RSSMicro.com Search - RSS Feed Search Engine - RSS Feed Directory
Dedicated RSS Feed Search Engine
 Search 4.3 million RSS feeds
The most comprehensive RSS feed search on the web
Top Stories  |  FeedRank Checker

Published

   Last Hour

   Last Day

   Past Week

   Past Month

 Anytime







Featured
RSS Feeds


CNN RSS Feeds

Reuters RSS Feeds

MSNBC RSS Feeds

New York Times RSS Feeds

Washington Post RSS Feeds

CNBC RSS Feeds

ABC News RSS Feeds

Fox News RSS Feeds

Sky News RSS Feeds

Forbes RSS Feeds

CNET RSS Feeds

Unicef RSS Feeds

PBS RSS Feeds

Wall Street Journal RSS Feeds

Financial Times RSS Feeds

Business Week RSS Feeds

Bloomberg RSS Feeds

TheStreet RSS Feeds

ESPN RSS Feeds

   




FeedRank - RSSMicro Search

FeedRank, a newly developed algorithm for ranking RSS feeds only on RSSMicro
Click here to learn more




FeedRank: 4/10  4/10  Good  ---  blog.prospect.org
Dean Baker's commentary on economic reporting ...

 

 
Sunday, July 20, 2008 --- 83 days ago
The NYT is so dogmatically protectionist in some areas that it will not even allow discussion of free trade on its pages. The protectionist doctrine is perhaps nowhere deeper than in the treatment of health care. The United States has a hugely inefficient health care system. We pay more than twice as much per person as the average for other wealthy countries yet we rank near the bottom in most measures of health outcomes. Reform is blocked by the power of the insurance and pharmaceutical industry, as well as the doctors' lobbies. The obvious solution would be to make it easier for people in the United States to take advantage of the more efficient health care systems elsewhere in the world. But the NYT never even has allowed this idea to be discussed in its pages. Instead, we get diatribes from protectionists like Tyler Cowen, who warns that we will be forced to pay 60-80 percent of income in taxes by the end of the century if we don't change the current structure of Medicare. (You get these numbers by assuming that health care costs continue to grow much faster than income, leading to large budget deficits, and that Congress lets the deficits get ever larger [never raising taxes or cutting spending] so that by the end of the century the country has an incredible debt and interest burden. It's not a serious projection, but it's good for scaring people.) The U.S. health care system is seriously broken. If the political system is to ...




Recent Posts





 Facebook     Del.icio.us     Digg     StumbleUpon     Reddit     Google
Copyright © 2008 RSSMicro.com