Warren's Support for M4A is a Total Fraud Because She Refuses to Admit It Would Necessitate a Middle-Class Tax Increase

Anyone with at least half of a functional brain understands that, medical care being as expensive as it is, a single-payer system in which the government pays for all warranted health care will require quite a significant increase in taxes paid by the middle class. Bernie readily acknowledges this, following up with the key point that everyone currently paying for medical insurance will end up with a major NET SAVINGS under M4A, because they won't be paying the rapacious medical insurance industry. And, for workers whose medical insurance is now paid for largely by their employers, Bernie's new labor proposal would require those employers to pass much or all of their savings resulting from M4A (since they will no longer need to buy insurance) to their employees in increased pay and/or benefits. In other words, except for people currently hazardously going without insurance, nearly everyone will SAVE money on M4A, while gaining assured medical care when they need it, regardless of their employment status (meaning that they have the latitude to quit lousy jobs without risking loss of medical care). Bernie is quite straightforward when he explains these points.

But how about Warren? She has refused to acknowledge that M4A would require a middle-class tax increase!

https://theresurgent.com/2019/07/30/warren-claims-medicare-for-all-will-...

What this means is that she has no real intention to fight for M4A - she's just telling people what she thinks they want to hear, to gain the nomination. If M4A is ever going to become law, it's because the public understands what it entails, and recognizes that they'll be better off financially and healthwise under this new system, despite a tax increase. That's why Bernie is trying to be transparently honest about this.

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Wally's picture

She voted for Trump's defense budgets not once but twice. And to increase them both times.

How the hell are any of her plans going to find the funding without significant cuts to the defense (sic) budget?

I was fooled by Obama twice.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWuqpTk5ZZM]

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Bollox Ref's picture

Stop fighting silly wars that never work, reduce the 'defense' budget by loadsa money, and I'm sure you'll find funds for healthcare for all without inflated 'prices'. If individuals want to buy extra 'health' 'insurance' for private care, well that's up to them.

(Edited)

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

Whenever Warren is pressed to answer questions about healthcare, she goes on about health insurance companies.

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It's simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves that we've been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back. Carl Sagan

WaterLily's picture

@chambord Is the tell.

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Not Henry Kissinger's picture

She's just like Bernie, only different...

Warren uses public messaging in her crusades as well. And I have no doubt that, as president, Sanders aides would scour the U.S. Code to make change if stymied by the political opposition. But the natural inclinations of the two senators are clear: Sanders works from the outside, Warren dives in to find ways to make progress. They can be complementary skills, and in a polarized country with lots of checks and balances, both will be important in the next Democratic administration.

But to know where someone is headed, it’s worth looking at where they’ve been. And this has been Warren’s approach since before being elected: knowing what levers of the administrative state to pull, and then using outside activism and insider relentlessness to get them pulled. It’s a worthwhile quality in a chief executive, not least because it shows a desire to do something in office beyond getting re-elected.

The Warren strategy seems clear:

  1. cling to Bernie like industrial velcro to split the Progressive vote,
  2. wink and nod to establishment types that, despite her 'insider relentlessness', Liz won't make structural changes.
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The current working assumption appears to be that our Shroedinger's Cat system is still alive. But what if we all suspect it's not, and the real problem is we just can't bring ourselves to open the box?

ludwig ii's picture

@Not Henry Kissinger Ted talked like an outsider, and made some in his party uncomfortable, but he was obviously establishment through and through. He was always sucking up to other candidates, hoping to be everyone's 2nd or 3rd choice when their fave dropped out. Hopefully the analogy holds and we get to see Liz pick a fake running mate a la Carly. Julian Castro?

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Alligator Ed's picture

@Not Henry Kissinger China Joe's popularity took a dive from 29% to 19% according to Monmouth poll. That's 10% drop. Half went to Bernie and Half went to Warren. They seem to be gaining different segments of those who initially backed Biden. As they say in the political campaign game, the two aren't cannabalizing each other's vote.

