered through an expanded Medicaid program.
To be fair, most people would not have access to the new public plan. Under the House bill, it would be offered through new insurance exchanges open only to those who buy coverage on their own or work for small companies. Yet even within that pool of 30 million people, only 1-in-5 would take the public option.
Who’s likely to sign up?
The budget office said "a less healthy pool of enrollees" would probably be attracted to the public option, drawn by the prospect of looser rules on access to specialists and medical services.
As a result, premiums in the public plan would be higher than the average for private plans. That could nudge healthy middle-class workers and their families to sign up for private plans.
"The concern was that the public option would destabilize the bulk of private insurance, but in fact what Congress has fashioned is very targeted," said economist Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund. "It’s not going to be taking away the insurance industry’s core business."
It’s unclear whether there are enough votes in the Senate for a public plan. The version that Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has offered would let states opt out, probably leaving a smaller plan than the House would want.
Insurers aren’t buying the budget office analysis. Asked if it might soften that opposition, industry spokesman Robert Zirkelbach of America’s Health Insurance Plans responded with a curt "No."
While a government plan might start out modestly, insurers fear that Congress could change the rules later, opening it up to all people and setting take-it-or-leave payments for hospitals and medical providers, instead of negotiating, as the House bill calls for.
For the same reason, employer groups also remain wary. Big companies don’t want to lose control of their health care budgets and instead have the government send them a tax bill.
"That cost is going to come back to you one way or another … and it’s coming back in the way of taxes and liabilities," said Eastman Kodak’s chief executive, Antonio M. Perez, speaking for the Business Roundtable. "We just don’t believe that there are miracles out there."
If Congress passes a public plan that’s not much of a sensation, Democrats might have reason to regret all the time and energy they invested in it.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091031/ap_on_bi_ge/us_health_care_public_plan
SJ Morgan - I was just getting ready to post this article. Thanks for beating me to the punch.
Everytime I read what’s in the "Pelosi Package" i have to go back and remember what Obama has repeated over and over in his before Presidency Campaign and his "now, never ending campaigning"…..
"If you already have insurance you will not be required to change, you can keep your insurance program". Yeah, sure, just another sales pitch from a "slick" campaigner!
Where are the jobs Mr. President? And, how about the economy? ……Guess he’s too busy campaigning to answer those questions!!!!!!!!
Just for the record, in case you want to check them out, these are the bills proposed, so far, by Price and his allies in the House: H.R. 77; H.R. 109; H.R. 198; H.R. 270; H.R. 321; H.R. 464; H.R. 502; H.R. 544; H.R. 917; H.R. 1086; H.R. 1118; H.R. 1441; H.R. 1458; H.R. 1468; H.R. 1658; H.R. 1891; H.R. 2520; H.R. 2607; H.R. 2692; H.R. 2784; H.R. 2785; H.R. 2786; H.R. 2787; H.R. 3141; H.R. 3217; H.R. 3218; H.R. 3356; H.R. 3372; H.R. 3400; H.R. 3438; H.R. 3454; and H.R. 3478.
H.R. 77
An attempt to undermine the recent minimum wage increase. Typical anti-worker partisanship. Not really health care reform, either.
H.R. 109
I got a good laugh out of this one
Followed by:
and:
The bill violates one of it’s own “findings” and allows outside insurers to ignore state regulation. It also transfers some state authority from the state legislative to state administrative branch via federal law. This is just slum-lord politics. Why do republicans keep trying to undermine state sovereignty?
These are increases of $9M and $25M respectively. Where does the money come from?
H.R. 198
This is not partisan, I just wonder why “dental care, vision care, or a specified illness” are not considered medical expenses?
Still making tax laws complicated and confusing.
So what we have here is an unfunded tax cut. Not partisan, but not revenue-neutral. How do you plan to pay for it?
Sorry, three strikes. Show me something worth passing.
Silly people…this is not about your health care. This about the government being able to control your life. When the government is responsible for the cost and therefore the burden of controlling the cost ofc health care, it is the ultimate justification for passing more laws to control your lives.
More affordable health care coverage for all…my a$$! Read your history!