Thursday, April 5, 2012
Memo to the Supreme Court: Health Care Is Not a Right
Below are a few excerpts from a recent excellent Forbes article on healthcare reform and the issues before the Supreme Court. For the full article, go to:
One need only read the legal briefs or hear the oral arguments made before the U.S. Supreme Court last week on the constitutionality of just one provision in the 2700-page ObamaCare law (the mandate to buy health insurance) to recognize that both sides blithely assume that “health care is a right.” The law itself and many of the Justices also assume it. Thus most everyone in this alleged “debate” is merely quibbling over how much the rights of health care providers will be violated – for that’s what a mythical “right to health care” entails...
In fact, health care is not a right. It’s a valuable service provided by intelligent, hard-working professionals with years of painstaking education and training, people who, like other Americans, deserve equal protection under the law, people who, like other Americans, have a right to their own life, liberty, property and the pursuit of their own happiness. Doctors, nurses, hospitals, drug-makers, and health insurers are no more “servants” of the masses, or even of those in need of health care, than are businessmen, bankers, teachers, journalists, or truck drivers servants of those who need their services...
...Some or all of ObamaCare may be upheld or struck down when the Supreme Court renders its decision in June, but regardless, notice how no one has bothered to rebut the claim that health care is a “right.” As such, there will likely be no sound remedy in the Court’s decision; providers’ rights will still be violated...
...As mentioned, in 1960 less than 5% of health care spending in the U.S. came from government, but after decades of Medicare and Medicaid, combined with an aging population (a trend which private-sector insurance actuaries have easily and prudently handled, but politicians and HHS bureaucrats will not), that share has increased to more than 50% of all such spending. As in the case of college tuition and housing, so also in medical care: when government foots more and more of the bill, the bill grows more and more, and disproportionately so relative to other prices. When people then complain about higher costs, government boosts subsidies; in short, having caused the fire, it “cures” it with more gasoline; the arsonist plays the fireman who saves the day...
...Those who are challenging ObamaCare before the Supreme Court don’t seem to care a bit about the mandates imposed on producers; they’re bothered only by the mandate imposed on consumers. The right-wing lawyers and Attorneys General claim to be stout defenders of the U.S. Constitution, but they’re sure selective about it; they assume that there’s some inherent conflict between the producers and users of health care, that not all parties to trade in the sector deserve equal protections under the law, because, at root, they share the belief of ObamaCare’s left-wing defenders that health care is a “right,” thus that suppliers have no rights, but only a duty to serve, as serfs...
Please read the entire article at:
Best Regards,
Dan Jones, MD
Sunday, January 1, 2012
The FDA Has Become a Tremendous Net-Negative for Americans
According to a recent new article (http://news.yahoo.com/insight-shortage-adhd-drug-adderall-seen-persisting-2012-151543814.html), the ADHD drug Adderall is in short supply, due to the FDA’s misguided micromanagement of the supply chain. This demonstrates once again how the FDA is an out-of-control agency trampling our liberties, diminishing productivity and choices in healthcare, decreasing innovation in medical science, and ratcheting up crime world-wide. Please recall that:
1. 1. Until the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914, an American could walk into any pharmacy and buy, without a prescription, any needed medication, including narcotics.
2. 2. Prior to the 1951 Durham-Humphrey amendment, you could obtain any medication (except narcotics) without a doctor’s prescription.
3. 3. There is no Constitutional authority for the government to tell Americans what drugs we can or cannot use for our health or recreation. On the contrary, any citizen who is sufficiently intelligent and motivated to manage his or her own health care has that right. The current violation of our fundamental freedoms is a major cause of spiraling healthcare costs.
4. 4. There is no evidence that this gross violation of our civil liberties has any more net benefit on crime than did alcohol prohibition in the 1920’s. On the contrary, this ridiculous criminalization of addiction commerce costs American taxpayers approximately $100 Billion annually, causes the murder of over 10,000 Mexicans, keeps about half a million US citizens in prison, fuels the multi-billion dollar worldwide narcotics trade, and make the US a world laughing stock.
In summary, the FDA is an out-of-control agency that is trampling our constitutional freedoms, driving up healthcare costs, and creating a tremendous net-negative effect on our economy and culture. It’s time to put the FDA back in its box, and liberate American healthcare.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Quality Assessment in Healthcare
The following was submitted as a response to John Goodman’s article, “Why is There a Problem with Health Care Quality?” You can read his article at:
http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2011/03/24/why-is-there-a-problem-with-health-care-quality/
In a free market economy, isn’t reputation the primary quality metric? Consumers are jaded about marketing hype. If you need an orthopedist, you ask your primary doc, or your friends and relatives, "Who's the best hip surgeon in the neighborhood?" As a small-town family physician, I asked every new patient how they heard about the practice (why they came). My number one source of new business was "word of mouth," which far out-ranked any marketing efforts (newspaper ads, billboards, etc.).