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longtalldrink's picture

@Alligator Ed I believe they Bernie and Liz appeal to two different constituencies. Bernie appeals to the true leftist, and Liz appeals to the (won't go away) Hillary crowd. Ya know...the whole "vagina" thing.

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Well done is better than well said-Ben Franklin

Pluto's Republic's picture

But how about Warren? She has refused to acknowledge that M4A would require a middle-class tax increase!

The stated tax increase is misinformation. It's an ugly poison pill that Republicans want to plant.

What families want to know is that their monthly (or yearly) total out of pocket costs for health care "insurance" will be about half what they are currently paying. Additional savings will come from substantial savings on pharmaceuticals and the lack of crippling co-pays. There will be no need to write a check to the insurance companies for $1,000+ every month for a family of four. Americans will have a lot more disposable income that they did before M4A, apart from any tax increases.

And one more thing. No more medical bankruptcies. Currently, two-thirds of the million or so personal bankruptcies that wipe out families every year are caused by exhorbitant medical bills. And the majority of these people had good health insurance!

We need to stop talking about this basic human right like a bunch of losers.

If you tell Americans that Medicare-for-all will eliminate premiums and reduce out-of-pocket costs for most Americans, the support for M4A increases to 67-30. If you tell them it will guarantee health care as a human right for all Americans, the support goes to 71-27.

However, Americans also have wariness about reforms specifically, where the track record is not so great. The last liberal attempt to fix the system — thanks to Obama selling out to the health care profiteers — manifestly failed to cover everyone or put American health care on a sustainable footing. By aborting the Public Option, ObamaCare could not bend the cost curve — thus, the health care "marketplace" didn't work at all how it was supposed to.

"Oh great, the freaking Democrats are going to 'help' us again," millions are probably thinking.

Add to this the medical lobby that is dead set against any reform that cuts into their gargantuan profits. They are flooding the media with propaganda to misinform the public and mobilize their cynicism. And, it's working.

Right now, 69 percent of Americans mistakenly say they think they would still have to pay deductibles and co-pays under Medicare-for-all, and 54 percent wrongly think they will still have to pay premiums.

But, neither is true — there is no cost-sharing whatsoever except for prescription drugs, and that is capped at $200 per year. Even more incredible, under the Sanders bill, not only is medical care covered, but for the first time the program will include dental, vision, nursing, and long-term care for all Americans, as well. This plan is wildly better than virtually any private plan — and would be accepted at every medical provider in the land. People would be celebrating in the streets once they figured out it wasn't some scam.

The key political task for a presidential candidate who wants to fix American health care is to build confidence, aggressiveness, and a sense of righteousness in the American People. A constant and broad educational campaign is something we should all participate in. We must loudly denounce the Democratic candidates who are again betraying the American People with their partial plans and stall tactics, and and trying to deny them this fundamental human right in order to enrich their corporate donors..

This is the only way out of America's dystopian health care nightmare.

______________
h/t to Ryan Cooper, national correspondent at TheWeek.com, whom I liberally paraphrased.

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k9disc's picture

That comes out to 12,500. For someone who makes $60K/year, that actually uses their insurance - like a broken bone, that is 20% of total wages - before taxes - that's almost the entire income tax burden...

If they don't use it at all, it's 10% of total income.

Private health insurance is a 20+% tax for most Americans. Only to be denied care and to pay $500 for the therapeutic dose of ibuprofen(4 200mg pills).

Medicare for All (I would suggest calling it the whole name, rather than the initials) will shift money from private coffers public coffers and deliver actual medical care while saving the patient thousands per year. This is a winner, clearly.

Thanks for the breakdown, @Pluto's Republic .

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“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu

yet I quickly found numerous specific proposals from Sanders to finance M4A; https://www.sanders.senate.gov/download/options-to-finance-medicare-for-...

I noticed that, as someone already on Medicare, I would pay higher taxes (tax on a little unearned income, and/or an additional 4% on all income). Well, boo hoo.

