Coulter Column: Obama's Public Sector Full Employment Plan
Last week, President Obama said "the private sector is doing fine." This was not reassuring to those of us who suspect the Democrats haven't the first idea what "private sector" means.
He did not help matters by becoming lachrymose over the suffering of public sector employees:
"Where we're seeing weaknesses in our economy have to do with state and local government. ... And so, if Republicans want to be helpful, if they really want to move forward and put people back to work, what they should be thinking about is, how do we help state and local governments ..."
When Democrats say the public sector is suffering, they mean public sector employees have half the unemployment rate of the rest of the country -- 4.2 percent compared to 8.2 percent.
Obama's monumentally idiotic statement has led his media defenders to recycle Mitt Romney's alleged "gaffe" from several months ago, when he said: "I like being able to fire people who provide services to me."
But that was not a gaffe at all -- except as deceptively edited by the media to end after the word "people." (Only Donald Trump enjoys firing people, and by the way, people love watching Donald Trump fire people.)
Far from a gaffe, Romney's actual sentence is the key to understanding the nation's health care crisis -- which happens to be exactly what he was talking about.
Nearly every product you can think of has gotten better and cheaper in the last 20 years because of market competition: cell phones, television sets, computers, food delivery, airline tickets (constrained by the cost of fuel), express mail, and on and on.
There aren't a lot of restaurants serving lousy food or dog walkers who lose your dog because they'd go out of business pretty fast if they provided rotten services. They're not the only game in town.
But you know what is the only game in town? The government, including putatively private businesses that are heavily regulated by the government. Only with the government do we continuously get worse service for a higher price.
Take away the ability to fire people, and you have airport security, public schools, Veterans Administration hospitals, the Postal Service, General Motors and Pinch Sulzberger, New York Times family scion.
Health insurers may technically be private companies, but they are required by law to cover a slew of services, making them an extension of monopolistic government. (Similarly, the old AT&T was a "private" company, but in reality it was just a government-run monopolistic phone company providing no choice, poor service, little innovation and obscenely high prices.)
In most states, you can't choose a health insurance plan that doesn't cover gambling and sex addictions, psychological counseling, speech therapy and prenatal care -- even if you plan on never having children.
Health insurance companies don't need to compete for your business -- they're all offering the same product, anyway. Moreover, because of government regulation concerning how health insurance is taxed, most people aren't choosing their insurers. Their employers are.
As a result, insurance companies have become outrageously unresponsive to both patients and doctors. Insurance companies need only concern themselves with satisfying government regulators and corporate purchasers. Meanwhile, doctors have to please only the insurance companies, which don't particularly care how patients are treated, as long as it's cheap.
This is a third-party-payer problem, or as the proverb goes, "He who pays the piper calls the tune." All third-party-payer systems are disasters. The customer is trapped, forced to pay for something he doesn't want, with no one to complain to and no possibility of taking his business elsewhere.
An example frequent travelers will recognize are the online discount hotel brokers. These can be great -- unless you arrive at a hotel and there's no WiFi, or there's massive construction going on, or your room isn't available until four hours after check-in time. But you've already paid the full price to the booking company.
If you had paid for the room yourself, you could walk away and find another hotel. (Even if you used a credit card, you can reverse the charges because, again, credit card companies would go out of business if they didn't refuse payment for scams.) But if you booked through a third party, the hotel tells you, "Sorry, take it up with Expedia."
Ironically, Romney is proposing that all Americans have the same ability he has to hire and fire insurance companies and doctors. The rich can already do this. Why can't the rest of us? We hire -- and fire -- our own appliance stores, pet groomers, restaurants, hairdressers and computer companies. Why not health providers?
And why are the media so desperate to avoid that conversation?
We need a free market in health insurance, which Congress could accomplish with a one-page bill stating, "There shall be interstate commerce in health insurance." Once we were allowed to purchase health insurance across states lines -- prohibited by law today -- everyone would be buying insurance from companies based in states such as Utah, which have the fewest mandates about what health insurers must cover.
Insurance companies would be responsive to us, the people buying their services, and not the government or corporations. Most people would choose to buy insurance only for what insurance is intended for -- catastrophes -- while paying for regular checkups themselves, the same way we pay for our own cell phones, computers, baby sitters, manicures and everything else that's been getting better and cheaper, unlike all government-regulated services.
Doctors would then have to be responsive to us, not to our insurance companies. Nothing improves the quality of a service like being able to fire the people providing it. The media don't want you to think about that, so they edit Romney's remark and call it a "gaffe."
For better service right now, for example, the American people need to fire Barack Obama and hire Mitt Romney.
- Ann Coulter's blog
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Comments
Well, sh**, Ann, that won't work
Submitted by CO2Maker on Wed, 06/13/2012 - 7:03pm.
It makes sense.
I'd add one small tweak: Sell insurance as a commodity, not on the basis of group rates. When you go to a restaurant, you don't pay for the burger or the ribeye based on what group you've already joined. Same with insurance: sell insurance based on the coverages of the policy, which you can buy at the drive-through window and super-size if you want, or you can buy at a sit-down agency and get it from the maître d'agency.
MY THOUGHTS ON INSURANCE
Submitted by craig1304 on Thu, 06/14/2012 - 12:42am.
I have always thought that the primary problem with insurance these days is that the insurance companies are for profit, Their main go is to maximize the return of the shareholders, not to take care of their policy holders, save for mutual insurance companies where the policy holders are the owners of the company.
I think that if time could be rolled back to when insurance companies were non-profit things might be better than what they are now.
MY thoughts on insurance companies*
Submitted by cajun2 on Thu, 06/14/2012 - 1:32am.
Insurance companies that make profits are able to serve a greater number of people.
Other than doing "good works", what's the point if ---
Submitted by matthewdean on Thu, 06/14/2012 - 1:39am.
something isn't profitable in one form or another?
MD
Craig, in a free market where
Submitted by Ken Shepherd on Fri, 06/15/2012 - 10:13am.
Craig, in a free market where there are no or minimal barriers to a company's entry and/or exit from the market, there's the power of competition to ensure that companies are not merely focused on the interests of shareholders but on the happiness of customers, because market share will erode if service quality declines and customers can shop around for competitors that offer better price and quality.
One large problem with the health care market is its so heavily-regulated by government in a manner such that competition is restricted and large conglomerates have the inside track and lobby for regulations that make it harder for upstarts to enter the market and provide cost-cutting competition.
Truly market-friendly reforms will remove artificial barriers to competition and ultimately benefit everyone.
proposed solution is true but...
Submitted by ljj-dcm on Sun, 06/17/2012 - 8:33am.
When you say "insurance companies, which don't particularly care how patients are treated, as long as it's cheap."- this is not true. Has anyone noticed that Insurance is expensive? It is expensive because the more it costs the more the Ins. company makes from their cut of the premiums - that they simply raise to make up any shortfall from excess medical expense payments incurred. The AMA, big Pharm, FDA, NIH etc. with the help of the media promote the facade of this great system we have and they are that holding down costs fighting against all of the "FRAUD" - coming of course from those quacky chiros, LMT's, nutritionists etc. - services that Ins. co.'s know from trial derived data actually decrease medical costs because they get people back to work faster, decrease prescriptions, hospitalization and the need for surgery (along with all of the expensive testing associated) etc.. Someone so smart as Anne should not be such an ignoramus in regard to this - but sadly the majority of people - being personally connected to the Medical industry money machine directly or indirectly are willingly propagandized.
Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/ann-coulter/2012/06/13/coulter-column-obama...