…goes to Washington (partial transcript over at Hot Air).
Category Archives: Political Commentary
Static Scoring Of Health-Care Costs
Yuval Levin notes that CBO is admitting that their projections are intrinsically wrong:
What we have here, in other words, is a frank admission by CBO that their methodology ignores the effects of policy changes on the behavior of both providers and consumers—effects which must, of course, be essential to the consequences of any health-care reform.
This methodological “gap” strongly favors the left in the health-care debate, because it assumes that the economics of health care are just a matter of manipulating levels of spending, and so that crude price controls will not affect access and quality and that market competition will not reduce costs. There is, of course, ample evidence of the former effect (especially in Medicaid, which in most states pays doctors at even lower rates than Medicare, at least for now), and there is some evidence of the latter too (though market forces haven’t had much of a chance to be tried, except in the Medicare prescription-drug benefit; other experiments (like Medicare advantage) all take place in the shadow of the existing fee-for-service Medicare system and so can’t really change the behavior of providers—they therefore have neither traditional Medicare’s ability to boss doctors around nor a market system’s ability to keep costs down, so they end costing no less than traditional Medicare, and sometimes even a little more.)
It’s the same kind of scam that they pull when they statically score the effect of a change in tax rates. It’s lunacy to assume that it will have no effect on behavior, and yet they do, and so delude themselves that they can predict with any confidence the resulting revenue.
Rethinking Space Transportation Regulation
Wayne Crews, one of my colleagues at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, has some thoughts at Forbes about how best to regulate the new private spaceflight industry.
[Update a while later]
Speaking of my CEI colleagues, Iain Murray has a new book out, titled Stealing You Blind: How Government Fat Cats Are Getting Rich Off of You. Sounds like the basic theme of the last three years. If not eighty.
One Generation Of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
…is enough. Unfortunately, they still infest the nation, and continue to call themselves “progressives,” remaining ignorant of their own intellectual history.
An April-October Marriage
Some thoughts, with a lot of amusing comments.
A Political Deadline For Afghan Troop Withdrawal?
You don’t say?
The 58-year-old Petraeus couched his committee answers in the standard Washington etiquette acknowledging civilian control of an obedient military.
However, his forthright replies rapidly reverberated across the Capitol, where so many in the political business are so ready to believe that the accelerated troop withdrawals were ordered by the Democrat more to enhance his troubled reelection plans, than because they would enhance the cause of crushing terrorist forces in Afghanistan.Afghan war US Sgt William Bee ducks just in time, file
Under questioning, Gen. Petraeus admitted today, “The ultimate [drawdown] decision was a more aggressive formulation, if you will, in terms of the timeline than what we had recommended.”
As previously noted, this not only has the potential to backfire, but a high probability of it. And it couldn’t happen to a more deserving politician.
Questions About NASA’s Heavy-Lift Plan
I ask them over at Popular Mechanics.
How Much Credibility Does The GOP Have On Taxes?
Not enough. And as he notes, the Democrats are completely hopeless.
“I Didn’t Create A Single Job”
At last, a presidential candidate who understand economics and the limits of government power:
“Don’t get me wrong,” Johnson said in a statement. “We are proud of this distinction. We had a 11.6 percent job growth that occurred during our two terms in office. But the headlines that accompanied that report – referring to governors, including me, as ‘job creators’ – were just wrong.”
“The fact is, I can unequivocally say that I did not create a single job while I was governor,” Johnson added. Instead, “we kept government in check, the budget balanced, and the path to growth clear of unnecessary regulatory obstacles.”
And the current gang in DC is doing exactly the opposite, so there’s no reason that continuing bad economic news should be “unexpected.”
[Update a couple minutes later]
The one stimulus that the government refuses to try:
It’s almost as if Washington envisions the economy not as a complex network of billions of voluntary, mutually beneficial relationships, but as a lawn mower which could be forced to run smoothly if only they’d yank hard enough on the starter cord.
Amid government’s rush to “do something,” we forget that, on a percentage basis, the nation’s most productive years, those in which the U.S. overtook Great Britain to become the world’s leading economic power, occurred prior to the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913. What many lawmakers and regulators are not considering here is the strong possibility that the stimulus and intervention have had a deleterious effect.
No, that couldn’t possibly be.
Et Tu, Jon Stewart?
He’s certainly not defending the BATF.