I notice also that there is no reference to cutting military spending to finance M4A. That should be politically useful in getting it passed, although I’d expect him to push for military cuts anyway.

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Alligator Ed's picture

@tle First, there is no fucking way the DNC lets the Bern win. They'll pull a Hillary on him, just like they did in '16. By the way. H Rodent Clinton is running again, lacing up her track shoes, you know the ones with outriggers on them, ready for the race.

Secondly, to mention reduction of the MIC budget is the kiss of death in Establishment politics currently, which is why the Establishmentarians won't let Tulsi win either--but her time approaches.

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Wally's picture

@Alligator Ed

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@tle Why doesn't he get on the stick and press for huge military cuts rather than say we need to increase taxes? That would be progressive. I think the answer is pretty clear. His foreign policy sucks.

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Wally's picture

@davidgmillsatty

As far as I know, the only candidate doing so.

See here.

And here:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-GKX0RSg2U]

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@Wally He is better on the MIC than anyone but Gabbard. But that is not saying much. What he did not say in these videos that he would use the cuts in military spending to finance M4A. That is my point. He is saying we need to raise taxes to pay for M4A. No we don't. We just need to cut defense spending to pay for M4A.

That was always the position of Dennis Kucinich, if I recall correctly. Even people like Ron Paul thought we ought to drastically cut military spending even though his position was that we should just do it to reduce taxes.

But for me the progressive approach is the approach of Kucinich. Maybe it is time for Kucinich to come out of retirement.

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Wally's picture

@davidgmillsatty

Going way back when to his mayoralty in Cleveland when he first got pegged as "Dennis the Menace."

But now is now and life is life (gawd, that was a silly, catchy, uplifting tune).

Also cuts in the military budget can't pay for every new program Bernie puts forward. I agree that it's going to be tough for him to get through to people in explaining any kind of tax hike even if it is more than reversed by other economic and health benefits.

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of the middle-class tax hike, it's that she hasn't yet put out a specific plan for M4A. She has co-sponsored Bernie's bill and a few others, or endorsed them. Just nothing yet, surprisingly, on a specific plan to address the medical care issue.

Stories recently in the WaPo and Politico calling out this omission.

I would be surprised if such plan wasn't forthcoming by the next debate. It would make sense politically. If not, the peculiar omission becomes itself an issue.

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Big Al's picture

budget to offset MFA taxes, it's much more than that. The dem party politicians can talk about that, but unless they come out and propose an end to US imperialism and the quest for world hegemony, it won't mean shit. Talking about reducing the defense budget by ten percent or some such bs (probably over a period of years) would hardly be the offset needed to persuade people to pay more taxes to fund M4A. Especially when the budget deficit is nearing 1 trillion per year and the national debt is now past a gazillion (over 22 T).

Not only that, truly going to a nationalized health care system, because we better do that or the rich will get all the best doctors and service any fucking way, will require a major shift, basically a shift toward socialism. So there's a double whammy, trying to justify socialism while ending imperialism. Trying to both at the same time, via this duopoly political system and this divided (by the two party system) citizenry? Right.

Don't see it happening. The only solution is revolution.

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Wally's picture

@Big Al

. . . and call me the minute it starts.

But I don't see it happening.

On the other hand, Bernie has a tiny chance of pulling it off. A chance of a lifetime opportunity.

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@Big Al @Big Al I watched him on The Hill interview, right up until he made me sick with his answer "Money", to the question "What motivates you to keep going?" lol Yeah I grew up poor with wealth all around me too, but I didn't go on to a lifetime career in politics selling books on Bezos platform to make my own fine self a millionaire... and then try to buy a D-presidency with the proceeds. nope I'm not that great. ~shrug~ Quantity is not quality but go on Mr. Most Popular. keep going

The answer to "How are you going to pass laws through congress?" was "agitate the locals in to protest" or what? I couldn't grok the word salad. Like when he went to Kentucky and bitched at Mitch on twitter I guess, look at the change that made. wowz

