You don't believe in the AMA cartel? That means you believe that anyone should be able to do anything to anyone if they call themselves a "doctor," because no one will have the ability to do any research before using their services. Without ham-fisted regulation, no one will know how to make decisions, bro.
9/9/2011 11:36:04 AM
1 to 2 million, damn!We do tax returns for quite a few doctors. Off the top of my head, the plastic surgeon who has his own practice makes near the top. We do a bunch of radiology docs but they're making nowhere near 1 mil. I'd say most are around 500k or so. The highest paid doctor I've done a tax return for was a neurologist from Duke who makes somewhere near 800k.I mean, with their investments and whatnot, their tax return is showing > $1 mil in income but it's not all from salaries.
9/9/2011 11:50:16 AM
PCPs make $90000 - $150000 ...in salary.Hospital doctors make $110000 - $450000 depending on their specialty and department title ...in salary.Specialists in private practices can pull in $200000 - $900000 depending on whether they own the practice, whether they preform surgeries themselves, how much they are putting back into the practice, etc, ...in salary.I'm sure that after investments and before deductions, a lot of their balance sheets are =$1mil.
9/9/2011 12:03:42 PM
looks like crocoduck just got schooled by LoneSnark. you were saying?
9/9/2011 2:53:03 PM
9/9/2011 6:21:19 PM
but they all have socialized medicine! why the hell would want to leave that utopia for care elsewhere?
9/9/2011 6:35:00 PM
9/9/2011 11:20:11 PM
9/9/2011 11:34:47 PM
9/9/2011 11:45:11 PM
9/28/2011 1:29:51 AM
9/30/2011 12:10:05 AM
9/30/2011 12:43:57 PM
9/30/2011 6:50:34 PM
Then you're clearly ignoring the graph, because it shows a significantly large increase in Social Security spending over the next two decades.Also, Social Security doesn't fit the definition of a Ponzi scheme, because it doesn't pay out abnormally high returns.Where are you getting this notion that Social Security is not solvent? Social Security has accounted for and planned for the baby boomers' retirement for decades.[Edited on September 30, 2011 at 7:55 PM. Reason : ]
9/30/2011 7:55:07 PM
9/30/2011 8:07:11 PM
Both your definitions for Ponzi scheme and insolvent are incorrect.It is solvent. It's tweaked to account for changes in the population as well as changes in the cost of living. The Social Security trust fund is funded and is not going to run out of funds until long after the baby boomers have retired, and that is with no needed tweaking whatsoever.Again, just because you say that the graph is bullshit doesn't it make it so.I wise user once said:
9/30/2011 8:46:33 PM
9/30/2011 8:49:11 PM
I'm pretty sure insolvent means unable to pay returns that are due. Seeing as how Social Security is able to do so - not only today, but for the next two decades - I would say that it is solvent.
9/30/2011 8:58:14 PM
9/30/2011 9:03:31 PM
They would only have to make marginal adjustments to maintain its solvency for an additional fifty-five years.I believe quick return implies an abnormally high return.However, if not:The Ponzi scheme usually entices new investors by offering higher returns than other investments, in the form of short-term returns that are either abnormally high or unusually consistent.
9/30/2011 9:14:06 PM
9/30/2011 9:18:04 PM
I've gotta bail on this discussion for now - enjoying it, though. Before addressing your most recent post, I'll just say:Ponzi scheme is based on the market and profit; Social Security is not.Those who have paid into Social Security have received what they had invested; the same can't be said of Ponzi schemes.
9/30/2011 9:37:48 PM
9/30/2011 9:58:50 PM
10/1/2011 1:54:13 AM
I'll try to find time to address your arguments, but ^^that is a solid response.Also, I appreciated the health care discussion that occurred earlier in the thread.[Edited on October 3, 2011 at 1:21 AM. Reason : Just saying, "Kudos."]
10/3/2011 1:20:56 AM
Didn't want to start a new thread but:Check out these crazy healthcare statisticsThe top 5% of US healthcare spenders account for almost 50% of Total healtchare expenditures http://motherjones.com/mojo/2011/11/other-1-percent-sick-people
11/29/2011 11:23:50 AM
11/29/2011 11:29:16 AM
Quite right. Medicare/medicaid should have a lifetime cap, something like $400k.
