Tangled logic and reaching for excuses: Medicaid version

Twitter: @rodgermitchell; Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
It takes only two things to keep people in chains: The ignorance of the oppressed and the treachery of their leaders..
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Since the Trump administration’s all-purpose excuse for everything is “Hillary, Obama, Democrats, and Fake News media,” one ought to be refreshed to see an article that tries to justify the GOP’s health care plans, without resorting to those pitiful alibis.

And yet . .

Sorry, Liberals: Protecting the Medicaid Status Quo Won’t Save Patients
The program desperately needs radical surgery
Shikha Dalmia | July 17, 2017 | Reason.com

Medicaid provides health care to 75 million Americans. It’s also a hideously expensive program that is at the center of the raging health-care debate in Washington.

It’s not Medicaid that’s expensive. It’s health care that’s expensive. Medicaid actually is less costly, in that contrary to popular wisdom, Medicaid is not funded by federal taxpayers.,

Even if all FICA collections were $0, the federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, could continue funding Medicaid, forever.

Related image
Medicaid doesn’t treat patients. It simply pays bills, as any insurance company does.

Republicans want to scale back the program, and Democrats warn that doing so will cause nothing short of mass death.

But that is not a credible—or responsible—claim.

ObamaCare extended Medicaid eligibility to able-bodied adults at up to 138 percent of the poverty level.

To do this, the federal government promised to pick up 100 percent of the tab for the first three years, and then 90 percent in perpetuity in participating states.

Republicans want to trim back Medicaid eligibility to the pre-ObamaCare days, when “only” the poor, children, the disabled, the elderly, and pregnant women qualified.

See, it’s like this. The GOP says if you are at, or 138% above, the poverty level, you’re not poor. Right? Wrong.

The official poverty level is pitifully low:

$12,060 for individuals
$16,240 for a family of 2
$20,420 for a family of 3
$24,600 for a family of 4

Try supporting a family of 4 on 24,600 a year, or even 138% that amount.

The Republican plan, assembled by millionaires means millions of poor people will not be able to afford health care insurance.

Conservatives also want to take the opportunity to fundamentally reform the program, which consumed half of most state budgets and a tenth of the federal budget even before the ObamaCare expansion.

To this end, Republicans want Uncle Sam to stop handing states on average 50 cents for every Medicaid dollar they spend and instead give them a fixed lump sum on a per-patient basis and tie its growth to general inflation.

The sole purpose is for our Monetarily Sovereign federal government to spend less and the monetarily non-sovereign states to spend more.

Those of you who understand economics immediately will see the fallacy.  A Monetarily Sovereign government never can run short of its own sovereign currency. A monetarily non-sovereign government can and does run short of money.

The federal government can afford anything. Many (most?) of the states are short of dollars.

Bottom line: The Republicans want less spent on the poor.

If Senate Republicans’ plan is enacted—a big “if” at this stage—federal Medic aid spending would drop from $4.6 trillion between 2018 and 2026 to about $3.9 trillion.

Right. There’s no magic in this. The GOP simply wants to cut benefits to the poor.  Period.

This reduction is hardly draconian.

It isn’t draconian unless you consider $700 billion to be a significant amount of money, and 22 million uninsured to be a health problem for America. 

However, given that liberals want health-care spending to go in only one direction—up—it’s hardly surprising that they’d fight this. But their claim that the cuts will kill Americans—about 208,500 over the next decade, per a Vox analysis—is pure sensationalism.

Let’s think about it.

Vox’s calculations are based on straightforward projections from a Congressional Budget Office report that estimates that scaling back ObamaCare spending would mean loss of insurance for some 22 million Americans. Vox also claims that every 830 people covered means one life saved, hence, presto, the GOP plan will mean killing 208,500 people.

The first problem with this analysis—apart from its chutzpah—is that it assumes that all insurance saves lives, even a substandard plan like Medicaid, which accounts for the vast majority of the people covered by ObamaCare. That is emphatically not the case.

According to the author, if fewer than 208,500 people die to young for lack of health care, there is no problem. We are not told how many additional deaths would be unacceptable to the Republicans.

As I have argued before, Medicaid is perhaps the civilized world’s worst program. It costs just as much as private plans—about $7,000 per patient—but produces worse outcomes, including higher mortality, than private coverage.

So given that one of ObamaCare’s dirty little secrets is that many of its Medicaid enrollees are folks kicked off their private plans due to the Medicaid expansion, the law may have actually cost—rather than saved—lives in this cohort.

This last claim goes under, “Figures don’t lie, but liars figure.” Two reasons:

  1. Medicaid doesn’t treat anything. Medicaid pays the bills. Period. It’s just like private insurance. In both cases, doctors do the treating. So if Medicaid patients have worse outcomes, it’s because . . .
  2. They are poorer. They lead harsher, more stressful, less healthful lives.  Poor people always have had “worse medical outcomes.”

Apparently, the author want you to believe that cutting Medicaid payments to doctors and hospitals somehow will improve the medical outcomes.

But what about the uninsured? Extending Medicaid to these people improved their health and diminished mortality, right? Wrong. Plenty of reputable studies suggest that this might not be the case:

A 2010 study by the University of Virginia of 893,658 patients in the university hospital found that individuals on Medicaid had the worst post-surgery survival rate of any patients, including the uninsured, after controlling for age, health status, income, and other relevant factors.

