More on health insulation policies

Arnold%20Kling%20011007.jpgThis previous post reported on Arnold Kling’s insightful Cato Unbound piece in which he explains how America’s health care finance system is being undermined by health “insulation” policies rather than real health insurance.
Kling’s article has provoked three excellent responses, including this one from Duke University professor Clark C. Havighurst, who has taught courses and written on health care law and policy, antitrust law, and economic regulation at Duke since 1964. Professor Havighurst explains cogently how the tax subsidy on employer-based health insurance has become a destructive force in the health care finance system and why it survives despite the fact that everyone knows that it is the principal cause of wasteful spending on health care:

The tax subsidy thus introduces new ìmoral hazardsî into health care decision-making. Not only are employers, union leaders, legislators, and courts happy to commit employee-votersí money in ways that make themselves appear to care about health above all things, but their stake in not having to say ìnoî to more and better health care also coincides perfectly with the preferences of the politically powerful health care industry. For these reasons, the tax subsidy has survived through political thick and thin even though every policy wonk knows that it is a principal cause of wasteful spending on health services. Liberals, of course, resist proposals to fix this glaring defect in the incentive system that drives health care spending. Why fix incentives to encourage consumers to make more appropriate health care choices when big government stands ready to choose for them?

Read the entire Havighurst piece, as well as this one by Jonathan Cohn, (a New Republic senior editor and the author of Sick: The Untold Story of America’s Health Care Crisis ó and the People Who Pay the Price, which will be published by HarperCollins later year) and this one by Matthew Holt (author of the Health Care Blog), both of whom favor a universal care, one-payor system administered by government. Holt, in particular, provides a pithy explanation of why meaningful reform of the health care finance system is so difficult to achieve:

[T]he political strength of the health care system actors combined with the disaggregated weakness of the consumers and those paying the bill ó intermediated by the costs of health care being hidden within overall employment compensation and buried in the murky finances of the federal government ó has meant that the system has chewed up and spat out any serious attempt to reform it since the 1930s.

Update: All of the authors have now responded to each other pieces in this cyber-conversation.

The ultimate risk of a wrongful prosecution

death%20penalty%20011907.jpgThe US Supreme Court’s strained relationship with Texas and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals over death penalty cases — which was previously discussed here and hereis back in the news as the high court again takes up the case of LaRoyce L. Smith, who was convicted and sentenced to die for the murder of a former co-worker. The Supreme Court overturned the sentence in 2004, but the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals promptly reinstated the conviction on the ground that the constitutional error that the Supreme Court had identified was harmless. The main issue in the second appeal is whether the Court of Criminal Appeal’s response was an appropriate one to the Supreme Court’s previous mandate in the case.
As the article points out, the recent history of capital punishment in the United States is inextricably tied to capital punishment in Texas, where 380 prisoners have been put to death since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. That number is far more than any other state — Virginia is second with 98.
Meanwhile, this Ralph Blumenthal/NY Times story reports on a case that reflects the main reason why I oppose the death penalty (previous posts here, here and here) — a 50 year-old Dallas black man being exonerated by DNA evidence after serving nearly half his life in prison after being wrongfully convicted of rape. It is the 12th such case in Dallas County alone of a conviction being overturned by DNA evidence since 2001.
Finally, sentencing expert Doug Berman provides this post and related links explaining why the Supreme Court’s fixation on death penalty cases is not such a good thing.

And about those declining oil markets

oreillyconfused6.jpgCrude oil fell to $50 a barrel earlier this week, the lowest price since early 2005 and a continuation of a steady decline in price since the market hit $80 a barrel last year. Why those greedy oil companies would continue to allow crude oil prices to fall after last year’s election (rather than simply before) has not yet been explained by the O’Reilly-type conspiracy theorists, but Clear Thinkers favorite James Hamilton analyzes the data and concludes that there has not been any dramatic shift in the underlying market forces that would explain the decline. Professor Hamilton believes that fundamentals generally drive the price of oil, so he notes the trendy belief that speculators in the oil markets drove last year’s price hike:

What about attributing the run-up in oil prices almost to $80 a barrel, and now the latest drop back near $50, entirely to speculation, without any reference to fundamentals? The reason Iíve resisted that hypothesis is that itís based on the premise that the folks who manage these funds are just throwing their money away.

Thus, Professor Hamilton observes:

Until U.S. and Chinese oil demand are kept in check, and until big production increases are forthcoming, it’s hard for me to see how the price could continue to plunge.
My advice to would-be speculators remains that fundamentals are ultimately what must drive the market. Anyone who believes otherwise should not expect to hang onto their wealth for long.

Check out the entire post, as well as some of the insightful comments.

Your Congress and Justice Department at work

online gambling3.jpgAs noted earlier here, here and here, the federal govenment’s crackdown on Internet gambling is a wasteful exercise in nanny-state futility. However, it also is damaging to foreign investment in American markets, which is also something that we should not take lightly.
Well, the modern-day Prohibition-protectors are at it again. Earlier this week, the founders of Internet payment-services company Neteller PLC — a publicly-traded London Stock Exchange company that merely facilitates payments to many online gambing sites — were arrested and charged with conspiracy in connection with the transfer of billions of dollars of Internet gambling proceeds. The Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office charged Stephen Eric Lawrence and John David Lefebvre, with conspiracy to transfer funds with the intent to promote illegal gambling, charges which carry a possible sentence of 20 years in prison. Lawrence was arrested in the Virgin Islands and Lefebvre was hauled off to jail in Malibu.
What level of waste regarding the destruction of lives, careers and wealth will it take before Congress and the Justice Department learn that enforcement of paternalistic laws criminalizing something that is not even a particularly serious problem is bad public policy? Along those lines, the Washington Post’s Andrew Beyer reports on how the prohibition-style legislation has already had a detrimental impact on American gambling consumers and an innovative company.

The Murray education series

rice_5.jpgThe American Enterprise Institute’s W. H. Brady Scholar, Charles Murray, completes today a provocative three-part series in the WSJ’s OpinionJournal on education in America (earlier installments are here and here.
As with Murray’s many books and this earlier piece on reforming welfare, Murray presents his thoughts on education in a compelling and provocative manner, urging us to modify our thoughts and societal prejudices regarding education and intelligence. Murray’s emphasis on IQ as a standard for tailoring education puts some people off, which is unfortunate. As he concludes below, Murray’s purpose is to provoke discussion on changing attitudes and prejudices that undermine productive and sensitive reforms in our educational system:

The aim here is not to complete an argument but to begin a discussion; not to present policy prescriptions, but to plead for greater realism in our outlook on education. Accept that some children will be left behind other children because of intellectual limitations, and think about what kind of education will give them the greatest chance for a fulfilling life nonetheless. Stop telling children that they need to go to college to be successful, and take advantage of the other, often better ways in which people can develop their talents. Acknowledge the existence and importance of high intellectual ability, and think about how best to nurture the children who possess it.

Don’t miss this series. The three installments are as follows:

Intelligence in the Classroom: Half of all children are below average, and teachers can do only so much for them.
What’s Wrong With Vocational School? Too many Americans are going to college.
Aztecs vs. Greeks: Those with superior intelligence need to learn to be wise.

The Texans’ playoff star

Gaffney-tie.jpgIt’s not as bad as that whole Vince Young thing, but Badsports’ Kevin Whited and Scott over at H-Town Sports do raise a valid question in wondering how wide receiver Jabar Gaffney (the second draft pick in the Texans’ history) has gone from Texans castoff to playoff star for the New England Patriots?
I wondered the same thing before this season and why the Texans overpaid for a wide receiver in decline to replace Gaffney.
Meanwhile, consistent with that quality of decision-making, the Texans announced late last week that they are raising ticket prices for next season.