Two factors diminish the effectiveness of reputation in our current system:
1. Physician selection is often restricted by insurance affiliations. You can't see the best doc if he or she isn’t in-network with your insurer (unless you can afford to pay inflated fees completely out-of-pocket). This problem can be dispatched by banning (or at least discouraging) contracting between physicians and insurers. That would free patients to select any provider they choose, and would allow patients to pay more out-of-pocket for greater perceived quality. This simple measure would, of course, also remove the single greatest driver of healthcare inflation: the consumer-payer disconnect.
2. The pervasive culture of secrecy and elitism in healthcare. Doctors, legislation and policies have long fostered the perception that physicians have such esoteric knowledge that they are above quality comparisons; and even if there are quality differences, non-physicians are too ignorant to evaluate them. This cultural attitude has allowed doctors to avoid quality concerns or even the requirement to explain their decisions.
In general, our society has become more open. Most meetings of public officials are now subject to “sunshine laws,” and you can read consumer evaluations of products and sellers on Amazon.com. In healthcare, the trend has perhaps been the opposite. For example, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996 gives virtually everyone in the healthcare system additional cause for paranoia and additional justification for secrecy.
Also, our increasingly urban and mobile populace seems less able to rely on “local reputation” for quality assessments than their small-town forbears. This problem can probably be solved by innovation in social media and online physician services, although the current climate of over-regulation and third-party revenue control greatly hampers such innovation.
(The elitist attitude in healthcare also fosters dependency on physicians, another major cost driver. For example, the Durham-Humphrey amendment of 1951 makes it quite explicit that all patients are too ignorant to manage their own healthcare, by mandating a physician consultation to obtain the great majority of medications.)
In summary: a) The only valid and efficient evaluators of quality are the consumers of goods and services.
b) The only proven efficient method of applying quality indicators is for consumers to “vote with their feet” according to their quality perceptions.
c) The current system is rigged, both by convention and law, to discourage consumers from evaluating quality; and to prevent them from voting with their feet.
Dan Jones, MD
Saturday, February 12, 2011
How To Fix Congress
I have alluded in previous posts to the incompetence (politely speaking) of the US Congress. This is reflected in the public discourse seen in such places as the New York Times editorials and reader comments. The majority of articles and comments seem to focus not on the merits of specific issues; but rather on the absurdities and paralysis of our two-party system.
Our two-party system has always been flawed, but its inadequacies have been amplified by the growing complexity and diversity of contemporary culture. Simply put, our two-party system has become totally dysfunctional, disruptive, bankruptive and corruptive. It’s time we ended it.
The two-party system is absurdly illogical. How can you possibly throw the multitude of important issues facing us into just two bins, and then say we have to vote for one or the other? What if I believe the government should be aggressive in protecting the environment, but that individuals should be responsible for their own health care? Two parties are simply inadequate. And, no, the solution isn’t a multi-party system. As exemplified by many European governments, multi-party systems are even more ineffective and chaotic.
Instead of endless ideological arguments about political parties, we should be individually voting on the issues near and dear to our hearts and minds. Now, for the first time in history, we have the technology to do that. When we can individually vote our hearts and minds on the issues, then we can argue about what really matters--the issues.
This won’t require a Constitutional amendment, or even an act of Congress. Such a desirable situation can, and probably will, arise organically from the grass roots and internet technology. If a Congressional candidate said, “Look, my party affiliation doesn’t matter. I’m just going to represent YOU. If you elect me, you can go to my web site and vote on any issue you care about; and I’ll vote in accordance with the majority of my constituents on that issue.” Would you vote for that Congressman? I certainly would.
All this transformation will require is:
1. Some benevolent tech company or philanthropist to create the software. (Are you listening Google, Facebook? Bill Gates?)
2. A few courageous legislative candidates to lead the way.
We, the people, will take it from there and reclaim control of our government. Party ideologues simply won’t be able to compete with representatives who empower their constituents to vote on the issues.
As always, “the devil’s in the details,” and this transformation won’t happen painlessly or overnight. Many will object, “That’s not what the Founding Fathers intended. True democracy means mob rule!” To that I ask, “Do you think the Founding Fathers intended our current corrupt, ineffective and profligate Congress controlled by special interests and party ideology?” No, the new system won’t be perfect. But it will probably be much better than what we have now. In any event, the status quo is no longer acceptable to rational citizens.
