A Second Romp Through Transfer Tax Theory
The first romp was a post on estate tax economics that reviewed an NBER paper by Wojciech Kopczuk. In this post I review one by
The first romp was a post on estate tax economics that reviewed an NBER paper by Wojciech Kopczuk. In this post I review one by
It’s a HuffPo colums, but not mine. Rob Stone, a physician in Bloomington and the Director of Hoosiers for a Commensense Health Plan has been
My Kaiser Health News opinion column is posted today. It begins, Few Americans should be satisfied with the way the government pays private health insurance
If you read this blog, you know that I think that single-payer health care systems are fine and dandy. So when I say that Medicare
I was a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar, so I can’t help but feel a bit of pride when I see another fellow pulling off
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley released a report on March 16 on health care cost drivers in the state. A few findings pertaining to prices
I’m a wimpy outdoorsman. I do love to walk and hike, but at night I like a bed and a roof. Not so my friends
Robin Hanson’s response to my post is interesting. He writes, More likely than not, medicine is on average is useless or harmful on the margin;
From Kaiser Health News today: A new Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Web site is making more claims data available to the public, Modern
This post has been cited in the 15 April 2010 edition of Health Wonk Review. One of the arguments I’ve made that gaming the individual
Rachel Ryan describes her experience with the French health care system. She’s shocked at how good it seemed: I walked into the Centre de Santé