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Devaluing the Dollar by Trashing Private Health Care

If Obamacare is implemented, there will be a migration away from innovation in the United States and towards a focus on process: "Did you get to see a doctor?" or "Did you get to see a nurse practitioner?" instead of "Did you get well?"

The main driver of the collapse of the dollar is the liquidity provided by the Fed at nominal interest rates, which invites a worldwide army of investors to short the dollar and buy foreign stocks and bonds. If the dollar continues to fall in value, these investors are effectively paid to borrow as long as their other investments are higher in dollar terms when they unwind the trade. Professor Roubini has a good article on this subject. He predicts that current policy is creating an international stock market bubble which will be followed by a collapse.

It is not a coincidence that the dollar's decline relative to other currencies and gold has accelerated over the last three months since the health care debate has culminated for the moment in the passage of H.R. 3962, the Affordable Health Care for America Act. To get a true sense of Congress's irresponsibility, it is necessary to outline at least a portion of the breathtaking scope of what they are attempting. As listed before, the Act is grossly inflationary because it mandates or results in (1) more coverage requirements per person, (2) more people covered, (3) fewer doctors per patient to provide care, (4) more adverse selection, (5) unreformed and unrepentant tort lawyers, (6) sharply higher health care unionization, and (7) less private interstate competition. The similar Senate proposal, which would effectively end much of private insurance, is discussed in an earlier CWDM here.

By CBO estimates, the Act commits U.S. taxpayers to spending over one trillion dollars over the next ten years. Through the magic of a projection that would be fraudulent if done by a publicly traded company subject to Sarbanes Oxley, the law was deemed to be a revenue-enhancer because it collects taxes beginning in 2011 while providing benefits only beginning in stages in 2013, one year after the presidential election. Deficits in the years beyond 2019 have been ignored by congressmen touting the bill. Among other major economic drags in the bill is the requirement that we all purchase insurance directly if our employers no longer provide it. This is because the employers will pay a cheaper payroll tax in order to shuck us off to the government pool, a tax on so-called gold-plated insurance plans, new taxes on pharmaceutical and medical device companies, and a 5.4% income tax surcharge. Including state income tax rates, many successful United States entrepreneurs will now face over 50% marginal tax rates, which will sharply reduce their incentive to start new small businesses — are the backbone of job-creation. In their talking points, the Republicans plausibly claim that the bill may cost five million additional jobs.

There is not the slightest chance that the assumptions underlying the bill will be reflected in reality once people have the chance to game the system. In the same way the government could not keep up with the acceleration of demand created by the cash-for-clunkers initiative, health care insurers and providers will not be able to keep up with the distortion in demand created by not having use of the system tied to a cost. Many employers will opt to pay an 8% payroll tax rather than provide private insurance. Millions of employees, knowing they can wait until they are sick, will pay the penalties associated with not having insurance, or ignore them altogether, only seeking insurance once they feel they need serious coverage. The penalties range up to a misdemeanor failure to insure (up to $25,000 and one year in jail) to a felony failure to insure (up to $250,000 and five years in jail). Representative Camp (R-MI) put it well when he said that "This is the ultimate example of the Democrats' command-and-control style of governing — buy what we tell you or go to jail." These penalties are so severe, so unjust, and so unconstitutional that they will never be uniformly enforced (if they are enforced at all).

These facts, coupled with how invincible we feel when we are young, will result in many millions of people delaying coverage for years knowing they cannot be denied government coverage for any preexisting condition. In a Fitch forensic survey of a 2007 mortgage pool that went bust, 47 out of 47 mortgage applicants lied to get their loans. Similarly, this law will encourage many U.S. citizens to work off the books now that they have coverage. As a result, as an unintended consequence of this act, fewer people are likely to actually be insured. While the poor may gain coverage, the middle class will lose coverage. And our smartest students will veer away from medicine.

With new health care industry taxes, the destruction of private insurers, and the likelihood of more arbitrary reimbursements, the pharmaceutical and medical device industries will stop innovating in the United States at the level that brought them to the top of the world in knowledge competitiveness. The large international companies will do more and more of their drug innovation elsewhere.