Once we, the people, are back in charge, what will we do with the political parties? I have an idea: how about Saturday Afternoon Naked Network Mud-wrestling--Republicans Versus Democrats. Enjoy your mud-slinging. And good riddance.
Dan Jones
Friday, February 4, 2011
Government Flaws Are Destroying Our Liberty and Prosperity
In his recent State-Of-The-Union address, Mr. Obama was inspiring, as always. We’ve had lots of inspiring speeches in the past few decades, but our government is increasingly incapable of leading the country according to any sound principles. And the President’s suggestions do little or nothing to address the fundamental problems afflicting our nation.
Today, the average American pays about 40% in taxes (federal, state and local). That means for every 3 days you work for yourself and your family, you must work 2 days for the government. Or go to prison.
The 13th Amendment says “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime...shall exist within the United States.” Working two days a week to support the government may not be slavery, but it certainly feels like “involuntary servitude” to many people.
Some argue that working two days a week for the government is amply rewarded by the services provided. This is demonstrably false, as detailed below. The government is squandering exorbitant amounts of our money. This is no bargain. And even if it was, what right does the government have to force you or me to buy its bargains?
The 4th Amendment to our Constitution says, “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, and in their houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated…” The government has no right to know our personal affairs, including how much money we make or how we earn or spend it. Yet, come tax time every year, we are forced to reveal the details of our personal finances. Or go to prison. Is this the freedom from tyranny so many Americans have fought and died for?
Of course, the politicians cleverly conceal our exploitation with tactics such as employer withholding, so we never even see the money they’re extorting on threat of imprisonment. But the simple fact is: if you are an average American, for every 3 days you work for yourself and your family, you must work 2 days for the government, and you must divulge your private finances. Or go to prison. If you think about it, that’s pathetic. We should either end it, or stop claiming to be a free people.
Alas, the courts have consistently ruled the income tax constitutional. How did that happen? Simple: our courts and judges have been duped by the same gradualism as the citizenry. I doubt there is an acting judge today who was born before the income tax existed*. People born into servitude and domination tend to accept it as normal--until it becomes intolerable.
*(Because an income tax was originally explicitly unconstitutional, it required the 16th Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1913, before it could be enacted. The income tax was initially only 1-7% and applied to less than the wealthiest 1% of citizens… But the camel’s nose was under the edge of the tent.)
How much should we pay in taxes? That depends on what we expect of government. Projects such as interstate highway systems, management of natural resources, and national defense clearly merit taxpayer support. Others, such as our counterproductive never-ending “wars” on terror, poverty, and drugs clearly do not. And arguably appropriate projects such as Social Security and “universal healthcare” are being pathetically bungled, leading us toward national bankruptcy.
Our government currently spends about the same on our military as all other nations on earth combined. American taxpayers now pay to station armed forces at more than 820 installations in at least 135 countries.
It is fabulously expensive to be the world’s policeman, but some people say that should be our role. After all, being world policeman worked pretty well for ancient Rome and imperial Great Britain. Yes, if you’re the world’s only superpower, being its policeman can be economically rewarding. But only if you enslave foreign countries and pillage their resources as Rome Great Britain did. But that’s not our thing, is it?
We are now approaching one trillion dollars ($1,000,000,000,000) spent on the “war on terror.” What should have been an aggressive policing action against a few thousand criminals has morphed into a trillion-dollar, multi-decade nation-building project in Afghanistan and Iraq. We have already spent nearly $3,300 for every American man, woman and child to give democracy to people who didn’t ask for it, don’t deserve it, and probably won’t accept it.
Now suppose you have a family of five. And suppose your Congressman came to you in 2002 and said, “Would your family like to donate $16,500 (that’s $3,300 per family member) to democratize Iraq and Afghanistan? There’s, oh, maybe a 20% chance we’ll succeed, and we’ll have to blow up a few thousand American boys, but, hey, let’s give it a try. How about it? Wanna donate $16,500?” Nobody asked me. They just spent my money. Did they ask you?
Some enormous government expenses border on insanity. For example, our government now pays "food stamp" subsidies averaging about $133 per month to about 43 million Americans, totaling about $55 Billion per year. But nobody is starving in America. Nobody is even skinny in America. Our only significant nutritional problem is our rampant obesity epidemic, which is worst in the poor, and increases diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular disease.
Stand by any check-out line in any inner city supermarket, and you will observe that the great majority of food-stamp users are seriously obese, and their carts are loaded with the unhealthiest sugar-, salt- and fat-laden foods. At the same time the government raids our wallets before we even see our wages, to buy free food for millions of obese people, we get further robbed to provide free health care for the millions of cases of diabetes, hypertension, heart attack, stroke and cancer our government is so generously facilitating. Is that just idiocy… or is it insanity? You decide.