This isn't '68 where you can "go out and get your head cracked" by the status quo and have it mean something. This is 2019 and stasi quo is so heavily militarized, and their robots so automated, any un-permitted protest is gonna get more like prison for life, or death. Why wouldn't it? states rights

I'm sick to death of seeing things
From tight-lipped, condescending, mamas little chauvinists
All I want is the truth
Just gimme some truth now

I've had enough of watching scenes
Of schizophrenic, ego-centric, paranoiac, prima-donnas
All I want is the truth now
Just gimme some truth

No short-haired, yellow-bellied, son of tricky dicky
Is gonna mother hubbard soft soap me
With just a pocketful of soap
Its money for dope
Money for rope

dump duopoly
PEACE

edit: fruedian typo 'buy to buy'. heh

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@Big Al

to the level we had at the height of the Iraq War. That was 270 billion/yr. That would keep us above every other country on earth. The only country that would be even close to us in spending would be China, which spends 215 billion/yr. We'd still be exceeding them by 55 billion dollars/yr. The next highest spender is Russia, which spends 69 billion/yr, a little more than a quarter of 270 billion. Exceeding the other countries of the world by that much should be enough imperialism for anyone, even the psychopaths who run the U.S. government. The reason it isn't is that the MIC essentially gets whatever money it asks for from the puppet Congressmen and Senators, and who would voluntarily end that racket if they were on the receiving end? Well, some people would, but those people wouldn't have set up that murderous racket to begin with.

Now, that's assuming that this spending competition matters in the way they say it does. In truth, as long as there's money enough to maintain the gigantic pile of nukes they have and money enough to spy effectively on their counterparts in other countries, there isn't going to be any organized, hot-war threat to the United States. As for terrorism, relatively little of the massive military budget actually does anything to stop a terrorist attack. Again, you're talking about surveillance and what actually ought to look more like police work, mostly, since terrorism is actually a crime and neither warfare nor a reason for warfare. Neither the nukes nor the expensive military planes nor any of a dozen other high-price implements of warfare have any applicability to preventing a terrorist attack. So the idea of this "defense" spending competition is, itself, based on a lie.

So in truth, we could have as much as 400 billion dollars a year to spend on things like healthcare--actual healthcare, rather than health insurance, which is all anybody, even Bernie, seems to want to discuss.

The real reason we can't have nice things is that Raytheon and U.S. Healthcare and their colleagues want to keep their profits.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Big Al's picture

@Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal if defense budget cut back to pre-9/11). First of all, won't happen and no candidate, not even the supposedly antiwar war on terror hawk Gabbard, will advocate that type of cut back. Like I said, that can only happen if the US renounces it's global hegemony agenda and those in control aren't going to do that and I haven't heard even Gabbard say that, other than the same thing Obama and Trump said (exactly), "we can't continue to be the world's policeman".

But like I said, the budget deficit is nearing a trillion per year and only to get worse because of Trump's tax cuts and the raising of the imperialism and police/military state budget to over a trillion (defense 750 billion). So cut half the defense budget and we're still running a deficit over half a trillion and the national debt is still skyrocketing.

The question is how to sell this to the public and the solution being offered is to reduce the defense budget which will (supposedly) pay for M4A in effect leaving overall taxes about the same. But with the deficit and national debt out there, even if that happened, it becomes very complicated and political and not necessarily an easier sell to the public, i.e., it's not that simple.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@Big Al

(which I wish I could), but nearly 300 billion a year doesn't sound like that to me. I think the U.S. could keep its insane hegemony idea all it wants to on 300 billion a year, given that nobody else is spending that and only one other country is even in the ballpark.

I really think this is not so much about consolidating global power as it is about raking in unlimited dough with no accountability and no chance of being refused.

