November 10th, 2009

Let states lead the way: Washington's one-size-fits-all reform won't work

From http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/05/AR200911...

By Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry

Friday, November 6, 2009

Congress is on the verge of enacting the largest unfunded mandate in American history. At a time when most states are struggling with rising unemployment, declining tax revenue and the worst national economic climate in 30 years, Congress is demonstrating that it is more out of touch than ever.

The Democratic health "reform" bill in the Senate would require states to expand Medicaid to include all people earning up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level, or $29,327 for a family of four. House Democrats want to require expansion to 150 percent of the poverty level, or $33,075 for a family of four. Even Texas, which has a balanced budget and nearly $9 billion in its rainy-day fund, isn't prepared to absorb this type of blow.

Complaints from majorities of Republican and Democratic governors alike continue to fall on deaf ears. Congress seems intent on forcing a one-size-fits-all mandate on states, some of which actually have solutions to repair their health-care systems that Washington is preventing them from trying.

Texas, for example, has adopted approaches to controlling health-care costs while improving choice, advancing quality of care and expanding coverage. Consider the successful 2003 tort reform. Fewer frivolous lawsuits have attracted record numbers of doctors to the state as medical malpractice insurance premiums dropped by half. Christus Health, a large Catholic nonprofit system with a significant presence in Texas, spent about $100 million on liability defense payments in 2003. Last year, Christus spent $2.3 million on such payments. Much of that savings has gone into expanding health-care services in low-income neighborhoods.

You might think Washington would be curious about plans to provide more low-income Texans with insurance, reduce expensive emergency-room visits for basic care and make it easier to buy into employer-sponsored insurance. Unfortunately, Washington has failed for 18 months to give Texas permission to use Medicaid dollars for these policies.

Historically, the federal government has paid an average of 57 percent of state Medicaid costs. In a transparent attempt to bribe governors and state legislatures into accepting 15 million to 20 million new people nationwide onto Medicaid rolls, Congress is proposing a series of additional subsidies to states to cover 90 percent of the costs of the newly mandated populations. In true Washington form, these handouts would be debt-financed, through the generosity of foreign bankers, to be paid back by future generations of American taxpayers.

Expanding the Medicaid program in Texas alone to include an additional 2 million people would cost $20 billion to $30 billion over the next 10 years. Regardless of how that cost is shared between the federal and state governments down the road, we believe that level of new mandated spending is grossly unacceptable.

Even more stunning than this fiscal irresponsibility is Congress's disregard for the quality of the Medicaid program and the well-being of the people in it. Medicaid is the lowest payer in the health-care system. It reimburses physicians 20 to 30 percent less than even Medicare, which pays costs at a much lower rate than do private insurers. If a doctor or hospital is facing bills, staff salaries and medical malpractice premiums, it is obvious which patients will get preference.

We note with concern that the Government Accountability Office reported in January that Medicaid made an estimated $32.7 billion in improper payments in 2007, equal to a full 10 percent of the program. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.) pointed out that the average improper payment rate for non-health government programs is 3.9 percent. He introduced an amendment in the Senate Finance Committee that would have prevented expansions of Medicaid until the secretary of health and human services could certify that its improper payment rate was equivalent to that of non-health programs, but that amendment failed on a party-line vote. The rate of improper payments needs to be addressed.

The Democratic health-care proposals do nothing to expand choice, lower costs and empower patients. They would add to, without reforming, bulky, overpriced programs that would in turn add to our already crushing burden of national debt. Reckless expansion would ultimately reduce the quality of U.S. medical care.

Such tragedies can be averted if the powers-that-be in Washington set aside their devotion to centrally planned, debt-financed, one-size-fits-all solutions and work cooperatively with those laboratories of innovation known as states. Otherwise, we'll end up with a one-size-hurts-all situation.

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July 30th, 2009

One Page Says It All

Want to know more about pending healthcare legislation? You could read the 1000+ page bill. Or you could check out just one very informative flowchart detailing the effect of the legislation.

healthcare_chart

To view the whole page click here.

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June 27th, 2009

Obama and Congress Vow to Raise Energy Prices

Under cap and trade energy prices will skyrocket.  Don't take my word for it though:

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May 23rd, 2009

New Energy is Costly

To the Herald Times editor:

Your May 5 editorial correctly states that Americans still don’t know how much more they will pay for electricity if Congress succeeds in passing a cap-and-trade tax.

This is not because these costs cannot be accurately estimated, but rather, because any objective analysis will show that Americans will see substantial increases in their utility costs. So it is not surprising that cap-and-trade boosters prefer not to discuss such pesky details.

Instead, they run full-page ads that misleadingly predict an abundance of new green jobs.

The White House concedes that cap-and-trade could net nearly $2 trillion for the federal government in the first eight years through 2020. Assuming 120 million American households, that works out to a cost of roughly $2,000 a year per American family.

My guess is that it will actually cost even more. In Germany, where the government is subsidizing thousands of giant windmills all over the countryside, electric bills are soaring and consumers are now angry. The average increase was 38 percent in 2007.

The irony is that while Germany now gets more than 15 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, it also has the dubious distinction of having the highest electric bills in all Europe.

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April 12th, 2009

Let the sun shine in on Hill et al

From the Herald Times: April 10, 2009

Speaking of volunteers, Baron Hill was in town recently and toured the Volunteers in Medicine clinic on Second Street. He couldn’t have picked a better spot to observe firsthand how determined people can choose to make a difference in their community.

Earlier in the day, he met with an array local officials about the status of stimulus funds that might be coming our way. This meeting was closed to the public, and at least one interested citizen was turned away.