Now, lest you think me personally stingy, let me be clear: I’m really a nice guy with good intentions and a kind heart. I'm neither a Democrat or Republican, just a citizen who thinks we deserve responsible and effective government. I want very much for all of us to be as healthy and happy as possible. This is not a discussion about whether or not we should prevent malnutrition, ensure affordable healthcare and comfortable retirements, and lift up the less fortunate among us. This is just a discussion about how we cannot accomplish such things. (How we can accomplish such things is another discussion, but there’s is no point in having that discussion until we stop squandering our resources on things that don’t work.)
Some things our government, despite good intentions, is simply incapable of doing in any efficient or affordable manner. For example, healthcare. Our government’s mismanagement has caused healthcare costs to increase at three times the average rate of inflation for several decades now. Since healthcare costs unavoidably get included in wages, this makes our products and services uncompetitive. How can our manufacturers possibly compete, in either the domestic or international markets, when they have to pay $8000 per year, on average, in healthcare costs for every employee and family member?
As a clinic builder and primary care physician, I have seen this from the inside. Our healthcare system has become a government-controlled Marxist dystopia, pure and simple. The CMS (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services) is virtually a replica of the Central Planning Committee of the now-defunct Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. It sets product specifications, fixes prices, and micromanages growing armies of bureaucrats, creating an every-more costly and inefficient system. The Soviets gave up on Marxism two decades ago. Why is our government still promoting it?
Sixty years ago, a young doctor could borrow a few thousand dollars, hire a receptionist and nurse, hang out his shingle in virtually any town in America, and be making a decent living in a few months. He or she competed with other doctors in a free market. Healthcare was 4.5% of GDP, compared to 17.6% today. You didn’t have to sell your house to have your gallbladder removed.
Today, it’s virtually impossible for a single doctor with a small staff to succeed in private practice. Fewer and fewer are fool enough to try it. You need deep pockets and a small army of “coders,”, “billing specialists,” accountants and lawyers to cope with the tsunami of counterproductive laws, rules and regulations gushing forth from the rapidly metastasizing pus-pockets and cancers corrupting our federal government (and increasingly, our state governments as well).
Or consider “Social Security.” Due to our government’s profligacy, this “retirement plan” has become a gargantuan Ponzi scheme. If you think the government has saved all that money you’ve been paying into Social Security, to be available when you retire, you’ve been duped. Our government has already spent your retirement money on democratizing Iraq, free groceries for fat people, artificial legs for blown-up soldiers, treatment for the diabetes and heart attacks the free food you’re buying for fat people is causing, and the growing army of overpaid “public servants” required to orchestrate this cornucopia of extravagance and corruption. Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme was peanuts compared to this. Bernie Madoff is in prison. But the US Congress is still at large.
It would be criminal enough if the government was only spending the dollars we’ve already earned. Not so. Today, our government is squandering our future incomes, and those of our children and grandchildren. Our federal government is now spending so much that is must borrow 41 cents of every dollar it is spending. Our federal government is now in debt $45,600 for every man, woman and child in America*. If you have a family of four, you and your family owe $182,400 and growing, on an unlimited “line of credit” signed by the US Congress and president.
*(This only includes the debt on the books. If you include the government’s unfunded Social Security and Medicare obligations, the total government debt is much greater).
Now, suppose your neighbor Bob came over and said, “Look, I’m spending $1000 every week, but I’m only making $590, so I’m short on cash. Can you loan me the other $410?” My guess is you’d think Bob must be insane, immoral, criminal, stupid, drunk, or maybe just pathetically irresponsible. Instead of getting out your checkbook, you’d probably suggest Bob check in with his pastor, priest or psychiatrist. Well, folks, meet Bob, your US federal government. And guess what? Bob doesn’t even need to ask! He already has carte blanche on your paycheck.
Our federal government has demonstrated excellence at projects where it can pay a few billion dollars to American engineers to perform technological miracles. For example, building the interstate highway system, controlling Mississippi River floods, putting a man on the moon, or building missile shields. But our government has demonstrated only utter incompetence, corruption and unbounded waste when it comes to ongoing social projects such as the “war on poverty,” Social Security, “food stamps,” the “war on drugs” or universal healthcare. We must get it out of those businesses!
We are fools to think a committee of 500 elected officials, mostly lawyers, can effectively engineer grand social projects or redesign our healthcare system. There is no science of “social engineering” or “economic engineering.” You can’t get degrees in those subjects from MIT or Georgia Tech. What the US Congress is doing is like a Paleolithic tribe designing the Space Shuttle. It's that delusional. And we need to accept that, stop them, and move on… before they destroy all that we have built.