That said, I think you've got the political situation pegged. Nobody's gonna make those cuts. Not Bernie, not Tulsi. Not cuts of that magnitude.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

WaterLily's picture

@Big Al [video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AirdHLCj4MY]

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Big Al's picture

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

We are spending 670 billion on military and security matters every year, so actually, it probably wouldn't require a middle-class tax increase. It only requires that if we accept military and security spending as untouchable.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

@Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal I think that the best side effect of investing more money in America and Americans will be that it will result in reduced defense spending and maybe less imperialism. Taking money from the DoD simply to reduce the deficit, etc., doesn't have a prayer in this age---look how easy it was to massively increase the defense budget under tRump. However, providing healthcare rather than a gold-plated weapon or a military base in the middle of Africa just might get public support sufficient to overcome the MICgrifters.

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@Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal this site, defense & security budget for this year is actually much larger, $989 billion. If we include annual spending on the various intel entities, the overall total reaches $1.1 trillion.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@wokkamile

What you think they got is massive; what they actually got is astronomical.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

So Warren skillfully evades an attempt by the media to label MFA first and foremost as yet another tax-and-spend Democratic project and that gets twisted beyond all recognition into a lack of seriousness for MFA? Breath taking.

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k9disc's picture

for All is dead on arrival and has no honest chance of becoming law.

I'm just gonna use the total numbers, someone smarter and better at researching can take it from the back of the napkin to a proper citation, but here it goes.

$3.3T in health expenditures, 17.9% of GDP (2016 numbers). Let's pretend that all $3.3T runs through the private insurance and hospital industry...

This $3.3T is invested in profitable investment vehicles of the insurance companies choosing - a steady revenue stream of dumb, captive investments.

First year we go Medicare for All, we lose $17.9% of annual GDP. I believe if we move from private coffers to public coffers, that it can no longer be computed in GDP.

In addition to reducing GDP and "destroying the economy" Medicare for All will eliminate that institutional investment stream of dumb money from the markets - not only will we lose 17.9% of GDP, but the movers and shakers would lose most all their flexibility and economic might because they wouldn't have a $250B/ month revenue stream to move money and shape and control markets.

What President is going to do that? Can Bernie do this? Is he willing to tank GDP like that? Is he willing to "destroy the economy" by hamstringing the insurance companies and ending the firehose of dumb institutional money?

I used to think so. After 2016, I do not think he has the courage and conviction to see it through - even with masses of active and engaged Americans.

IMO, this needs to be the angle the Left takes to make Medicare for All a reality (If I'm correct in reading the situation.) This needs to be common knowledge and be taken into account when listening to testimony on the viability of public healthcare. Without it being common knowledge, people have a hard time realizing just how much the insurance lobby, banksters, and other market parasites have to lose in terms of money, marketshare, and power.

And, please... If I've messed up the insurance companies role and the logic above, please correct me. I've tried to bring this to conversations for the last few years, but it usually hurts people's brains to follow the argument. And it's not that it's too complex, although people will act like that - it's that it comes out of nowhere - there are no receptors for the idea at all. We don't know how insurance companies make money. We should fix that.

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“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu

ggersh's picture

@k9disc for GDP is made up by tptb to make economy
look alright. It's always revised downwards never
upwards and is pretty much meaningless.. W/$1tril
deficits GDP should be at 7-10% but is coming in
at 2%, money/debt ain't what it used to be.

Another aspect of losing that 17.9% of GDP is that
it can be if necessary changed, think clinton and
Hedonics.

Also putting more money in peoples pockets will
add significantly to GDP rather than insurance
companies buying back stocks.

GDP is the last reason to be concerned w/regards
to M4A

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

k9disc's picture

GDP and the DOW is the only place where we grow - they are the only things worth growing and maintaining. If they grow, all is well.

I didn't think about the impact of money in people's pocket being shifted to consumption. Maybe it would be a wash in terms of GDP, but it certainly would reduce institutional private investment and the power of that investment - harming the flexibility of investment markets and the velocity of money - and as such it's a non-starter.

Thanks for the response.