So there it is. By some unexplained miracle, being able to afford health care worsens “post-surgery survival rate.

This ridiculous nonsense is what the right wing wants you to believe.

A 2011 Journal of Heart and Lung study found that of 11,385 patients undergoing lung transplants, Medicaid patients were 8.1 percent less likely to survive than the uninsured after 10 years. They also found Medicaid insurance was a significant predictor of death within three years, after controlling for other clinical factors.

And then there is the famous 2013 Oregon study — the closest thing to a lab experiment in the real world — co-authored by ObamaCare architect Jonathan Gruber.

It contrasted uninsured patients who were randomly assigned to Medicaid with those who remained uninsured and found that the Medicaid patients did not have significantly better outcomes for diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and even mortality.

Stop and think about it. If you had seen a selected study that showed having health care insurance worsened survival rates, what would you think about that study?

All Medicaid does is pay bills.  It doesn’t perform operations or provide post operative treatment. So, by what twisted logic would you come to the conclusion that being able to pay your doctor and hospital bills will kill you?

Or would you rightly conclude that other factors must be involved. Would you sensibly conclude that being able to pay your bills does not lead to an early death.

The author doesn’t have that sense, or hopes you don’t.

The main evidence to support Vox’s claim that Medicaid improves mortality rates comes from Massachusetts’ experience with universal coverage.

Vox claims ObamaCare emulates Massachusetts’ system, but as the Manhattan Institute’s Oren Cass points out, that comparison doesn’t fly: In contrast to ObamaCare, Massachusetts’ private plan component accounted for about 80 percent of coverage, while Medicaid comprised 20 percent at most.

So, the solution is to reduce coverage???

And even if Medicaid’s mortality outcomes were somewhat better for the uninsured, it would still not necessarily follow that extending the program would save lives on balance—or that eliminating the program would do the reverse.

Get it?

The Republicans claim increasing the number of people who can afford to pay doctors and hospitals doesn’t improve life span, and being unable to pay doctors and hospitals doesn’t reduce lifespan.

In short, doctors and hospitals don’t help people live longer, healthier lives. Do you believe that? It’s what the right wing wants you to believe.

In a world with finite resources, one also has to consider the opportunity costs or other ways of spending that may potentially save more lives.

What are the “finite resources”?  Money? The federal government can spend infinite money; the states cannot. So illogically, the right wing wants to take some the costs from the federal government and push them onto the states.

Or are we talking about doctors and hospitals as being “finite resources”? If so, the right wing seems to be saying that these resources should be allocated only to higher income people and not “wasted” on the poor.

Indeed, a 2016 study in the journal Health Affairs found that states that spent a smaller portion of their budgets on Medicaid and Medicare than on social programs such as housing, nutrition, and even public transportation, showed “significant” gains on a myriad of health factors, including mortality, over states that did the reverse.

It may be the case that these programs improved general quality of life and lowered stress levels, thus bettering baseline health and preventing people from falling prey to life-sapping illnesses in the first place.

And what holds true for state-level spending might be doubly true for individuals spending out-of-pocket.

It absolutely is true, which in part explains why the poor die younger. And the problem is that states and individuals, being monetarily non-sovereign, are limited in what they can spend. 

The main advantage of health insurance in general and Medicaid in particular is not really to prevent death but to protect against catastrophic illnesses that wipe out patients financially—in other words, to provide a psychic comfort.

What!!? The main benefit of health insurance is to provide “psychic comfort“? That’s the “main benefit”?? Yikes!

But patients are not willing to pay for any insurance product to receive that comfort, presumably because at some point, other uses of the money — like a car fitted with state-of-the-art safety features or a more expensive home in a low-crime neighborhood—can offer an even stronger sense of security.

As if the above were not clueless enough, the author now drifts into abject delusion:

As George Mason University economist Alex Tabarrok recently pointed out, in Massachusetts, buy-in for Medicaid-like programs fell precipitously when patients were asked to bear more of their cost.

Medicaid recipients value the program at about one-fifth its actual cost, research shows.

In other words, they’d buy only after an 80 percent discount.

By liberal logic, if they declined to buy in, they’d be courting death. But the calculus of health insurance is much more complicated than their simplistic arithmetic.

Uh, excuse me, but the reason people don’t buy in is because THEY ARE POOR.

Get it, right wing? Poor people do without insurance because they struggle to pay today’s bills.

When you, don’t have enough money to put food on the table, or to pay the rent, or to afford transportation to a low-paying job, insurance seems like a luxury.

The right wing wants to cut Medicaid payments to doctors and hospitals, and has invented some truly obnoxious excuses for this cruelty to the poor.

The bottom line is:

  1. Medicaid does not treat patients. It simply pays doctor and hospital bills. It is does nothing more than replace for-profit insurance companies. Thus, to claim that Medicaid “care” is better or worse than private insurance care or patient-paid care is utter nonsense.  Medicaid just issues checks.
  2. The notion that somehow, not being able to pay for health care has no effect on health, is among the more ridiculous claims by the right wing.
  3. The Federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, cannot run short of dollars. The states, being monetarily non-sovereign, can and do run short of dollars. Thus it is nonsensical to shift costs from a government that can afford everything to governments that cannot.
  4. The only, ONLY, reason the Republicans make these outrageous claims is because they have been bribed by the rich to widen the financial, educational, and opportunity Gaps between the rich and the rest. Causing poor health widens all Gaps.