On its current trajectory, our government will be bounded only by the bankruptcy and impoverishment of our nation. We can’t fix this by "throwing out the bums" and voting in new ones. We’ve tried that. Republicans or Democrats--Coke or Pepsi. Insanity has been defined as doing the same thing, over and over again, but expecting different results. Let us not be insane.
The problem is deeper: as currently constituted, our government has an inherent tendency to grow ever larger, to create ever more complex laws and bureaucracies, to gobble up ever more of our nation’s resources, and to nibble away ever more of our rights and liberties. Simultaneously, the net benefit per tax dollar spent keeps shrinking.
We came to America from all corners of the earth, to find a better life and build a better world. Now we must continue that project with new vigor and resolve. In the words of our Founders in 1776:
“We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness--That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its Foundation on such principles, and organizing its Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”
It is our right to alter our government, and that is what I believe we must do. What alterations are required? Let’s begin by listing the fundamental defects that need to be corrected: (I am referring to the federal government here, although, alas, many of the same issues are increasingly applicable to state governments.)
1. The government is spending too much, and has no ability to control its expenditures.
2. The government is financing many programs that lack broad taxpayer support; or are simply ineffective or inefficient.
3. The government is continuously increasing the costs and complexity of doing business in America, by creating ever more laws and regulations; while rarely removing outdated, ineffective and counterproductive laws.
4. Laws and regulations increasingly infringe our personal liberties, to which we are entitled by the US Constitution and by our heritage of common law and traditions.
How can these defects be corrected? We now have ample evidence they can’t be corrected by either legislation or by electing new representatives. Congress has enacted multiple laws to prevent deficit spending, and then just rescinds or alters them, at its convenience. No, these problems can only be solved by decreasing the power of Congress.
In general, there are only two legal and constitutional ways we can decrease the power of Congress:
1. Amend the Constitution so as to further limit Congress’ ability to tax, spend, create laws, and infringe our liberties.
2. Create new organizations or technology that increase the electorate’s ability to control Congress.
I will consider these options in more detail later. Please stay tuned.
Dan
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Poverty in America and Social Policy
The following (slightly edited and expanded) was originally posted as several reader comments on the New York Times, in response to Tina Rosenberg’s article of January 3, 2011, titled
To Beat Back Poverty, Pay the Poor
I think the problem in the US (with cash transfers to the poor), and what scares conservatives is this:
1. Bureaucrats and politicians in the US who are doling out tax money always seem to develop a curious linguistic deficit: they forget how to say "no." Any strict rules regarding the eligibility requirements necessary to make such programs effective in lifting people from poverty would likely be watered down or disappear.
2. From conservatives' perspective (paranoid or not), that is because the objective of "social liberals" in the US is not to liberate the poor, but to maintain a dependent class who will vote to keep them (the bureaucrats and politicians) in office, and personally well above the poverty level.
We have seen this in the past, with "welfare" programs that only created a hopeless underclass of people with a multi-generational culture of entitlement expectation, but with no work ethic or economic skills.
I don't believe that conservatives, Republicans, or whomever can or would resist a program that demonstrates a strong ability to sustainably elevate people from poverty or solve other major social problems. But they certainly can/will resist programs that commit massive amounts of federal dollars for decades for unproven liberal adventure (e.g., Obamacare).
Those who wish to promote such programs as "conditional cash transfers" or "workfare" should design short-term, limited-scale test programs, to be advanced and expanded as they prove themselves. That's the difference between, e.g., the highly successful man-on-the-moon program and the disastrous Obamacare.
One big problem with cash transfers I’ve seen in the US is that, because the great majority of the poor are above the subsistence level, the money tends to be spent on “luxury” items that may actually be detrimental. For example, food stamp user’s grocery carts are often loaded with the most toxic “foods” (sodas, chips, pastries, ice cream, etc.). If actual cash was provided, much of it would no-doubt be spent on cigarettes, alcohol, drugs, junk food and Nikes.
Riddle me this: How do you reconcile the following facts anywhere within the realm of human sanity?
1. Our government now pays "food stamp" subsidies averaging ~$125/month to MORE THAN 40 MILLION Americans.
2. NOBODY IS STARVING in America. I've worked as a physician in emergency and primary care in 3 states in the South for 30 years. I’ve never seen a single starving person, or anyone suffering malnutrition from lack of food.
3. The number one health and nutrition problem in America is our RAMPANT OBESITY EPIDEMIC. Obesity greatly increases your risk of diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease and cancer.
4. Stand by any check-out line in an inner city supermarket, and you will observe that the great majority of food-stamp users are SERIOUSLY OBESE.
5. At the same time that those of use with a grain of sanity left get our wallets raided before we even see the paycheck, to buy more groceries for millions of obese people, we also get further robbed to provide free health care to take care of all the diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease and cancer our government is so generously facilitating with our hard-earned incomes.
I’m sorry, Folks, but it’s just been too long since the revolution.
So what to do about poverty in the US?
Conditional cash transfer programs seem to be effective in much of the undeveloped world, but “poor” is a relative term. There are no masses of poor people in the US living in dirt-floored shanties without water or electricity. We have no starving masses; the obesity epidemic is worst in our poor. Children aren’t dropping out of school for economic reasons; parents don’t take them out of the 5th grade to work in a sweat shop or pick fruit. What is it like to be poor in the US, and what should we do about poverty here?
As a physician and small-businessperson who has worked in emergency rooms and primary care clinics, and nurtured small businesses for three decades, I have met thousands of our nations poor people as Medicaid or uninsured patients and their families; and others as neighbors and employees. As a small child my own family lived in a 3-room share-cropper shack without indoor plumbing. As a teenager, I traveled this great land, hitch-hiking and sleeping under bridges, from one minimum-wage job to another. I have observed there are two classes of poor in the US.
First there are the “upwardly mobile poor.” These people work long hours at menial jobs, such as deboning chickens at Tyson’s for $8-10 per hour. Most of them have a high-school education or less, though intelligence ranges from low to above average. What distinguishes them is their gritty work ethic, their “scrimp and save” financial habits, and their belief in the “American dream.” Those who are younger are “working their way up,” and often succeed. Those who are middle-age and older don’t expect any more for themselves than hard work, relative poverty, and a modicum of comfort in their old age from Medicare and Social Security. But they smile and brag about their children in community college, studying to be nurses and computer technicians.
Second, there are the “hard core poor,” who are trapped in persistent poverty by one or more of the following:
1. A fundamental lack of “adaptive personality traits” such as a strong work ethic, self-esteem, or persistence. They either shun work, or flit from one low-paying job to another, never persisting long enough to obtain any modicum of financial security or advancement. Additionally, these people tend to be less intelligent and more impulsive on average, and tend to make poor choices with adverse long-term consequences, such as dropping out of school, getting pregnant without the necessary resources, buying things they can’t afford, etc.
2. Poor “life skills”: no ability to balance a check-book, make out a household budget, plan for the future, or negotiate simple compromises with a partner, neighbor, landlord or employer.
3. Lack of good “mental hygiene.” These are simple habits of mind that most of us take for granted, although we probably acquire them from family and culture: “positive thinking” (e.g., counting your blessings, seeing the cup as half-full instead of half-empty), accepting responsibility for your situation, understanding how to control your own emotional state, etc.
What can we do to help the poor in our own country? The two types of poor require very different types of assistance.
For the upwardly mobile poor, we just need to make the path upward as easy and obvious as possible. That is, we need to promote a strong economy, with an abundance of both entry-level, mid-level, and high-level jobs. Easier said than done, right?
In times of recession and high unemployment, a strong argument can be made for Keynesian measures such as deficit stimulus spending. But that is a dangerous double-edged sword that needs to be wielded with more restraint and wisdom than our government has shown in the past. In the long run, deficit spending is just as dangerous to our nation as to our households and businesses.
The primary advantage of stimulus spending is its immediacy. That is also probably its greatest danger, because that makes it prone to abuse as a “quick fix,” when recessions are often a natural economic cycle, implying a need for bubbles to burst, lessons to be learned, and for individual and business habits and policies to be adjusted at the grass-roots level. Government has very limited ability to control the economy, and no wisdom regarding its own limitations.
The best thing government should do, in my opinion as a small businessperson, is to keep taxes low. Every dollar spent re-cycles through the economy multiple times, whether it is originally spent by the government, individuals, or businesses. But money spent by businesses is more likely to be invested in new products, services and jobs that will provide long-term economic growth. Many times I would have created new products and hired more employees, if only the government hadn’t robbed me of the money I would have used to do that.
What can we do about the hard-core poor in the US? These people are not starving or living in dirt-floored shanties. But many are trapped in multi-generational poverty by their self-defeating personality traits, relatively low intelligence and education, and lack of basic life skills. Parents with such deficits tend to pass them on to their children. It is extremely difficult to change the fundamental habits and personality traits of adults; and educating adults is far more difficult than educating children. So these efforts should focus most on the children. I suggest the following measures:
1. Tuition and book/supply subsidies for adults to attend community colleges. Cash transfers are questionable, and if used at all should be conditioned on school performance. Since most of these people already have the basic necessities, cash is as likely to be spent on junk food, cigarettes, alcohol, and drugs, as on anything of long-term benefit.