11/29/2011 11:31:05 AM
I suppose thinking that 5% of the people spend on average $50,000 a year might be thinking about it the wrong way, although I'm sure there are some people that need continuing care that could rack up numbers like those. But Im guessing that a bunch of people rotate in and out of that 5%????? As in people get seriously sick but then get better a year or so later and spend much less the next year (but someone else gets sick to take their place in the 5%)????
11/29/2011 11:35:31 AM
^^Let them die after that.Didn't Obamacare remove lifetime caps? Now we want them back on? Does not compute. Force private companies to remove caps, force people to go onto government health care, and then put caps and rationing on government healthcare. AWESOME.[Edited on November 29, 2011 at 11:42 AM. Reason : ]
11/29/2011 11:39:10 AM
just went to the actual paper and it says
11/29/2011 11:41:57 AM
Social security is the hands-down best example of why, allowing private entities to opt out of government assistance, citizens can profit for themselves by providing for their own securities. Last time I had to attend a benefits/retirement briefing, I think the government estimate for your return on investment into social security is something like 2%-or-less which barely matches long-term inflation. Let me take that same amount of money and invest it in my TSP (government version of a 401K) and I promise I'll return a better investment than 2%. Hell, let me stick my social security deductions into a government bond and I'll even do better than 2%.The same thing is true for healthcare, but people have a harder time saving for medical expenses. Today you see a lot of people voluntarily depositing money into the 401K and IRA. No one is telling them to do that. Because of their investments, they will have post-retirement funds. For medical expenses, since we access the money more frequently, IMHO you are going to have a harder time convincing people to responsibly set money aside for the dentist, optometrist, etc... The "best" solution I could think of for reducing healthcare costs would be to remove the "industry of overhead" (insurance) from the equation and move towards something along the lines of a Flex Spending Account (FSA) or whatever the civilian equivalent is. This allows someone to take money straight out of their paycheck and place it into a medical-expenses-only account that can pay providers directly or reimburse individuals after services have been rendered.It's a model that already exists and works as an insurance supplement (I don't personally have one, but a lot of my coworkers do). It's a good system that makes perfect mathematical sense for most individuals in the long term. The problem is that going to a 100% FSA-styled system would require completely eliminating an entire industry that employs hundreds of thousands and has a strong lobbying effort. Good luck.
11/29/2011 11:46:00 AM
11/29/2011 12:40:37 PM
That's kind of like asking, "How would kids put away 300k for a law degree in the absence of student loans?"Obviously, they wouldn't. Prices would come down. Would all these doctors that are trained to perform these procedures just stop working? Nope. They'd just have to negotiate.Who would stand to lose the most if we restored the client-doctor relationship? The insurance companies and the government.
11/29/2011 12:47:11 PM
11/29/2011 1:06:27 PM
A law degree is an investment that pays back.Your point relies on a lot of shaky assumptions:-the price of expensive medical procedures is highly dependent on the compensation to a doctor-doctors are in it for the money-doctors don't have an array of lucrative alternatives-health-care costs SHOULD depend on the demand and supply, in other words PROFITI reject those
11/29/2011 1:21:41 PM
So a lot of people on other forums are operating under the assumption that a majority of the big healthcare spenders are probably older, which ?I think? makes pretty good sense. I really liked this quote with respect to our current healthcare/medicare system:
11/29/2011 1:27:06 PM
11/29/2011 1:27:52 PM
That graph about health care costs per spending level doesn't make any sense.The top 50% account for 97% of spending? No. It's cumulative. So the top 100% account for 97% of spending.Wait. What?
11/29/2011 1:39:01 PM
It would be the top 50% of the population (with the highest annual medical bills, aka the 50% of the population that is the sickest) account for 97% of the dollars spent on healthcare (excluding the things I mentioned in an earlier post) . . . .. . . I think.Im gonna look at that report later and see if they break it down by age and what the money is spent on -- I wanna see how much is spent on drugs.[Edited on November 29, 2011 at 1:53 PM. Reason : edit]
11/29/2011 1:51:40 PM
11/29/2011 2:07:53 PM
11/29/2011 2:13:50 PM
11/29/2011 2:42:32 PM
11/29/2011 2:49:49 PM
11/29/2011 2:55:17 PM
^^right, per capita for the bottom 50% is left off but from the article:
11/29/2011 2:58:18 PM
11/29/2011 3:11:13 PM
11/29/2011 4:00:06 PM
Medical expenses are not voluntary
11/29/2011 5:49:54 PM
Neither are hunger expenses. Should we have a single payer food distribution program administered by the state? If not, why not?
11/29/2011 5:56:02 PM