The solution to America’s health care problems is a completely federally funded, comprehensive, no deductible, Medicare for All plan (See the Ten Steps to Prosperity, below.)

To claim that cuts to federal spending somehow will improve America’s health is an unacceptable combination of ignorance and cruelty, a tangled logic, reaching for excuses to enrich the rich and impoverish the rest.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The single most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the have-mores and the have-less.

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:
1. ELIMINATE FICA (Ten Reasons to Eliminate FICA )
Although the article lists 10 reasons to eliminate FICA, there are two fundamental reasons:
*FICA is the most regressive tax in American history, widening the Gap by punishing the low and middle-income groups, while leaving the rich untouched, and
*The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, neither needs nor uses FICA to support Social Security and Medicare.
2. FEDERALLY FUNDED MEDICARE — PARTS A, B & D, PLUS LONG TERM CARE — FOR EVERYONE (H.R. 676, Medicare for All )
This article addresses the questions:
*Does the economy benefit when the rich can afford better health care than can the rest of Americans?
*Aside from improved health care, what are the other economic effects of “Medicare for everyone?”
*How much would it cost taxpayers?
*Who opposes it?”
3. PROVIDE A MONTHLY ECONOMIC BONUS TO EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND CHILD IN AMERICA (similar to Social Security for All) (The JG (Jobs Guarantee) vs the GI (Guaranteed Income) vs the EB (Economic Bonus)) Or institute a reverse income tax.
This article is the fifth in a series about direct financial assistance to Americans:

Why Modern Monetary Theory’s Employer of Last Resort is a bad idea. Sunday, Jan 1 2012
MMT’s Job Guarantee (JG) — “Another crazy, rightwing, Austrian nutjob?” Thursday, Jan 12 2012
Why Modern Monetary Theory’s Jobs Guarantee is like the EU’s euro: A beloved solution to the wrong problem. Tuesday, May 29 2012
“You can’t fire me. I’m on JG” Saturday, Jun 2 2012

Economic growth should include the “bottom” 99.9%, not just the .1%, the only question being, how best to accomplish that. Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) favors giving everyone a job. Monetary Sovereignty (MS) favors giving everyone money. The five articles describe the pros and cons of each approach.
4. FREE EDUCATION (INCLUDING POST-GRAD) FOR EVERYONE Five reasons why we should eliminate school loans
Monetarily non-sovereign State and local governments, despite their limited finances, support grades K-12. That level of education may have been sufficient for a largely agrarian economy, but not for our currently more technical economy that demands greater numbers of highly educated workers.
Because state and local funding is so limited, grades K-12 receive short shrift, especially those schools whose populations come from the lowest economic groups. And college is too costly for most families.
An educated populace benefits a nation, and benefitting the nation is the purpose of the federal government, which has the unlimited ability to pay for K-16 and beyond.
5. SALARY FOR ATTENDING SCHOOL
Even were schooling to be completely free, many young people cannot attend, because they and their families cannot afford to support non-workers. In a foundering boat, everyone needs to bail, and no one can take time off for study.
If a young person’s “job” is to learn and be productive, he/she should be paid to do that job, especially since that job is one of America’s most important.
6. ELIMINATE FEDERAL TAXES ON BUSINESS
Businesses are dollar-transferring machines. They transfer dollars from customers to employees, suppliers, shareholders and the federal government (the later having no use for those dollars). Any tax on businesses reduces the amount going to employees, suppliers and shareholders, which diminishes the economy. Ultimately, all business taxes reduce your personal income.
7. INCREASE THE STANDARD INCOME TAX DEDUCTION, ANNUALLY. (Refer to this.) Federal taxes punish taxpayers and harm the economy. The federal government has no need for those punishing and harmful tax dollars. There are several ways to reduce taxes, and we should evaluate and choose the most progressive approaches.
Cutting FICA and business taxes would be a good early step, as both dramatically affect the 99%. Annual increases in the standard income tax deduction, and a reverse income tax also would provide benefits from the bottom up. Both would narrow the Gap.
8. TAX THE VERY RICH (THE “.1%) MORE, WITH HIGHER PROGRESSIVE TAX RATES ON ALL FORMS OF INCOME. (TROPHIC CASCADE)
There was a time when I argued against increasing anyone’s federal taxes. After all, the federal government has no need for tax dollars, and all taxes reduce Gross Domestic Product, thereby negatively affecting the entire economy, including the 99.9%.
But I have come to realize that narrowing the Gap requires trimming the top. It simply would not be possible to provide the 99.9% with enough benefits to narrow the Gap in any meaningful way. Bill Gates reportedly owns $70 billion. To get to that level, he must have been earning $10 billion a year. Pick any acceptable Gap (1000 to 1?), and the lowest paid American would have to receive $10 million a year. Unreasonable.
9. FEDERAL OWNERSHIP OF ALL BANKS (Click The end of private banking and How should America decide “who-gets-money”?)
Banks have created all the dollars that exist. Even dollars created at the direction of the federal government, actually come into being when banks increase the numbers in checking accounts. This gives the banks enormous financial power, and as we all know, power corrupts — especially when multiplied by a profit motive.
Although the federal government also is powerful and corrupted, it does not suffer from a profit motive, the world’s most corrupting influence.
10. INCREASE FEDERAL SPENDING ON THE MYRIAD INITIATIVES THAT BENEFIT AMERICA’S 99.9% (Federal agencies)Browse the agencies. See how many agencies benefit the lower- and middle-income/wealth/ power groups, by adding dollars to the economy and/or by actions more beneficial to the 99.9% than to the .1%.
Save this reference as your primer to current economics. Sadly, much of the material is not being taught in American schools, which is all the more reason for you to use it.

The Ten Steps will grow the economy, and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Simple single payer facts and utter nonsense

Twitter: @rodgermitchell; Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
It takes only two things to keep people in chains: The ignorance of the oppressed and the treachery of their leaders..
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Boiled down to its essence, there are only two facts you need to know about “single payer” health care:

  1. Single payer simply means that instead of insurance companies and states paying doctors and hospitals, the federal government pays the bills.
  2. The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, easily can afford to pay any amount, while for-profit insurance companies and monetarily non-sovereign states cannot.

That’s it. You now know everything you need to know about single payer vs. whatever-you-want-to-call the U.S. current system. All else is trivial by comparison.Image result for healthcare insurance companies

The U.S. already knows how to do single payer. It’s called “Medicare.”

But those opposed to single payer, either for idealistic or for money reasons, want to confuse the debate. And in that vein, I bring you right-wing columnist John Kass, and some excerpts from his column in today’s Chicago Tribune:

What’s not being asked in the Charlie Gard case?

In the story of Charlie Gard — the seriously ill 11-month-old boy that British health care is compelled to let die over his parents’ wishes — there is something important that is missing.

You’ve probably heard of Gard’s rare illness and the British health care bureaucrats who think it best that he die. And you also may have heard about his parents’ battle in the hopes of saving their son, and the latest court hearing where a last-ditch effort was scheduled in the hopes of bringing him to the U.S. for experimental treatment.Image result for healthcare insurance companies

The question is this: If America adopts such a government health care (single payer) system, could what has happened to Charlie Gard and his parents happen here?

Those in favor of government health care might not want to answer it; and journalists in favor of such a system might not want to know. Or they might not want to appear rude.

But the answer is yes.

I’ll interrupt to remind you that what Kass misleadingly calls “government health care” really is the government taking the place of privately-owned insurance companies.

The actual health care still is provided by doctors and hospitals, no matter who pays.Image result for healthcare insurance companies

Little Charlie suffers from a rare genetic illness. Blind and deaf, he endures painful epileptic seizures. His doctors in London insist that his illness can’t be treated, and that he will die when life-support is withdrawn.

And health care bureaucrats in London want it withdrawn.

But his parents, Chris Gard and Connie Yates, are fighting to bring him to the U.S. for a chance at experimental medicine. They’ve raised almost $2 million.

Yet British doctors say prolonging Charlie’s life will only cause him pain. 

Reminder: This is doctors, not the government, objecting to Charlie being subjected to more pain. Would American doctors have the same objection? If not, why not?

So the Charlie Gard story is a political story, where a government and its bureaucrats, not the parents, decide whether a baby lives or dies.

No, it is doctors making life/death decisions, as they must do every day. It comes with the territory.

Some governments might be seen as progressive, others as conservative, but to the people who pull the levers, one thing is understood.

Government is about force. It always has been about force.

“Force” is another word for “law,” which Libertarian anarchists profess to hate.

They might be driven by what some call scientific reason, and by others as the end product of cost-benefit analytics.

But with a bureaucracy, it always ends up being about the same thing. Force.

Or, as in the case of the British doctors, mercy for a blind, deaf child who is experiencing terrible pain.

Someday it might be your child whose fate is being decided by others. Someday it might be you. But who should make that decision? The government or the parents?

Would you sit quietly, and allow bureaucrats to tell you what must be done?

Yes, governments often must protect helpless children, even from their parents. It is what we expect governments to do.

Kass is a right-wing Libertarian, who opposes government, and especially opposes progressive benefits for the poor. So he writes emotional articles designed to denigrate social programs.

To both the Republicans and the Democrats (but especially the Republicans), federal funding for universal health care is an anathema.  It narrows the health care gap between the rich and the rest, something the rich resist mightily.

You’ll notice Kass talks about federal bureaucrats but does not mention insurance company bureaucrats, the latter having a much stronger profit motivation to deny benefits.

When it comes to paying doctors and hospitals, for-profit bureaucracies deal in force, as do government bureaucracies, the primary difference being that private insurance companies cannot afford to insure the already-sick or those having rare, expensive illnesses — the “Charlie Gards” of the world.

The next time you’re involved in a discussion about single-payer, universal health care, remember these two simple facts:

  1. Single payer simply means that instead of insurance companies and states paying doctors and hospitals, the federal government pays the bills.
  2. The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, easily can afford to pay any amount, while for-profit insurance companies and monetarily non-sovereign states are financially motivated not to pay.

Don’t let the toadies for the rich confuse a simple issue.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The single most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the have-mores and the have-less.