There will be a migration away from innovation in the United States and towards a focus on process: "Did you get to see a doctor?" or "Did you get to see a nurse practitioner?" instead of "Did you get well?" The vibrant health care industry, with its equity in public companies alone valued at $1.9 trillion in today's dollars, will likely be bisected in value over the next five to ten years as the same forces that made Amtrak unprofitable are brought to bear. For those families fortunate enough to own some stocks in a pension or a retirement or private account, the average losses attributable to the wipeout of health care could be on the order of $15,000 to $20,000 per household in today's dollars. The losses are likely to be unequally distributed, with health insurers losing the most.

This is above and beyond the annual burden that will be imposed by forcing everyone to buy non-economic, government-based insurance. To the extent the dollar collapses, it may well be that in dollar terms, the industry does not lose as much value. But in real terms, the loss of value will be clear. For example, all sorts of drugs, operations, and procedures that are considered routine today will be considered unnecessary and unreimbursable tomorrow.

Congress acts as if we can borrow and borrow and never have to worry about repaying. We have issued $12 trillion in debt, and the new law would add another trillion at a minimum. This is in an economy with only $14 trillion of nominal GDP. As the total United States debt begins to climb to over 100% of our GDP, other nations will increasingly move away from the dollar.

Every time Congress spends, or evens threatens to spend, without getting full value in return, they effectively destroy value compared to what might have been and what should have been. Disrespecting the dollar by trashing private health care will do nothing but destroy one of our truly world-class industries, result in fewer people getting actual health insurance, wastefully spend money we don't have, and invite fraud on a level that will make Fannie Mae blush.

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1 comment to Devaluing the Dollar by Trashing Private Health Care

  • Bill Wavering

    Three Major Errors in Health Care Reform:

    In 1966 Medicare cost $3 billion and the House Ways & Means Committee estimated that cost to rise to $12 billion by 1990. The actual program cost in 1990 was $107 billion, over nine times the original estimate. Medicare spent $330 billion in 2005.

    Medicaid costs were estimated by Congress in 1987. They said the program would cost $1 billion in 1992. The actual cost in 1992 was $17 billion, exactly 17 times the estimated cost. Medicaid costs in 2005 were over $180 billion.

    In 2006 the combined program expenditures before the prescription drug program was added was over $500 billion.

    The current bill passed out of the House is $1.2 trillion over ten years. Gauging its actual cost from the previous examples would place the actual cost at somewhere around $15 trillion by 2020 (1.2 x (17×9)/2)). If this prediction is only ½ right; by 2020 our annual budgetary considerations will be such that we'll cease to be a country and become a health care plan with an army: And a poorly funded army at that.

    The company I work for now covers my health care while I pay for dependents. Health care deduction from my checks now amount to $425.14 per month or 5,101.72 per year to cover my wife (the kids are gone). My annual gross salary is @ $35,500.

    The current bill says that an employer must pay an 8% payroll tax if they decide not to cover employee's health. Since my wife and I are within 6 months of each other in age, I can only assume that my health insurance costs the company about the same amount that I pay to cover my spouse. 8% of $35,500 is $2,168.65. What CFO is going to balk at a $2,240 net savings per year? This simultaneously raises my health insurance costs from 14% of my annual gross income to 28% of AGI! This immediately places me on a government run health plan; forcing me to say "Bye-bye" to a health plan we've had for over a decade and are extremely satisfied with.

    Finally; this health care plan is being sold to the American People as a 'right'. Nothing could be farther from the truth. This health care plan constitutes a right for the state, not the individual. In order to highlight this, let's look at another government program.

    I believe we can all agree that the control the federal government has over the public school system is ubiquitous. The amount of money the federal government contributes to public school operation budgets averages 7% by district. If they demand that type of control for seven cents on the dollar; what kind of iron-fisted control do you think the federal government will demand over each and every facet of your live for the cost of your health care premium?

    That is why I say it is a right for the state, not the individual. They will decide who can and cannot be born. For those lucky enough to make it out of the birth canal, they will decide where you live, how you live, and how long you live. They will decide what you may consume; including how much and what types of food, how much square footage you occupy and where, how much energy you may consume and of what types, how many hours you work, sleep, and recreate. Each decision will be predicated on what is best for the continued existence of the state. I can guarantee that, at some point, this constant cost/benefit analysis will come out against the favor of the state and when that happens they will make the last, final decision regarding your continued existence.

    This health care bill fundamentally alters the contract between the federal government and the American people. Once placed into law, we will cease to be the grand experiment in self government we started out as.

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