2. Community colleges should provide programs on “life skills” to teach poor adults such basic skills as impulse control, decision-making, household budgeting and how to negotiate with family, friends and employers.
3. Counseling programs should be available to counsel struggling individuals regarding life planning, budgeting, etc. These should be grass-roots volunteer programs. The only such government-sponsored programs I’ve had any experience with were staffed mostly with incompetent counselors who wasted their clients time.
4. Stop the food stamp program, and consider “regressive” taxes on all foods except whole fruits and vegetables (which should be untaxed, and possibly subsidized). The obesity epidemic affects the poor most, and the resulting diseases and disability only exacerbate their plight.
5. End farm subsidies. We spend billions every year subsidizing the corn, beef and dairy products, all of which should be minimal components of a healthy, low-calorie diet. The evidence is overwhelming that the most healthy and nutritious foods are whole vegetables and fruits. Only those foods, if any, should be subsidized.
6. Encourage or subsidize inner-city neighborhood gardens.
7. Subsidize public daycare, so young parents can afford to work; and so educational activities can begin at an early age.
8. Reform our schools! Even when I was a teenager, urban public school was mostly a “baby-sitting service” to keep us off the streets so our parents could work. Many urban schools are much worse now (e.g., see “Waiting For Superman”). Education is key to breaking the intergenerational cycle of poverty. But we need more than the “3 R’s” (readin’ and ‘ritin’ and ‘rithmetic). Traditionally, schools were supposed to provide the 3 R’s, while family and church provided the ethical principles and life skills required for success in life. But many impoverished kids are not exposed to those essential principles at home or church. (For a graphic depiction that is both heartbreaking and inspiring, see “Precious”). For such children, our schools must have a broader mission. (Try getting consensus on those requirements at the national level!)
9. Abolish or radically redesign the SSDI (“disability”) component of Social Security/Medicare. In my experience, only a shrinking minority of the growing millions of people “on disability” are truly disabled or actually benefit from this program. Most are harmed by it; and it is creating another multigenerational category of “entitled” people with no work ethic, but tremendous finesse at gaming the system. This is the inevitable result of politicians’ and bureaucrats’ congenital inability to say “no” to anyone who might complain about, or vote against them. Certainly there are truly needy disabled people among us, and we should take care of them. But it is folly to think our federal government can provide a solution.
In general, all such programs should be done as close to the “grass roots” level as possible, at the neighborhood, city/county and state levels, with little or none at the federal level. Our federal government has demonstrated its excellence at projects where congress can pay billions of dollars to a few hundred engineers to accomplish miracles in a decade or two. For example, creating the interstate highway system, controlling Mississippi river floods, putting a man on the moon, and conquering foreign countries. It has demonstrated its utter incompetence at such grand social projects as Social Security (a bankrupt Ponzi scheme) and Medicare/Medicaid (which have caused healthcare costs to increase at three times the rate of inflation for 4 decades now, creating the most expensive and inefficient healthcare system on the planet).
Finally, we should be humble, and understand both our obligations and our limitations. In Deuteronomy 15:11, the God says, “Since there will never cease to be some in need on the earth, I therefore command you, ‘Open your hand to the poor and needy neighbor in your land.’” No federal bureaucrat or politician will ever know the needs of our neighbors as well as we do.
Dan Jones
PS: The above analysis seems to leave us with the following categories of “poor” in the US:
1. The “upwardly mobile poor.” These are on their way up, and are no problem.
2. The “coping poor.” These people aren’t likely to migrate up the socioeconomic ladder due to a variety of possible factors (age, education, intelligence, personality, minor disability, etc.), but are employed most of the time and meeting their basic needs. The most efficient and effective public policy strategy for these people is to encourage a robust economy, so that ample “low-wage” jobs are available that pay enough for a decent life.
3. The disabled, whose family cannot or will not provide for them. Clearly a “social safety net” is required for these folks, to ensure adequate nutrition, clothing and shelter. (Assuming they want such; some schizophrenics would rather be Napoleon sleeping under the stars than disabled Joe living in a shelter, and I think they should have that right.)
4. The “marginally able” (referred to as “hard core poor” above). These are those who would be “coping poor” if they had better education, life skills or mental hygiene. Clearly, it would be wise to assist these people to migrate into the “coping poor” category whenever possible. Any who can’t, with best efforts, be migrated into the coping category probably actually belong in category 3 (disabled), or category 5 or 6 (below).
5. The lazy or parasitic. These people give poor a bad name. They’re why liberals call conservatives cruel and uncaring, and why conservatives call liberals bleeding heart fools. Such people always have a story, and depending on how inclined you are to believe it, they’re either good people down on their luck, or lazy parasites mooching off the taxpayer.