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:
1. ELIMINATE FICA (Ten Reasons to Eliminate FICA )
Although the article lists 10 reasons to eliminate FICA, there are two fundamental reasons:
*FICA is the most regressive tax in American history, widening the Gap by punishing the low and middle-income groups, while leaving the rich untouched, and
*The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, neither needs nor uses FICA to support Social Security and Medicare.
2. FEDERALLY FUNDED MEDICARE — PARTS A, B & D, PLUS LONG TERM CARE — FOR EVERYONE (H.R. 676, Medicare for All )
This article addresses the questions:
*Does the economy benefit when the rich can afford better health care than can the rest of Americans?
*Aside from improved health care, what are the other economic effects of “Medicare for everyone?”
*How much would it cost taxpayers?
*Who opposes it?”
3. PROVIDE A MONTHLY ECONOMIC BONUS TO EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND CHILD IN AMERICA (similar to Social Security for All) (The JG (Jobs Guarantee) vs the GI (Guaranteed Income) vs the EB (Economic Bonus)) Or institute a reverse income tax.
This article is the fifth in a series about direct financial assistance to Americans:

Why Modern Monetary Theory’s Employer of Last Resort is a bad idea. Sunday, Jan 1 2012
MMT’s Job Guarantee (JG) — “Another crazy, rightwing, Austrian nutjob?” Thursday, Jan 12 2012
Why Modern Monetary Theory’s Jobs Guarantee is like the EU’s euro: A beloved solution to the wrong problem. Tuesday, May 29 2012
“You can’t fire me. I’m on JG” Saturday, Jun 2 2012

Economic growth should include the “bottom” 99.9%, not just the .1%, the only question being, how best to accomplish that. Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) favors giving everyone a job. Monetary Sovereignty (MS) favors giving everyone money. The five articles describe the pros and cons of each approach.
4. FREE EDUCATION (INCLUDING POST-GRAD) FOR EVERYONE Five reasons why we should eliminate school loans
Monetarily non-sovereign State and local governments, despite their limited finances, support grades K-12. That level of education may have been sufficient for a largely agrarian economy, but not for our currently more technical economy that demands greater numbers of highly educated workers.
Because state and local funding is so limited, grades K-12 receive short shrift, especially those schools whose populations come from the lowest economic groups. And college is too costly for most families.
An educated populace benefits a nation, and benefitting the nation is the purpose of the federal government, which has the unlimited ability to pay for K-16 and beyond.
5. SALARY FOR ATTENDING SCHOOL
Even were schooling to be completely free, many young people cannot attend, because they and their families cannot afford to support non-workers. In a foundering boat, everyone needs to bail, and no one can take time off for study.
If a young person’s “job” is to learn and be productive, he/she should be paid to do that job, especially since that job is one of America’s most important.
6. ELIMINATE FEDERAL TAXES ON BUSINESS
Businesses are dollar-transferring machines. They transfer dollars from customers to employees, suppliers, shareholders and the federal government (the later having no use for those dollars). Any tax on businesses reduces the amount going to employees, suppliers and shareholders, which diminishes the economy. Ultimately, all business taxes reduce your personal income.
7. INCREASE THE STANDARD INCOME TAX DEDUCTION, ANNUALLY. (Refer to this.) Federal taxes punish taxpayers and harm the economy. The federal government has no need for those punishing and harmful tax dollars. There are several ways to reduce taxes, and we should evaluate and choose the most progressive approaches.
Cutting FICA and business taxes would be a good early step, as both dramatically affect the 99%. Annual increases in the standard income tax deduction, and a reverse income tax also would provide benefits from the bottom up. Both would narrow the Gap.
8. TAX THE VERY RICH (THE “.1%) MORE, WITH HIGHER PROGRESSIVE TAX RATES ON ALL FORMS OF INCOME. (TROPHIC CASCADE)
There was a time when I argued against increasing anyone’s federal taxes. After all, the federal government has no need for tax dollars, and all taxes reduce Gross Domestic Product, thereby negatively affecting the entire economy, including the 99.9%.
But I have come to realize that narrowing the Gap requires trimming the top. It simply would not be possible to provide the 99.9% with enough benefits to narrow the Gap in any meaningful way. Bill Gates reportedly owns $70 billion. To get to that level, he must have been earning $10 billion a year. Pick any acceptable Gap (1000 to 1?), and the lowest paid American would have to receive $10 million a year. Unreasonable.
9. FEDERAL OWNERSHIP OF ALL BANKS (Click The end of private banking and How should America decide “who-gets-money”?)
Banks have created all the dollars that exist. Even dollars created at the direction of the federal government, actually come into being when banks increase the numbers in checking accounts. This gives the banks enormous financial power, and as we all know, power corrupts — especially when multiplied by a profit motive.
Although the federal government also is powerful and corrupted, it does not suffer from a profit motive, the world’s most corrupting influence.
10. INCREASE FEDERAL SPENDING ON THE MYRIAD INITIATIVES THAT BENEFIT AMERICA’S 99.9% (Federal agencies)Browse the agencies. See how many agencies benefit the lower- and middle-income/wealth/ power groups, by adding dollars to the economy and/or by actions more beneficial to the 99.9% than to the .1%.
Save this reference as your primer to current economics. Sadly, much of the material is not being taught in American schools, which is all the more reason for you to use it.

The Ten Steps will grow the economy, and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The single, most important question in all of economics.

Twitter: @rodgermitchell; Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
It takes only two things to keep people in chains: The ignorance of the oppressed and the treachery of their leaders..
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

The realities of the U.S. economy can be is difficult to explain to people who have been led to believe federal economics resembles personal economics.

False notions of “affordability,” “taxpayer dollars,” and “debt/deficit sustainability” hide the truth behind many layers of intuition and misleading propaganda.Image result for money printing machine

Sometimes, the solutions to the most infuriatingly complex problems can be visualized by a single, simple concept.

Heliocentrism, the simple fact that the entire solar system revolves around the sun, is an easy way to visualize mathematically complex planetary motions.

And what could be simpler than E=MCas a way to visualize a relationship between matter and energy.

In that vein, consider the difficulty in visualizing solutions to the many, disparate and difficult problems in economics, among which are: What should a government do about economic growth, deficits and debt, spending affordability, employment and unemployment, interest rates, imports and exports, poverty, and defense spending?

The answers to such questions are made even more difficult by the variance in government type: National vs. local.

I suggest that the answers to the biggest, most difficult economics problems facing any government can be visualized by one simple question:

If the U.S. government can “print” money, why does it collect taxes?

Try it, yourself. Answer the question and see whether your answer leads you to other questions and answers, eventually taking you to an explanation of Monetary Sovereignty.

The realities of Monetary Sovereignty seem to be quite counter-intuitive to many people, and there is a strong human reluctance to deny intuitive beliefs.

So perhaps the best way to influence someone’s opinion may be to help them uncover the facts rather than being told the facts.

Next time you debate what the federal government should do about a specific problem, you might advance the discussion by asking the most important question in all of economics.

It could be a useful first step.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

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THOUGHTS

•All we have are partial solutions; the best we can do is try.

•Those, who do not understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty, do not understand economics.

•Any monetarily NON-sovereign government — be it city, county, state or nation — that runs an ongoing trade deficit, eventually will run out of money no matter how much it taxes its citizens.

•The more federal budgets are cut and taxes increased, the weaker an economy becomes..

•No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.

•Cutting federal deficits to grow the economy is like applying leeches to cure anemia.

•A growing economy requires a growing supply of money (GDP = Federal Spending + Non-federal Spending + Net Exports)

•Deficit spending grows the supply of money

•The limit to federal deficit spending is an inflation that cannot be cured with interest rate control. The limit to non-federal deficit spending is the ability to borrow.

•Until the 99% understand the need for federal deficits, the upper 1% will rule.

•Progressives think the purpose of government is to protect the poor and powerless from the rich and powerful. Conservatives think the purpose of government is to protect the rich and powerful from the poor and powerless.

•The single most important problem in economics is the Gap between the rich and the rest.

•Austerity is the government’s method for widening the Gap between the rich and the rest.

•Everything in economics devolves to motive, and the motive is the Gap between the rich and the rest..

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Did you know, raising interest rates kills economic growth? Nah, it’s a myth

Twitter: @rodgermitchell; Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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It takes only two things to keep people in chains: The ignorance of the oppressed and the treachery of their leaders..
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Do you believe any of these popular myths about our economy:

Image result for myth
There should be a sign

 

  1. The federal deficit is too high.
  2. Federal deficit spending (aka “printing money”) causes hyperinflation
  3. The federal debt is “unsustainable.”
  4. Our children will pay for the federal debt
  5. Federal taxes fund federal spending.
  6. The federal government can run short of dollars.
  7. The federal government should live within its means
  8. Federal finances are like personal finances.
  9. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) benefits poor nations
  10. Federal debt crowds out private debt
  11. Federal spending crowds out private spending
  12. The poor are lazy, dishonest “takers”; the rich are smart, energetic “makers.”
  13. The U.S. government should be run like a business, by a businessperson
  14. Austerity helps an economy grow.
  15. Some people don’t pay their “fair share” of federal taxes
  16. Raising interest rates kills economic growth.
  17. If you cross your fingers for the next hour, your baseball team will win.

O.K., that last one isn’t economics, but it’s just as scientifically factual as the others.

You can see a more complete list of common, economics myths at: Which of these myths do you believe? A test of your knowledge.

Today’s post focuses on myth #16, which the duplicitous and the uninformed promulgate on a weekly, if not hourly, basis, especially when the Fed announces an interest rate hike.

Here are excerpts from a typical article written by a noted debt fearmonger:

Dear Mr. President, Be Careful What You Wish for: Higher Interest Rates Will Kill the Recovery
Posted on June 11, 2017 by Ellen Brown,

Higher interest rates will triple the interest on the federal debt to $830 billion annually by 2026, will hurt workers and young voters, and could bankrupt over 20% of US corporations, according to the IMF.

Ah, the IMF, the International Monetary Fund, the group that always, always, always prescribes austerity as a cure for a failing economy — essentially prescribing leeches to cure anemia.

Is the IMF composed of liars, or of incompetents? Hard to tell — but they are led by Christine Lagardewho embodies huge dollops of both attributes.

Responding to earlier presidential pressure, the Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates this week for the third time since November, from a funds target of 1% to 1.25%.

An increase in the base rate, however small, will tighten the screw on younger voters and some of the poorest communities who rely on credit to get by.

Allow us to place this into some sort of context. The interest increase of .25% on a $5,000 loan amounts to less than the cost of one extra pack of cigarettes every 3 months — not much of a “screw tightening.”

More importantly for his economic programme, higher interest rates in the US will act like a honeypot for foreign investors . . . . [S]ucking in foreign cash has a price and that is an expensive dollar and worsening trade balance. . . .

