Some reading material from the Internet today:
1. Interesting profile of Romney’s governorship of Massachusetts in the NYT:
“The Mitt Romney Who Might Have Been
By ROBERT DRAPER
Published: October 2, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/07/magazine/mitt-romney.html?hp
It appears to have been written prior to the debate.
2. I’m shocked that businesses would figure out how to circumvent the ACA’s mandates by self insuring.
http://healthpolicyandmarket.blogspot.com/2012/10/will-smallest-employers-circumvent.html
3. Steve Pearlstein on job creators:
and the side effects of cost reduction in non-labor intensive industries
Filed under: Bits and Pieces |
JNC, did you find Baumol’s cost theory persuasive? I did, as to elementary school education, particularly. Generally, it seems to comport with reality over time, to me.
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FWIW, the ACA instituted changes to clamp down on costs through a productivity adjustment to payment rates and a lot of the “savings” assumes they adjustments are implemented on schedule. I’m dubious. I think we’ve created a “doc fix” for everyone.
Also — Baumol’s theory has been kicking around health care for years. This is from 2001
http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2001/02/12/bica0212.htm
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I found it to be a useful analysis of the current state of affairs, especially when thinking about the price of computer components or other consumer electronics relative to other goods.
With regards to health care, it’s valid until we get automated holographic doctors:
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“markinaustin, on October 8, 2012 at 7:28 am said:
JNC, did you find Baumol’s cost theory persuasive? I did, as to elementary school education, particularly. Generally, it seems to comport with reality over time, to me.”
Banned is slightly more dismissive in his comments on the same article on Ezra’s site:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/10/08/wonkbook-can-government-keep-up/
Baumol may be wrong about healthcare & education cost drivers, but that doesn’t make Pearlstein a “hack”.
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With regards to music performance:
it’s worth noting Mick Jagger’s take on this:
Under this view, artists got paid based a specific tying of music to a physical distribution system, i.e. records, and then technology revolutionized that. Also, the price of artist tickets isn’t based on work effort, but rather scarcity.
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