Stros lose to Pirates

After being nasty weathered out last night, the Stros wasted another strong pitching performance from Roy O and lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates on Wednesday night, 4-2. The loss was the Astros’ fifth in their last seven games. Andy Pettitte comes off the disabled list on Thursday afternoon to pitch the final game of the series in Pittsburgh before the Stros come back to Minute Maid Park on Friday night behind the Rocket to begin a four game set with the Cincinnati Reds. Ricky Stone was sent down to AAA New Orleans to make room for Pettitte on the 25 man roster.

On the ground in Baghdad

Yass Alkafaji is a Northeastern Illinois University accounting professor and an ÈmigrÈ from Iraq. Professor Alkafaji went to Baghdad in January as the director of finance for the Ministry of Higher Education of the Coalition Provisional Authority. In this Chicago Tribune (free subscription required) interview, he relates what it’s like on the ground in Baghdad. Read the entire interview, but here are a few highlights:

Alkafaji recently left Baghdad during one of the bloodiest months of the U.S. occupation. We shared chai lattes at a Starbucks in Sauganash to discuss what he saw and heard while he was there. We thought he would be full of tales of violence in Sadr City, mutilations in Fallujah and bombings in Basra. But, oddly enough, he said that while he was there, he hardly noticed these events that made headlines all over the world.

Q. You were in Iraq during some of the worst anti-American violence of the occupation. How did that affect your work?

A. I did not notice it. Even though I was in the middle of it, I was apart from it. It was not something we thought about on a daily basis. We got briefings, and we’d hear people saying things here and there. Sometimes I would receive calls from my wife, and she was telling me what was happening in the green zone, where I was living, but I didn’t know it. Or we would be working in the middle of the day at our computers and we would hear explosions, boom boom, and we would simply look up and go back to work.

Q. What is your take on the mood of the Iraqi people?

A. They are thankful to the U.S. for getting rid of Saddam Hussein, and they are content that the military needs to be there. But after that, they are divided between how long should the U.S. military stay and whether they are doing a good job or not. The U.S. military presence is very visible, and they [the soldiers] are really scared, so their posture is very offensive. They see Iraqis, and they put guns in your face. They move in convoys, and they tell people to get away from them. When the convoys are in a traffic jam in the middle of Baghdad, that is the most dangerous thing. So they shout at people to get out of the way, and they drive up on the sidewalk of some stores. That creates a lot of hard feelings for the Iraqis.

Q. What about the economic and employment situation with ordinary Iraqis?

A. Most of the people are not informed of what the U.S. is doing because they don’t see the visible improvement of their livelihood, especially those who don’t have a government job . . . I think there is still a lot of confusion about who is the good Iraqi and who is the bad Iraqi. I think [the U.S.] has shown to the rest of the world that we are really ignorant when it comes to dealing with other cultures. We have a great military power, but when it comes to building nations we have no idea. You can see the tension in the clashes between the British and Americans in the palace. The Americans will say `do this or do that’ and the British will just be shaking their head. But the British have a much longer history in the Middle East, and they know how to deal with the Arab mentality. They feel very marginalized.

Q. Depending on how people want to spin it, they characterize the recent violence as a few bad apples or a popular uprising. How do you see it?

A. Surveys show about 70 percent of the Iraqi people accept that there is a need for the American military to be in Iraq, otherwise it will be chaotic and there will be no security on the ground. Of course, if you talk to someone in Sadr City with a first-grade education, they will say otherwise. One day I was waiting seven hours to try to leave the compound to try to see my sister. We had some thugs from the Sadr group demonstrating 15 feet away saying, “We want the U.S. out.” So I said, “OK, the U.S. is out and then what next? Who is going to control the country?” They don’t think about the implications of what they say.

Hat tip to Daniel Drezner for the link to this interesting interview.

Comcast bid for Disney is dead

Comcast announced this morning that it is dropping its stagnating bid for Disney.
Not surprisingly, Comcast shares rose 51 cents to $30.48 in mid-morning trading on Nasdaq.

Wyeth gets hammered in Beaumont

Brilliant Houston trial lawyer John O’Quinn strikes again.
Update: Dylan over at Slithery D observes that Mr. O’Quinn’s formidable talents are often misdirected.

America’s health care finance mentality

Holman Jenkins of the Wall Street Journal ($) has some interesting observations about America’s health care finance mentality today in his weekly Business World column. The subject of the column is the rather inane political issue involved in the importation of government subsidized prescription drugs from Canada, but Mr. Jenkins uses the subject to clear up some common misconceptions regarding how American drug companies finance development of drugs and how America’s health care finance mentality affects such development.
Inasmuch as American drug company profit margins are relatively high, some politicians who are in favor of imports from Canada suggest that American drug prices are too high and that the companies are greedy, which Mr. Jenkins quickly debunks:

What can it possibly mean to call an industry “greedy”? Drug companies are said to be an unconscionable exception because their profits are comparatively high, 15.4%, when measured as a percentage of sales. But here’s a question: Grocery stores have a measly return on sales of 1.4%, and liquor stores an even measlier 1%. So why does anybody invest in these businesses rather than the drug business? Last time we looked, the grocery industry and liquor stores still existed.
Such indictments of the drug industry overlook the fact that profits are a cost — the cost of a company’s capital. Nobody pays back their investors more than they are obligated to. By the same token, if your capital costs are 15.4% of your total costs, profits had better be 15.4% of your revenues or you won’t be in business long. Measures of profitability, in short, tell you a lot more about an industry’s need for capital than about its “greed.”

And how about the demagogues’ allegation that the excessive amount of money that drug companies spend on advertising is proof that they make too much money? Mr. Jenkins explains:

Wrong. Companies spend money on advertising because it generates profits, not because it consumes them. You’ve spent 10 years and $500 million to develop a new product and haven’t rung up your first sale yet. What could be a smarter investment than spending a few dollars more to let the world know the product exists? Advertising actually makes companies more willing to invest in R&D. Capital can be earned back faster; fixed costs can be spread over a larger number of customers, allowing each to be charged a lower price.

But then Mr. Jenkins bears down on the real problem relating to financing of prescription drug development — America’s health care finance mentality:

America’s real problem is that drugs have been roped into the same perverse incentives that govern most health care spending. Consumers don’t weigh cost vs. benefit; drug companies focus their development efforts on drugs aimed at large populations of price-insensitive, insured patients. At the same time, consumers who don’t have drug insurance and pay out of their own pockets scream bloody murder because drugs seem like a violation of a natural order in which medical care is increasingly perceived as a costless entitlement.
Think we exaggerate? Everybody noticed when HCA, the big hospital chain, earlier this month put aside $700 million to cover the bad debts of uninsured patients, who are typically good for only seven cents on the dollar. Little noticed was the fact the company also has to cover the bad debts of insured patients, who routinely skip out on their co-payments and deductibles. Nowadays these people are good for only 45 cents on the dollar on average.
Medical bills seem to have become optional to Americans when deciding which envelopes to toss in the trash unopened at the end of the month. “Hospitals are ninth” on the payment list, HCA’s Chief Jack Bovender told Reuters in February, well behind mortgages, car payments and cable-TV bills. “The only thing people pay worse is the student loan program.”

Read the entire column. Good stuff again from Mr. Jenkins.