@ggersh

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“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu

Raggedy Ann's picture

@k9disc
the rest of America doesn't UNDERSTAND how it works - which it doesn't work. I teach my students about GDP and the negative impact it has on our lives. I'm all about Bhutan's GNH - Gross National Happiness. I teach them about that one - which would you choose? GNH would be awesome if implemented in America, however, we prefer consumption - in more ways than one.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

ggersh's picture

@k9disc @k9disc @k9disc

EDIT: no worries

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

@k9disc
prefer to exclude government expenditures from GDP (since they view all government spending as "non-productive") that's not done. GDP includes both the public and private sectors. The exact calculation is kinda fuzzy, I looked it all up a few years ago to try to figure out what gets excluded (e.g., transfer payments like Social Security checks do not count).

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

k9disc's picture

run across some RW nutters... I was under the impression that public sector stuff like Medicare and SS were not included in GDP.

Thanks for the heads up.

@UntimelyRippd

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“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu

k9disc's picture

https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/082415/are-social-security-paym...

When calculating GDP, government spending does not include transfer payments (the reallocation of money from one party to another), such as payments from Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, welfare programs, and subsidies. Because these are not payments for goods or services, they do not represent a form of final demand, also known as GDP.

Looks like Medicare is a "transfer payment". Not included, and it doesn't get reflected in consumptive GDP. So removing $3.3T from private health insurance takes it out of GDP. Looks like it goes back in from the citizen's pocket, as per ggersh's comment. That will, unfortunately for the Masters of the Universe, be minus the taxes we all pay. So whatever the "real cost" of health care is, the noncorporate-graft shit, will be excluded from the calculation.

The 17-20% overhead of private health care in relation to Medicare's 3%? 80% public transfer payments means a loss of $2.3-2.7T in GDP.

I think the concept holds. $3T in dumb, institutional monthly revenue is put into corporate investment vehicles, slush funds, and the market in our private insurance system. Remove that and put it in bonds or something non-sexy, and you can't do sexy things with $3T worth of money - who wants that?

After the fact:
I wonder how much of our GDP growth in the 21st Century has come from hollowing out government and shifting transfer payments to the private sector. Obamacare, I'm looking at you.

@UntimelyRippd

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“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu

@k9disc
confident that there is simply No. Way. that the billions of dollars in medical services provided through Medicare each year are not counted as part of the GDP.

It turns out that a lot of people are very confused about this, but it has to do only with how those billions of dollars are classified within the GDP. There are a few different definitions of GDP, used in different contexts, but this is the most useful one for us: GDP = Consumption (i.e., all private expenditures NOT INCLUDING NEW HOUSING) + Investment (Business expenses on non-consumable stuff, plus new housing) + Government Expenditures (on "final goods and services", including wages for government employees) + (Total Exports - Total Imports). I'm not going to explain why it makes sense to subtract Total Imports.

Anyhow, the point is this: Although Medicare payments are made directly to the provider, for purposes of calculating GDP they are considered transfer payments to the patient, who is then considered to make a private purchase of the medical services and goods. So yes, they are part of the GDP -- they just get entered on the ledger under "C" for Consumption, rather than "G" for Government Expenditures.

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The earth is a multibillion-year-old sphere.
The Nazis killed millions of Jews.
On 9/11/01 a Boeing 757 (AA77) flew into the Pentagon.
AGCC is happening.
If you cannot accept these facts, I cannot fake an interest in any of your opinions.

k9disc's picture

Be the case as I was wrapping up my comment.

I saw the equation. Thanks a bunch for sharing your thoughts.

The GDP angle may be exaggerated in my thoughts here - losing the private sector overhead and some change from the tally, but the institutional investment stream and power and control it provides is a massive economic roadblock.

$3T per year is $250B per month, every month - ain’t no fucking way they are giving that up. It’s why we didnt have a public option and it’s why the Democrats say Medicare For All is a pipe dream of free shit.

Thanks again for your diligence and critique.
@UntimelyRippd

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“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu