You mean the public option ain't what we thought it was?
Other people are starting to come to the conclusion that the public option being discussed might not be the savior we thought it was. From
Other people are starting to come to the conclusion that the public option being discussed might not be the savior we thought it was. From
Ezra Klein has a truly excellent post on adverse selection and the public option. He concludes with, “The most important factor here will be the
Several months ago my Palm Tungsten E died and I used it as an opportunity to migrate my contacts and calendar to Google. That was
I was on Stand Up! with Pete Dominick this afternoon, and a caller asked a question I get asked all the time. Basically, he was
I recently wrote a little bit about the solvency of two huge entitlement programs: Social Security and Medicare (U.S., not Canada). This post goes a
So I opened my email today and found an email from Joseph DiMasi, the Director of Economic Analysis at the Tufts Center for the Study
Medicare Advantage (MA) plans are paid more by Medicare to insure a beneficiary than it would cost to cover that beneficiary’s care directly under traditional fee-for-service
Buckle in, because this will be a long one… Although this does not seem like a fact that most people would commit to memory, somehow
We keep doing the same thing and expecting a different outcome. What does that signify? Please go read the whole thing at The Huffington Post!
We’re coming into the time of year when I begin to consider how much of my traditional IRA funds to convert to a Roth IRA.
I’ve said before that the opt-out public option was politically savvy. I still believe that. We get a reasonably robust, nationwide public option. Politicians on
Yesterday I addressed the relative amounts that the pharmaceutical industry spends on research and development as opposed to other expenses. But there’s still another way