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Is the Health Care Industry a Net Drain on the U.S. Economy?

Today's Washington Post refers to "...the daunting challenge of remaking a health system that consumes $1 out of every $6 spent in the country..."

Did you ever wonder why journalists don't refer to other side of the balance sheet when it comes to the health care industry? Of course, they're just mouthing platitudes put out by politicians and their special-interest supporters, but it doesn't take an accounting genius to consider that across the ledger from "expense" is the word "revenue". By repeated exposure to that '1-in-6' figure, you might get the sense that the health care industry is a net drain on the U.S. economy.

Can you imagine a journalist reporting that $1 out of every $6 spent in this country is "consumed" by the media?

For the sake of this discussion, let's set aside aside the health-related outcomes of the medical business, and strictly consider the financial output.

The $1 that the "health system" allegedly "consumes" doesn't just vanish into the ether. In addition to providing tangible, often-measurable benefits to the customer, the dollar also produces the following...
  • personal income to support families (including little children) of everyone from insurance agents, to scientists, to medical equipment engineers and manufacturers, nurses, doctors, janitors, food service staff, ambulance drivers and the attorneys who chase them, construction workers, architects and many others;
  • tax revenues (real estate, income, sales, corporate, etc.) paid to local, state and federal governments, including politicians who sometimes make factually-inaccurate or misleading statements about the impact of the health care system on the economy;
  • tuition and student loan payments for degrees, from community colleges to med schools and a range of educational institutions in between;
  • contributions to charities, faith communities, public TV & radio, universities from which health care workers earn degrees, and even to incumbent politicians who send out news releases with skewed information about health care and the economy;
  • sales of unrelated goods and services to people who draw their income from health care industry employment: homes, cars, fuel, vacations, clothing, food, even newspapers and cable TV that pay journalists who sometimes report one-sided information about crucial economic issues;
  • investment income to advance medical science, as makers of drugs and medical gear do R&D to increase the effectiveness of their products;
  • retirement income for people who have invested in the stock of medical firms;
  • investment income for medical firm stockholders that then gets spent on luxury goods, commodities and everything in between.
This is not an argument for the current pricing structure (already overly-influenced by government's regulation, price fixing and subsidies). It's an effort to bring balance to the discussion, or at least discussion of the balance sheet.

A dollar "consumed" by anything but government, generally produces a dollar, more or less, in value, as well as a ripple effect through the economy that generates benefits for people in all socioeconomic strata. The one sure way to louse up this beneficent cycle of blessing is to increase control by politicians and bureaucrats who have understanding of neither health care, nor basic economics.

As you travel your community today, look at the homes, the cars, the stores, the people, the medical offices, the hospital and realize that $1 out of every $6 spent in this country supports a quality of life unsurpassed in world history, for you, your family and your neighbors, thanks to the health care industry.

There now, that should make you feel better.

Author, speaker, and Washington Examiner columnist Scott Ott, is candidate for Lehigh County Executive in Eastern Pennsylvania.
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Obama Plays 'One of These Things is Not Like the Others'

PRES. OBAMA: "...we must lower the health-care costs that are driving us into debt, create the jobs of the future within our borders, give our workers the skills and training they need to compete for those jobs, and make the tough choices necessary to bring down our deficit in the long run." -- Op-Ed in Washington Post


Do you remember the Sesame Street game "One of these things is not like the others"? You see a grouping of four objects and have to decide which one is different before the song ends.

Look at the president's list above. Can you tell which thing doesn't belong?

Song Over: The only actual federal government responsibility among the four items the president lists is to bring down the deficit. (Unless he's talking about cutting health-care costs for federal employees, or giving federal workers job skills training.) So far, his plan for bringing down the deficit seems to be to spend as much borrowed taxpayer money as possible. Under this plan, the only hope for "deficit reduction" is to alter the definition of one, or both, of those terms.

The president, who has no previous executive experience, seems to think he got elected CEO of USA, Inc. and that every part of your life is a government program over which he exercises control. In the course of his aggressive effort to run your life, he neglects (or perhaps rejects) the job he swore to do: "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

Perhaps one could argue that, technically, he is upholding his oath to "execute the office of President of the United States". After all, that verb does have more than one meaning.

Author, speaker, and Washington Examiner columnist Scott Ott, is candidate for Lehigh County Executive in Eastern Pennsylvania.
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