It might undermine (Trump’s) call for the repatriation of factories to the rust-belt states if goods cost 10% or 20% more to export.

Higher interest rates will attract investors to U.S. dollars, thereby strengthening the dollar. A strong dollar makes imports less costly, which is one reason why interest rate increases fight inflation.

And those cheaper imports particularly benefit the “younger voters and some of the poorest communities” about whom Ellen Brown expressed such concern.

As for the “repatriation of factories to the rust-belt states,” that was just a con-job by Trump, along with “I will save the coal industry,”  and “The Keystone oil pipeline will create thousands of jobs.”

There will be no “repatriation” of factories unless two things happen, neither of which is attractive or likely:

  1. American wages drop below the level of 3rd world nation wages
  2. Automation ceases to be the primary job-consuming, efficiency-building factor in America

Raising interest rates benefits financial institutions, due to a rise in interest on their excess reserves and net interest margins (the difference between what they charge and what they pay to depositors).

This neither adds nor subtracts dollars from the economy. It just changes the flow. Borrowers will pay more dollars to lenders and depositors. But there is one important benefit to the economy:

The hardest hit will be the federal government.

According to a report by Deloitte University Press republished in the Wall Street Journal in September 2016, the government’s interest bill is expected to triple, from $255 billion in 2016 to $830 billion in 2026.

Said another way, “the government will pump many hundreds of billions of additional stimulus dollars into the economy every year, reaching $575 additional stimulus dollars in the year 2026.

This stimulus will be a boon to economic growth while costing Americans nothing.

The Fed returns the interest it receives to the Treasury after deducting its costs.

That means that if, rather than dumping its federal securities onto the market, it were to use its quantitative easing tool to move the whole federal debt onto its own balance sheet, the government could save $830 billion in interest annually – nearly enough to fund the president’s trillion dollar infrastructure plan every year, without raising taxes or privatizing public assets.

That’s Brown’s restatement of the “Federal taxes fund federal spending” myth. After all these years, she still doesn’t understand that unlike state and local governments, the federal government uniquely is Monetarily Sovereign.

As such, it creates its sovereign currency, the dollar, by the act of paying bills. Every time the government pays a bill, it creates new dollars, ad hoc. Even if all federal tax collections fell to $0, the federal government could continue spending, forever.

As noted by fund manager Eric Lonergan in a February 2017 article, “The Bank of Japan is in the process of owning most of the outstanding government debt of Japan (it currently owns around 40%).”

Forty percent of the US national debt would be $8 trillion, three times the amount of federal securities the Fed holds now as a result of quantitative easing. Yet the Bank of Japan, which is actually trying to generate some inflation, cannot get the CPI above 0.2 percent.

Oh, what a surprise. The Bank of Japan, rather than the people of Japan, receives the interest on 40% of government securities, and this does not generate inflation.

Well, of course not. With no increase in the money supply, inflation is not stimulated.

The Deloitte report asks: Since the anticipated impact of higher interest rates is slower growth, the question becomes: why would the Fed purposely act to slow the economy? We see at least two reasons.

First, the Fed needs to raise rates so that it has room to lower them when the next recession occurs. And second, by acting early, the Fed likely hopes to choke off inflationary pressure before it starts to build.

Really? “The anticipated impact of higher interest rates is slower growth”?

Blue line = Interest rate; Red line = GDP growth

Over the 25-year period, 1955-1980, interest rates averaged higher as GDP growth increased. From 1980-2015, interest rates averaged lower while GDP growth also fell.

There is zero evidence to support the myth that interest rate increases cause slower growth.

Now, the Fed wishes to raise the rate from 1% to 1.25%, still historically low, and the Ellen Browns of the world are panicked.

The Fed is paying 1% (soon to be 1.25%) on $2.2 trillion in excess reserves.

At 1%, that works out to $22 billion annually. At 1.25%, it’s $27.5 billion; and at 3.5% by 2020, it will be $77 billion, most of it going to Wall Street megabanks.

This tab is ultimately picked up by the taxpayers.

Wrong again. Ms. Brown, please repeat this to yourself, again and again, until you learn it: “Taxpayers do not fund federal spending.”

Among other possibilities, an extra $22 billion annually accruing to the federal government would be enough to end homelessness in the United States.

Instead, it has become welfare for those Wall Street banks that largely own the New York Fed, the largest and most powerful of the twelve branches of the Federal Reserve.

And wrong, yet again. If $22 billion annually is enough “to end homelessness” in the United States, nothing stops the federal government from spending it. The government cannot run short of its own sovereign currency.

Better yet, the government should institute the Ten Steps to Prosperity (below).

Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public Banking Institute, a Senior Fellow of the Democracy Collaborative, and author of twelve books including Web of Debt and The Public Bank Solution. She co-hosts a radio program on PRN.FM called “It’s Our Money.” Her 300+ blog articles are posted at EllenBrown.com.

Sad, but she can’t help it. Even if she understands the truth, there is no way she can admit it after twelve books, a radio show and 300+ blog articles devoted to the myth that raising interest rates kills the economy.

Excessive inflation however, does kill an economy, and that is what the Fed wishes to prevent.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

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The single most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the have-mores and the have-less.

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:
1. ELIMINATE FICA (Ten Reasons to Eliminate FICA )
Although the article lists 10 reasons to eliminate FICA, there are two fundamental reasons:
*FICA is the most regressive tax in American history, widening the Gap by punishing the low and middle-income groups, while leaving the rich untouched, and
*The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, neither needs nor uses FICA to support Social Security and Medicare.
2. FEDERALLY FUNDED MEDICARE — PARTS A, B & D, PLUS LONG TERM CARE — FOR EVERYONE (H.R. 676, Medicare for All )
This article addresses the questions:
*Does the economy benefit when the rich can afford better health care than can the rest of Americans?
*Aside from improved health care, what are the other economic effects of “Medicare for everyone?”
*How much would it cost taxpayers?
*Who opposes it?”
3. PROVIDE A MONTHLY ECONOMIC BONUS TO EVERY MAN, WOMAN AND CHILD IN AMERICA (similar to Social Security for All) (The JG (Jobs Guarantee) vs the GI (Guaranteed Income) vs the EB (Economic Bonus)) Or institute a reverse income tax.
This article is the fifth in a series about direct financial assistance to Americans:

Why Modern Monetary Theory’s Employer of Last Resort is a bad idea. Sunday, Jan 1 2012
MMT’s Job Guarantee (JG) — “Another crazy, rightwing, Austrian nutjob?” Thursday, Jan 12 2012
Why Modern Monetary Theory’s Jobs Guarantee is like the EU’s euro: A beloved solution to the wrong problem. Tuesday, May 29 2012
“You can’t fire me. I’m on JG” Saturday, Jun 2 2012

Economic growth should include the “bottom” 99.9%, not just the .1%, the only question being, how best to accomplish that. Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) favors giving everyone a job. Monetary Sovereignty (MS) favors giving everyone money. The five articles describe the pros and cons of each approach.
4. FREE EDUCATION (INCLUDING POST-GRAD) FOR EVERYONE Five reasons why we should eliminate school loans
Monetarily non-sovereign State and local governments, despite their limited finances, support grades K-12. That level of education may have been sufficient for a largely agrarian economy, but not for our currently more technical economy that demands greater numbers of highly educated workers.
Because state and local funding is so limited, grades K-12 receive short shrift, especially those schools whose populations come from the lowest economic groups. And college is too costly for most families.
An educated populace benefits a nation, and benefitting the nation is the purpose of the federal government, which has the unlimited ability to pay for K-16 and beyond.
5. SALARY FOR ATTENDING SCHOOL
Even were schooling to be completely free, many young people cannot attend, because they and their families cannot afford to support non-workers. In a foundering boat, everyone needs to bail, and no one can take time off for study.
If a young person’s “job” is to learn and be productive, he/she should be paid to do that job, especially since that job is one of America’s most important.
6. ELIMINATE FEDERAL TAXES ON BUSINESS
Businesses are dollar-transferring machines. They transfer dollars from customers to employees, suppliers, shareholders and the federal government (the later having no use for those dollars). Any tax on businesses reduces the amount going to employees, suppliers and shareholders, which diminishes the economy. Ultimately, all business taxes reduce your personal income.
7. INCREASE THE STANDARD INCOME TAX DEDUCTION, ANNUALLY. (Refer to this.) Federal taxes punish taxpayers and harm the economy. The federal government has no need for those punishing and harmful tax dollars. There are several ways to reduce taxes, and we should evaluate and choose the most progressive approaches.
Cutting FICA and business taxes would be a good early step, as both dramatically affect the 99%. Annual increases in the standard income tax deduction, and a reverse income tax also would provide benefits from the bottom up. Both would narrow the Gap.
8. TAX THE VERY RICH (THE “.1%) MORE, WITH HIGHER PROGRESSIVE TAX RATES ON ALL FORMS OF INCOME. (TROPHIC CASCADE)
There was a time when I argued against increasing anyone’s federal taxes. After all, the federal government has no need for tax dollars, and all taxes reduce Gross Domestic Product, thereby negatively affecting the entire economy, including the 99.9%.
But I have come to realize that narrowing the Gap requires trimming the top. It simply would not be possible to provide the 99.9% with enough benefits to narrow the Gap in any meaningful way. Bill Gates reportedly owns $70 billion. To get to that level, he must have been earning $10 billion a year. Pick any acceptable Gap (1000 to 1?), and the lowest paid American would have to receive $10 million a year. Unreasonable.
9. FEDERAL OWNERSHIP OF ALL BANKS (Click The end of private banking and How should America decide “who-gets-money”?)
Banks have created all the dollars that exist. Even dollars created at the direction of the federal government, actually come into being when banks increase the numbers in checking accounts. This gives the banks enormous financial power, and as we all know, power corrupts — especially when multiplied by a profit motive.
Although the federal government also is powerful and corrupted, it does not suffer from a profit motive, the world’s most corrupting influence.
10. INCREASE FEDERAL SPENDING ON THE MYRIAD INITIATIVES THAT BENEFIT AMERICA’S 99.9% (Federal agencies)Browse the agencies. See how many agencies benefit the lower- and middle-income/wealth/ power groups, by adding dollars to the economy and/or by actions more beneficial to the 99.9% than to the .1%.
Save this reference as your primer to current economics. Sadly, much of the material is not being taught in American schools, which is all the more reason for you to use it.

The Ten Steps will grow the economy, and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY