Often, when discussing our need to lower our deficit through controlling entitlements costs, I'll see or hear the argument that Social Security is insolvent and that our younger generations will never see their share of it.Yes, projected spending for Medicaid and Medicare is out of control; however, Social Security doesn't appear to fluctuate too much from the spending baseline.I can understand why someone who makes a living through investing retirement accounts would wish to see Social Security dismantled, but I feel that it's in the best interest of most Americans to continue to fund the program.There are only two ways that we will not receive our Social Security benefits:1) We allow them to take it away from us.2) We spend so much on programs other than Social Security that our country is too bankrupt to fund it.Those of us who are serious about reducing the deficit would benefit from investing less time and energy into railing against Social Security and focusing more on spending programs that are far less solvent.Every argument spent demagoguing Social Security's impact on our deficit distracts us from the urgency of resolving our rising health costs problem.
9/6/2011 2:50:37 PM
How can you not see that health care inflation and entitlements are interconnected? As health care costs continue to explode, so will the unfunded liabilities resulting from our entitlement system.Before I offer my explanation of why health care costs might be increasing at an abnormally high rate, I'd like to hear yours.
9/6/2011 3:17:23 PM
how is medicare not an entitlement? DOHAND, that SS projection is woefully inadequate. Baby Boomers retiring is going to massively increase outlays[Edited on September 6, 2011 at 6:29 PM. Reason : ]
9/6/2011 6:28:41 PM
The options for price increase are1. Too little supply - It's not lucrative to be a doctor -- too many years of school for too little reward. There are seemingly more lucrative (but unproductive) professions such as finance, business, and lawyering2. Too much demand - Baby boomers3. Too much inflation - Out of control financial sector pumping too many dollars into the real economy.I'd rank them as 3, 1, 2 in explanatory importance.[Edited on September 6, 2011 at 8:33 PM. Reason : .]
9/6/2011 8:32:29 PM
healthcare providers can basically charge whatever they want because they know either medicare or insurance will take the heat
9/6/2011 9:21:00 PM
single payer could've fixed all of this
9/6/2011 9:23:54 PM
lol no it wouldnt
9/6/2011 9:24:15 PM
they arent paying attention to cost now they wouldnt do it in a single payer system either.identifying the causes of healthcare cost increases and putting a stop to them is independent of the payment system. but no ones gonna touch that shit because healthcare is defense 2.0
9/6/2011 9:29:43 PM
9/6/2011 9:33:03 PM
what's so wrong with just saving/investing your own money for retirement?(besides the fact that most americans are too fucking stupid to do so, of course)
9/6/2011 10:14:11 PM
because the gov't can't control your life as easily and garner votes for Democrats that way. duh
9/6/2011 10:15:46 PM
9/6/2011 10:19:08 PM
haahahahahahaha. actually, it's much easier to make it affordable if you get the government the fuck out of it in the first place. is it any surprise that costs skyrocketed after Medicare was created?
9/6/2011 10:31:46 PM
Generally, it costs more money to take care of people than to let them suffer.
9/6/2011 10:48:33 PM
because the only two solutions are "gov't runs everything" and "nobody gets healthcare"
9/6/2011 10:54:51 PM
ITs not "nobody" its the vulnerable. The only two options are private companies provide workers with jobs and healthcare because they are decent or the government steps in and a. forces companies to be decent or b. provides what the companies don't provide.
9/6/2011 11:02:33 PM
9/6/2011 11:03:28 PM
i didn't assume that. i just said it was the only alternative to government healthcare.
9/6/2011 11:04:55 PM
which is still totally retarded. employment sponsored healthcare is also part of the problem. and yet you hark it as one of the only "solutions".and, yes, that's a fucking assumption. to say "it's A or B" and B specifically is not allowed in A, is to assume that B is a viable solution[Edited on September 6, 2011 at 11:08 PM. Reason : ]
9/6/2011 11:08:07 PM
your solution is healthcare only for the richshow me a high paying job that doesnt include healthcare as a benefit[Edited on September 6, 2011 at 11:12 PM. Reason : k]
9/6/2011 11:11:51 PM
hahaha. again, you are assuming that it has to be tied to a job. it would be much better if it weren't, in so many fucking ways. yet, being the troll you are, you will give us the false dilemma of employer-sponsored versus gov't provided
9/6/2011 11:15:55 PM
if employer nor government provides the means of healthcare, who the hell does? Is there a health fairy that will visit people who leave their cancerous cells under the pillow?If employer sponsored is so bad, why do all high paying jobs offer it?
9/6/2011 11:19:25 PM
9/6/2011 11:24:24 PM
9/6/2011 11:32:56 PM
Wells Fargo is getting rid of their HMO and PPO plans due to "rising healthcare costs and increased healthcare regulations".Coming soon to a company near you. They will still offer HSA/HRA but that means you pay in full up to your deductible (Say, $1,000) and then you have 80% co-insurance (you pay the other 20% out of pocket, no more $20 co-pays).I for one think this is a great way to control healthcare costs as it's bullshit that people can just go to the doctor for $25 once a week while I get stuck paying for them.I'm for changes like this that control the cost of healthcare, but there are going to be a lot of families freaking out about this.I think it's funny that everyone thought free healthcare was a good idea until they realized someone has to pay for it.
9/6/2011 11:45:53 PM
9/7/2011 12:00:32 AM
9/7/2011 7:41:12 AM
9/7/2011 7:52:08 AM
You got a gun?
9/7/2011 8:43:37 AM
^^^http://www.medscape.com/features/slideshow/compensation/2011Is there any reason your wife's "sample" of salaries is way more than this survey's medians and averages? $150-$350k seems like the right range.[Edited on September 7, 2011 at 8:49 AM. Reason : .]
9/7/2011 8:48:58 AM
^hahah. Yeah, ALL doctors make 1M to 2M and work 3 days a week. Good lord. Maybe she audits Dr. Oz and Dr. Philbtw, I do know an ophthalmologist that I believe makes around 1M, but he busts his ass. (sees 40+ patients in a morning) They own their own surgery suite, that is where the money is.[Edited on September 7, 2011 at 8:59 AM. Reason : .]
9/7/2011 8:56:48 AM
9/7/2011 9:10:38 AM
So, the reasons presented appear to be multiple and of unclear magnitudes. A. Lack of price seeking behavior on the part of consumers due to 3rd party payer systems (insurance/medicare/medicaid) B. Lack of supply of new doctors due to artificial restrictions upon medical schools by the AMAC. Wasted effort on protective medicine to avoid lawsuitsAny others I missed? The solutions are quite easy, we just need to adopt the regulatory regime of any other industrialized country. First we need to crush the AMA and allow an increased supply of doctors. Second, we need to first make medicare means tested and give those that remain a high deductible with a low lifetime cap of, say, $200k.
9/7/2011 9:20:11 AM
9/7/2011 12:50:06 PM
there just needs to be a restored relation between only DOCTOR and PATIENT. NO GOVERMENT.
9/7/2011 12:50:33 PM
rabble rabble rabble rabble All doctor's drive mercedes and don't care about me and are millionares and are bankrupting america.I will be leaving medical school with over 250000 in debt with interest that will amount to well over 1.5 mil to pay off, I have been working over 65 hrs a week for free (actually i've been paying through student loans to work that) for the past two years, and I will work greater than 70 hrs a week for 40,000 grand a year starting next year. when I leave residency in 3 years I will be lucky to pull in 65 grand a yr once you factor in my student loans and malpractice. So next time you see your primary care doc you should thank him cuz he sure as shit is doing it for the money.
9/7/2011 4:44:02 PM
kinda fumbled on your closing statement there, doc
9/7/2011 4:54:23 PM
I pretty much agree with the OP.Nothing other than that to contribute.
9/7/2011 6:33:47 PM
^^^ You mean NO INSURANCE COMPANY. At least that's my experience -- insurance companies are shitty, and the interaction between me, doctors, and insurance companies is a bureaucratic nightmare. No government involved.
9/7/2011 6:35:10 PM
9/7/2011 7:37:50 PM
^lets punish him then. We should make it that noone wants to be doctors. That way they wont earn as much as they do. Make everyone feel better.
9/7/2011 10:36:17 PM
That is not how a stable system works. Doctors should be paid enough for the supply and quality of doctors to satisfy demand, which is not what we have now, with the AMA artificially restricting the supply of doctors.
9/8/2011 12:48:47 AM
^^Read the chapter in Predictably Irrational on the effects of money on motivation. It's pretty insightful.
9/8/2011 1:22:15 AM
^^^ im not for shitting on doctors, but considering he doesn't live extravagantly and manages his money he'll be a multi millionaire by his mid 30s...doubt he'd argue doctors don't make enough
9/8/2011 8:02:37 PM
9/8/2011 8:27:35 PM
9/8/2011 8:55:47 PM
9/8/2011 9:07:37 PM
9/8/2011 10:48:13 PM
^ Point is proven? That is a low logic bar. You provide no backing for your claims. Google is your friend. The AMA at least talks like it wants to increase residency spots, and as all they actually can do is talk and lobby ... the ball is in Congress' court.http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2009/05/25/prse0528.htm
9/9/2011 7:14:54 AM
Why is residency a requirement requiring federal funding? the AMA says so. Why did we go decades without a single new medical school? The AMA said so. This is a government enforced cartel and should be broken up. [Edited on September 9, 2011 at 8:14 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/9/2011 8:10:59 AM