From any objective psychological or even moral viewpoint, I don’t think “laziness,” as a personality trait, is any more the fault of the individual possessing it than any other disabling mental trait or defect. So for both theoretical and pragmatic reasons, I think these people should just be put in category 4, and be done with it.
I’ve singled out the lazy parasites, though, because they have an effect on the social assistance debate that is disproportionate to their numbers. Those opposed to generous social programs for the poor will always be able to point to such individuals as evidence that assistance is abused or too generous. In effect, such people will always set an “upper bound” on assistance programs for the poor or disabled; and too the extent that their “laziness” is subject to reward and punishment, such individuals may tend to migrate to category 2 (coping poor) or category 3 (disabled), depending on the generosity of benefits and liberality of definitions. At least, that is the theory of social conservatives that gets them branded as “stingy” or “uncaring” by liberals.
6. The criminal. Crime occurs in all socioeconomic strata, but is clearly related to poverty in several ways.
a) Poverty increases crime. It is an obvious truism that most people will steal to prevent themselves or their family from starving. You can argue, and no doubt people do, about the relationship between lesser forms of poverty and crime, but clearly poverty does increase crime, and the associated costs to society.
b) Crime increases poverty. For example, a young person incarcerated is unable to attend school. And having a criminal record decreases employment opportunities later on.
c) Some “crimes” are not defined as such based on any clear-cut moral or social principles, and may needlessly contribute to criminality and poverty. For example, defining drug manufacturing, importing, sales and use as crimes probably has a tremendous net-negative effect on society, as exemplified by our national experience with alcohol prohibition during the 1920’s. About half the people in federal prisons are there for drug-related crimes. And according to a paper in the American Sociological Review (http://www2.asanet.org/media/blacksinjail.html), about 20% of young black men spend time in prison. While in prison those men have no ability to contribute to the finances of their families; and their criminal records decrease their employment opportunities when released.
To close, poverty and near-poverty are significant problems in America that could be improved through effective social programs. Alas, most current federal and state programs appear to have net-negative effects, while squandering fabulous amounts of our nations treasure.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Social Security Disability Destroys Lives
NOTE: this was submitted as a comment to the article “America’s Hidden Welfare Program,” which you can read at
The 300+ reader comments following the article reveal how deeply the SSDI system is embedded in our culture.
This article is not intended to disparage the minority of Social Security Disability Insurance recipients who are seriously disabled. The problem is, they are only a minority of recipients.
As a physician I’ve seen many patients “get on disability.” Social Security disability destroys lives, pure and simple. I’ve seen this many times. A patient is a normal person--they have medical or mental problems (like most of us), but they struggle, as we all struggle. Sometimes they’re happy because they’re succeeding in some way. Sometimes they’re despondent because they hurt, or because life I hard. But they manage.
Then they get the notion, often from advertising by lawyers who exploit the SSDI system, that they should “go on disability.” Then life will be better. I warn them what will really happen, but they ignore me.
There are no objective criteria for SSDI benefits. You can qualify because you’re depressed or because your back hurts. In truth, there are no objective medical criteria for disability. The only SSDI qualification is having a good lawyer and determination. So a year later, despite my warning, the patient is “on disability.” Then what happens?
When they come to my clinic, there are no longer good days and bad days--only bad days. The money is not enough for any sort of “financial security,” so they live in chronic poverty, without hope. They no longer work, even part-time, for fear of losing their benefits, or due to lack of motivation. They are now officially disabled and incompetent to make their way in the world.
They no longer struggle. Even if depression was not the reason for their disability, they become chronically depressed. If they had chronic pain, it becomes worse and more constant, if only because they have nothing to distract their attention from it.
It is our daily struggles that bring us joy and self-esteem. Alas, the same anticipation of reward that motivates our struggles, also makes us prey to the delusion that “getting on disability” will solve all our problems. In truth, SSDI just promotes chronic misery, and deprives citizens of that most fundamental Constitutional right to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
I have described the most common person on disability. The second most common recipient, in my experience, is the non-disabled abuser. These people are well-adjusted and often do work, either part-time or “under the table,” so as to keep their benefits.
In summary, SSDI is widely abused, and causes far more misery than it relieves. For that reason, it should be abolished. There is a minority of those on SSDI who are truly disabled. One might argue that we only need to tighten the criteria. But to anyone who’s seen such systems evolve, that argument is absurd. Such systems inevitably succumb to the political and bureaucratic expediency that result in incrementalism, abuse, exploitation, waste, and harm to the very citizens they attempt to help. It is time to abolish SSDI because it causes far more harm than good, and it is not repairable. -Dan
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