That may not have been the best way to handle a timely topic that many of Hill’s constituents are vitally interested in. A meeting at which the public was allowed to listen in might have been a better choice. We common folks know how to conduct ourselves in a meeting with officials. Curiosity about how the political sausage is made is a legitimate taxpayer concern.

Source: http://www.heraldtimesonline.com/stories/2009/04/10/digitalcity.qp-50004...

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April 10th, 2009

Stop Spending Our Future

From Tad DeHaven at Cato@Liberty

That’s the title of an alarming, but informative, video over at Reason TV.  The video contains lots of eye-popping comparisons between amounts being spent on bailouts/”stimulus” and previous big-ticket government expenditures like the World War II and the New Deal.

And if you haven’t done so already, check out my colleague Dan Mitchell’s videos on the fallacies of Keynesian economics and the folly of so-called fiscal “stimulus” packages.

Source: http://www.cato-at-liberty.org/2009/04/10/stop-spending-our-future/

 

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February 21st, 2009

If the Pelosi-Obama-Reid Trillion Dollar Debt Plan Were a Country…

… which country would it be? Just so we can all wrap our heads around how big President Obama’s Trillion-Dollar Debt Plan is, this graphic compares the pre-Senate debt plan costs with the GDPs of major nations: obama-debt-plan-size2.jpg.jpg

Just think of it: The deficit-spending package passed by House Democrats already is bigger than 168 of the 180 national economies measured by the World Bank. Now, in the Senate, it threatens to break into the Top 10 by catching up with Russia (No. 11) and then Brazil (No. 10).

Source: http://blog.heritage.org/2009/02/03/if-the-pelosi-obama-reid-trillion-do...

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February 12th, 2009

Do the American People Care

Chuck Schumer says "the American people really don't care" about pork spending.

 

From the Wall Street Journal Opinion Page

"The bill will mark the largest single-year increase in domestic federal spending since World War II; it will send the budget deficit to heights not seen in 60 years; and it will establish a new and much higher spending baseline for years to come. Combine this new spending, and the borrowing it will require, with the trillions of dollars still needed for the banking system, and we are about to test the outer limits of our national balance sheet...Americans need to understand the vast expansion of government they are getting -- and who voted to pass it."

Does Mr. Schumer really believe that the American people just don't care?

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December 23rd, 2008

Hill Trying To Do The Impossible

One thing not in dispute in the debate over the automakers’ bailout bill is that Indiana’s economic well-being is heavily at risk if General Motors, Chrysler or Ford go out of business.

No one is arguing with the Economic Policy Institute’s estimate that a shutdown of domestic automakers would put nearly 150,000 Hoosiers out of work.

Like most Hoosiers, I don’t want them to lose their jobs. But I have some serious doubts about the bailout because it is clear Congress intends to do a lot more meddling in the auto industry than just loan money.

Rep. Baron Hill, who voted for the bailout bill, is leading efforts to sharply increase the so-called Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards for domestic automobiles. Under his bill, H.R. 2927, Detroit would be pretty much limited to building and selling Prius clones.

Hill is trying to do the impossible — save the auto industry’s high-paying jobs while at the same time forcing domestic automakers to build cars that many Americans don’t want to buy. Detroit is capable of making great cars and trucks. If it could get its labor costs in line with its overseas competitors, it would once again be a formidable force in the market.

But Hill and Democrats in Congress are not going to let Detroit build the kinds of cars and trucks that would truly be competitive. This is bad news for Indiana and nearly 150,000 workers who could successfully compete if Congress would just let them.

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August 21st, 2008

More Questions for Hill

If nothing else, your Aug. 15 report on Baron Hill’s visit to New Albany seems to have finally smoked out the 9th District congressman on what he wants to do about high gasoline prices.

At the top of his list is “forcing” oil companies to drill on millions of acres of land that are already secured with leases.

Why he wants them to drill there is not clear. The oil companies say they are not drilling on this land because they aren’t sure there is enough oil to make it worthwhile. Perhaps Mr. Hill knows something they don’t?

Mr. Hill also invoked the House Democrats’ new-found mantra, “we can’t drill ourselves out of this problem,” and then in the very next breath declared his eagerness to vote on a bill that would end the ban on off-shore drilling in limited areas.

The bill he refers to would open up off-shore drilling in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico — but interestingly, not along the California coast which has the largest known reserves. I hope Mr. Hill will explain to voters before November why he is excluding California from his energy plan.

The Interior Department says the two biggest patches of untapped oil in America are under the California off-shore coastline and in the Alaskan National Wildlife Refuge. The latest estimates are that these two fields could provide up to 19 billion barrels, the equivalent of 30 years of imports from Saudi Arabia.

Most economists will tell you that expanding the supply of a commodity will lower its price. This would be a major-league expansion. I’d like to know why Mr. Hill thinks otherwise.

Finally, Mr. Hill wants to impose $10 billion worth of tax increases on oil companies. Does he really believe these tax increases would not be passed along to consumers at the pump?

I would like to hear his answer to that question, too.

It is apparent that Mr. Hill has figured out that we Hoosiers don’t like $4 per gallon gasoline. So why is he trying to push it to $5?

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About the Founder

Photo of Todd YoungTodd Young, an attorney at the southern Indiana law firm of Tucker and Tucker, P.C., was born August 24, 1972, a fifth generation Hoosier and the second of three children of Bruce and Nancy Young. Young lived in Marion County for several years before settling in Hamilton County, where he... Read more »