The man who would not shut up

oreillyconfused4.jpgFox News talk show host Bill O’Reilly has some strange ideas about energy prices, but he remains a popular — and quite wealthy — television demagogue. This Cathy Young/Reason article sums up O’Reilly’s demagogy well:

OíReilly has not lost the independent streak that sets him apart from GOP apparatchiks like Sean Hannity. But shrill, intolerant rhetoric has almost entirely eclipsed intelligent discussion on his show, and his pugnacious but likable populism has given way to a paranoid and venomous self-aggrandizement.
OíReilly cultivates an image of a giant almost single-handedly fighting for ìthe folksî against slimy politicians, elitist journalists, nutty professors, namby-pamby judges, and greedy corporations. Sometimes he champions unquestionably good causes, such as the rights of abused children. But even then, he undercuts his own stance with grandstanding and selective presentation of facts.

Meanwhile, this Jacob Heilbrunn/NY Times Book Review article reviews Marvin Kitman’s The Man Who Would Not Shut Up (St. Martin’s Press 2007), which tracks O’Reilly’s career as a local television news reporter into wealthy demagogue. Heilbrunn notes:

“[T]here is something more than a little nonsensical than a little nonsensical in OíReillyís lachrymose nostalgia about his humble origins, as well as in his self-important declarations about his heroic battle to save America from the cultural elites.” [. . .]
. . . OíReillyís struggle isnít about conservative ideas. Itís about parading his seething personal resentments in order to become the very thing he purports to despise: a celebrity.

The struggle of recovery made worse

new_orleans.gifAlthough the Bush Administration’s troubles in devising and implementing a workable strategy for bringing civil order to Baghdad receives most of the mainstream’s media attention, the failure of government to facilitate order in New Orleans and rebuilding throughout the Hurricane Katrina-ravaged Gulf Coast region is a more appalling failure (earlier post here).
It’s not as if my expectations for government in the New Orleans region are all that high — I’d be satisfied with ensuring law and order, making sure that basic services are provided and creating an environment where entreprenuers will take the risk of starting businesses that will create badly-needed jobs for the residents of the area. In this NY Times article, Adam Nossiter continues his series of excellent series of articles over the past year regarding the failure of the local and state governments in New Orleans to ensure law and order and the devastating effect that failure is having on the region.
Meanwhile, in another not as well-reported failure of government, this NY Times article reports on the Oreck Corporation’s decision to move its maufacturing facility and 500 jobs from the Gulf Coast region of Mississippi to Tennessee, in large part because of the company’s difficulties in arranging insurance for its operations in Mississippi. As Ted Frank observes, the lack of insurance coverage is the direct result of Mississippi courts expansion of the coverage of insurance contracts beyond their plain terms and the state legislature’s response to those court decisions, which “has [made] things worse: criticize the businesses who have left, and seek to further regulate the price of insurance, despite thousands of years of evidence that limiting the price will reduce the amount supplied and lead to shortages.”
But at least the region has (for this season anyway) a good professional football team, which continues to exist in New Orleans only because local and state governments in Louisiana found the time and resources to arrange several hundred million in emergency funding for the team and its facilities. And even that subsidy might not work in the long run. As usual, the government has its priorities in order.
By the way, while on the subject of interesting Ted Frank blog posts, don’t miss this one.

The Power of Choice

milton-friedman-6.jpgGreg Mankiw passes along that PBS has announced that it will broadcast The Power of Choice, a documentary about Milton Friedman, on January 29th.
This promises to be a special show and one that should not be missed by anyone who is interested in the course of economics and capitalism in American society. The preview for the show is up on YouTube and can be viewed here.

The Admiral of San Antonio

David%20Robinson_vi.jpgOne of my sisters, Mary, is a pediatrician who lives in Boerne and works in San Antonio.
Although sister Mary couldn’t care less about professional sports in general and professional basketball in particular, she knows who former San Antonio Spurs center David Robinson is and admires him a great deal. This NY Times article explains why.
Robinson made a lot of money in San Antone while playing for the Spurs, embraced the community during his playing days and decided to stick around and give back to the community after his playing career was over. Bully for him.