Ross Douthat, “Did The Americans With Disabilities Act Work?”

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Ross Douthat, “Did The Americans With Disabilities Act Work?”


“Measuring” the impact of the stimulus

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“Measuring” the impact of the stimulus


Benjamin Franklin on wealth

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-kochan-luxury-20100726,0,5604070.story


If You Own a Gun, Should You Pay More for Health Care?

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If You Own a Gun, Should You Pay More for Health Care?

Jonathan Chait at The New Republic calls it the “The NRA Health Care Loophole.” He writes that the National Rifle Association (NRA) successfully lobbied to include a provision in the health reform law prohibiting insurance companies from raising premiums for people with guns in their homes.

From this you might suppose that insurers charge higher premiums to gun owners today. They don’t. But the left is obsessed with guns as opposed to, say, swimming pools — despite the fact that almost 6 times as many people die by accidental drowning as in firearms accidents.

Chait asserts that “a huge portion” of the “conservative backlash against health care reform was premised on the notion that reform would force people who choose to lead healthy, responsible lives to subsidize bad decisions by fat, lazy slobs.” But there is an even more egregious subsidy, according to Chait. He claims that “people who keep guns in their home are choosing to run the risk of injury or death.” And that “[g]un owners are eleven times more likely to have a household member attempt suicide, and four times more likely to suffer an accidental homicide or shooting injury than to successfully use the gun in self-defense.” Where, he asks, is the conservative outrage over this subsidy?

People philosophically opposed to gun ownership have spent more than 20 years trying to position it as a health risk. In the course of their campaign, they funded a collection of widely cited but empirically shaky academic studies engineered to give credence to their claims. [Selected examples and discussion are here, here, here, and here.]

Chait has decided the time is ripe to blow the dust off those moldy statistics and revive the effort to control guns. ObamaCare provides the vehicle for this because the law gives political functionaries wide latitude to define both real and imagined health risks and to force people to pay for them.

Chait also claims that “accidental homicides” or shooting injuries were four times more likely than successfully using a gun in self-defense. To the contrary, Ga…

Daniel J. SmithSent Via Mobile Phone
http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Alan Blinder and Mark Zandi’s Keynesian Black Box

http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=12010


Arizona’s Immigration Surprises

http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB10001424052748704684604575381561053396180-lMyQjAxMTAwMDIwNzEyNDcyWj.html


Anarchy and Efficient Law – David Friedman

http://www.daviddfriedman.com/Academic/Anarchy_and_Eff_Law/Anarchy_and_Eff_Law.html


Afghanistan war logs: How US marines sanitised record of bloodbath

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/26/afghanistan-war-logs-us-marines


Is philanthropy killing business in Africa?

http://chrisblattman.com/2010/07/28/is-philanthropy-killing-business-in-africa/


Gulf spill has not fouled most beaches but hurts tourism – USATODAY.com

http://www.usatoday.com/travel/destinations/2010-07-28-oil-spill-beaches_N.htm

Daniel J. Smith
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http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Where Has all the Oil Gone?

http://abcnews.go.com/WN/bp-oil-spill-crude-mother-nature-breaks-slick/story?id=11254252


The Costs of War – Freakonomics Blog – NYTimes.com

http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/27/the-costs-of-war/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+FreakonomicsBlog+%28Freakonomics+Blog%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Daniel J. Smith
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http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Credit Scores, Criminal Background Checks and Hiding the Bad Apples

http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2010/07/beyond-fico.html


Si, se Puede: “CastroCare in Crisis”

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Si, se Puede: “CastroCare in Crisis”

Although Cuba’s government commits 16 percent of its budget to health care, the communist dictatorship’s real health-care “system” is dedicated to serving cash-paying customers from Canada and other countries. This comes from a fascinating article in the latest issue of Foreign Affairs, “CastroCare in Crisis,” by Laurie Garrett of the Council on Foreign Relations.

It’s not news that The Castro brothers profit from medical tourism. Michael Moore infamously shilled for the enterprising Havana Hospital in his movie, SiCKO, where he brought 9/11 Ground Zero rescue workers to be treated. The Havana Hospital appears to be a more competitive, patient-centered enterprise than any American general hospital I’ve seen: It posts prices for its services, reports testimonials, and can schedule surgeries on short notice (three days for open-heart surgery!

Garrett explains that the hospitals that serve foreigners are owned by a government-owned tourism conglomerate, and serve patients from 70 different countries. Canadians are significant customers. Like Cuba, Canada controls access to medical services through a government monopoly, so citizens cannot get timely care. Unlike Cuba, Canada allows the rest of the economy to operate freely, so Canadians are rich enough to be able to pay just under $7,000 for knee replacements in Cuba (instead of waiting for months in Canada).

But what will happen when the Castros are gone? Two competing effects, according to Garrett: An influx of U.S. patients who will be free to travel to Cuba for treatment, but an exodus of physicians who will be free to emigrate to the U.S. Plus Cuba has the second oldest population in the Americas, with only one quarter of the population under 40 years of age. Once the Cuban people are free of communism, their pent-up demand for medical care will also explode. Cuban patients (as opposed to Canadian patients in Cuba) already have to provide their own syringes, sheets, and towels. Soap, disinfectant, and sterile equipment are rare. (See John Goodman’s previous post here.)

Unfortunately, Garrett does not consider the consequences of ObamaCare, which will likely accelerate the international travel of U.S. patients, while minimizing the emigration of Cuban doctors. If Cuba becomes a free society that welcomes foreign capital, American investors will soon decide that investing in hospitals that serve U.S…

Daniel J. SmithSent Via Mobile Phone
http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Another Country Michael Moore Would Like

http://www.john-goodman-blog.com/another-country-michael-moore-would-like/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+TheJohnGoodmanHealthBlog+(The+John+Goodman+Health+Blog)


Expect Emergency Room Visits to Soar

http://www.john-goodman-blog.com/expect-emergency-room-visits-to-soar/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+TheJohnGoodmanHealthBlog+(The+John+Goodman+Health+Blog)&utm_content=Google+Reader


Ed Leamer knocks it out of the park (again)

http://mungowitzend.blogspot.com/2010/07/ed-leamer-knocks-it-out-of-park-again.html


How to become a feudal lord with hundreds of servants for $99

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How to become a feudal lord with hundreds of servants for $99


“A city outsources everything. Sky doesn’t fall.”

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“A city outsources everything. Sky doesn’t fall.”


Snus Beats the Pharmaceutical Competition in Norway

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Snus Beats the Pharmaceutical Competition in Norway


Why This Gigantic “Intelligence” Apparatus? Follow the Money

http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/129364.html

Daniel J. Smith
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http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Recycling Myths Revisited : PERC – The Property and Environment Research Center

http://www.perc.org/articles/article1282.php

Daniel J. Smith
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http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Cuban Health Care (WHO Statistics)

http://www.john-goodman-blog.com/what-michael-moore-didn’t-tell-us-about-cuban-health-care/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+TheJohnGoodmanHealthBlog+(The+John+Goodman+Health+Blog)&utm_content=Google+Reader


Rights

http://friendlyatheist.com/2010/07/16/the-response-i-wish-more-christians-would-give/

“The Muslim community, however, often suffers in silence. And around here, I get the sense that the hatred runs deep. It amazes me that the same folks who so loudly champion their rights to guns and free speech guaranteed by the constitution seem to think freedom of religion is negotiable.

As Christians, we must speak up, for it is no coincidence that when Jesus was asked, Who is my neighbor? he chose the most hated religious-ethnic group of the day — Samaritans — to tell his story.

Yes! That’s the type of response more Christians ought to be giving. If they’re going to pick and choose which parts of the Bible to follow, standing up for minorities is a good lesson to get behind. Many pastors talk about this in church, but how rarely do we see Christians actually following through on it? Certainly not the ones opposing the mosque.”

“I want to see more Christians speaking out in favor of these mosques… and against any fellow Christians who disagree. It’s easy to do and it shows you’re not afraid to stand up to the crazier people in your faith. They’re wrong. You’re right. Don’t be afraid to say so”


Spooner Quote

“But whether the Constitution really be one thing, or another, this much is certain – that it has either authorized such a government as we have had, or has been powerless to prevent it. In either case, it is unfit to exist.” – Lysander Spooner


The Libertarian Missionary

http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2010/07/the_libertarian_2.html

“Take drug prohibition.  Alcohol ruins far more lives, destroys more families, and kills more bystanders than all illegal drugs put together.  Conservatives barely think about this problem, but they’re confident that we should keep fighting the Drug War for the foreseeable future.”

“Conservative opposition to immigration is even more disturbing.  Immigration promotes almost every value my opponent mentions – especially for the low-skilled workers he wants to exclude.  Life in the Third World ranges from hard to hellish.  Just letting an immigrant move here to work at Walmart spreads happiness, prosperity, equality, common decency, and yes, survival.  The economically illiterate assume, of course, that immigrants’ gains come at the expense of the native population.  But conservatives know better: International trade enriches the people of both countries, even if they’re trading labor.


Top Secret America: Post documents growth of intelligence since 9/11

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/19/AR2010071901011.html

Daniel J. Smith
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http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Work Incentives and the Food Stamp Program — by Hilary Williamson Hoynes, Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach

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Work Incentives and the Food Stamp Program — by Hilary Williamson Hoynes, Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach

Labor supply theory makes strong predictions about how the introduction of a social welfare program impacts work effort. Although there is a large literature on the work incentive effects of AFDC and the EITC, relatively little is known about the work incentive effects of the Food Stamp Program and none of the existing literature is based on quasi-experimental methods. We use the cross-county introduction of the program in the 1960s and 1970s to estimate the impact of the program on the extensive and intensive margins of labor supply, earnings, and family cash income. Consistent with theory, we find modest reductions in employment and hours worked when food stamps are introduced. The results are larger for single-parent families.

Daniel J. SmithSent Via Mobile Phone
http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


Death by Market Power: Reform, Competition and Patient Outcomes in the National Health Service — by Martin Gaynor, Rodrigo Moreno-Serra, Carol Propper

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Death by Market Power: Reform, Competition and Patient Outcomes in the National Health Service — by Martin Gaynor, Rodrigo Moreno-Serra, Carol Propper

The effect of competition on the quality of health care remains a contested issue. Most empirical estimates rely on inference from non experimental data. In contrast, this paper exploits a pro-competitive policy reform to provide estimates of the impact of competition on hospital outcomes. The English government introduced a policy in 2006 to promote competition between hospitals. Patients were given choice of location for hospital care and provided information on the quality and timeliness of care. Prices, previously negotiated between buyer and seller, were set centrally under a DRG type system. Using this policy to implement a difference-in-differences research design we estimate the impact of the introduction of competition on not only clinical outcomes but also productivity and expenditure. Our data set is large, containing information on approximately 68,000 discharges per year per hospital from 162 hospitals. We find that the effect of competition is to save lives without raising costs. Patients discharged from hospitals located in markets where competition was more feasible were less likely to die, had shorter length of stay and were treated at the same cost.

Daniel J. SmithSent Via Mobile Phone
http://www.danieljosephsmith.com


In Defense of Payday Lenders and Their Customers

http://www.thefreemanonline.org/headline/payday-lenders/


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