Balance Sheet Woes Coming To Roost…

Mr. Pinard, a good friend and small business owner in Texas, was talking to me recently about the frustration of having to watch the mud-slinging between the two presidential candidates.  In the melee of gaffs, gotcha commercials, and character attacks, he noted that no one was talking about the worst threat to our future: the debt.  Mr. Pinard has to make sure that his books are balanced 365 days a year.  If he were to fail to bring in more revenue than he spends, he would have to slow the growth of his company and even fire people.  If the problem were to persist, he would go out of business.  The only difference between Mr. Pinard’s home health business and the US is the timeline.  Mr. Pinard doesn’t have a Ben Bernanke there to bankroll poor management and pass judgement day to a future generation.

The delay between action and consequence is the only reason that democrats are still taken seriously today.  Like a spoiled child gambling in Las Vegas, they have little concern or awareness of the bills they are racking up.  Even the president of the United States couldn’t answer how much his country owes to lenders.  When confronted, Obama and other democrats use a reliable excuse they’ve been using for decades ”the debt doesn’t pose a short-term problem”.

That is no longer the case.  On Sunday, Bryce wrote a great article describing how the debt not only poses a threat to our economy, but also our national security.  The threat is no longer a problem for our children and grandchildren.  It is our problem now. Thanks to the rapidly accelerated spending started under Bush and carried on by Obama, our day of reckoning is only one or two presidential terms away.  It begins as soon as the Fed raises interest rates:

The following graph is the federal budget in 2011 as per the CBO:

And the following are the tax reciepts for 2011:

When looking at the above graphs of the US balance sheet, two things stand out:

  1. There is a gap of $1.295 trillion between the numbers.  The wealthiest nation in the world was taxed at one of highest rates (in relation to GDP) in its history in 2011 and produced $2.303 TRILLION for our masters to do what they need to do.  They ended up spending 156% of that amount.  This has been the story since 2008 and isn’t giving any sign of letting up soon.
  2. The graph doesn’t include Obamacare and the extra $500 billion of additional annual interest we’ll be paying by 2018, after the fed raises interest rates to more “normal” levels.  Austerity anyone?  Who and what are we cutting to make this happen?  Social Security? Medicare? Infrastructure?

This isn’t a lofty discussion of politics or conjecture.  It is simple math.  By the time your kids entering college are out looking for a job, we will be facing Greece-like cuts.  Your money will be going toward a return for Chinese debt holders, not updating the bridge you cross every day or hiring a teacher at your local school.

The two pies presented above should be in the back of our minds every time a politician speaks.  This our balance sheet.  Ask yourself how long we could survive spending 156% of what we make… because that is exactly what each and every one of us is doing right now.

 

From Hale to Obama: How Far We’ve Come…

In September 1776, Nathan Hale, a 21-year-old soldier of the Continental Army, volunteered to go behind enemy lines in New York City in order to spy on British movements in the area.  General Washington needed to know what route the British would be taking to lay siege to Manhattan and believed that the only way to know was to send over a spy.  Hale was a newly minted first lieutenant in the Connecticut militia and had not yet been in combat.  When the request came from General Washington, he was the sole volunteer.  Despite knowing the punishment for spies was swift execution by hanging, his sense of patriotic duty far outweighed the risks to his life.

Shortly after he ferried over to the British position in Long Island, the Brits invaded and took over Lower Manhattan and forced General Washington to retreat to the northern side of the island.  Despite disguising himself, the young inexperienced spy was identified in a pub by a British loyalist.  Nathan Hale was lured into a revealing his identity by the man and arrested in Queens on September 21, 1776.  He spent the night in a prison where he was denied a bible or clergyman.  The next morning, a highly composed and stoic 21-year-old Hale was led to the gallows where a noose was placed around his neck.  The only courtesy extended to those guilty of spying was the allowance of final words before pulling the noose tight:

“I only regret that I have one life to give for my country.”

Though barely out of college and without children of his own, Nathan Hale went to his death proud of his decision to defend liberty for his country. Since his death, many thousands of Americans have followed his selfless path in defense of our lives.  These people have never met the millions of Americans for whom they are giving the ultimate sacrifice.  They do it based on a belief that they want to leave a better world to their children and fellow countrymen… and that that is worth everything.

Hale’s story and those like it lie in stark contrast to what we saw out of our current president Tuesday night who spent his evening on a comedy talk show in leu of dealing with our country’s current crisis:


After deflecting all responsibility for the deficit he doubled to his predecessor, Obama went on to talk about how a certain class of people should “sacrifice” more to pay for the problem.  Hundreds of billions of our current and future tax dollars were spent by his administration to shore up union pensions and strengthen his constituencies.  This is a man who chose a Reverend who preached we got what we deserved on 9/11 and a wife who said she didn’t feel any pride in American until her family was running the show.  Rather than reach across the aisle and come up with a solution to our nation’s problem, he dug in his heels and funneled money to his constituency.  His ”apple of discord” approach to politics is shamelessly pitting Americans against each other to gain favor:  He won over the AMA by saying the primary care doctors deserve more than surgeons… Wall street was blamed to gain favor with Main street…  Rich are blamed for making money off the backs of the poor.  If there is any political gain to be won by demonizing a minority group of his fellow Americans, Obama doesn’t hesitate.

Is this the legacy Nathan Hale was imagining when he held his head high for the hangman’s noose?

A 1%er Weighs in on Mr. Ryan’s Medicare Plan

The following article published today by our former Director of Office and Budget Management, Peter Orszag, describes his take on what Paul Ryan’s plan would mean for Medicare recipients:

Ryan’s Proposal Would Shrink Medicare’s Doctor Pool

In the article he makes the following arguments:

  1. Privatization of Medicare would raise costs considerably.
  2. Ryan’s plan would reduce choice for Medicare beneficiaries and cut off their access to doctors.

The level of real-world ignorance it took to come to these conclusions gives us a rare glimpse of how ill-equipped Obama’s economists are at steering our economy.  If you need a visual of the realization, I’ve provided this video to illustrate what has been happening for the last four years:

By no means is Peter Orszag considered a stupid man.  He has a great deal of knowledge the most of us don’t have, much like the child in the video may be able to recite the capitals of all 50 states. Peter received top honors in an economics degree from Princeton and went on to get a PHD in the same subject at the prestigious London School of Economics.  After a life in academia and politics, in 2010 he moved on from the Obama administration to a senior position in Citigroup’s freshly bailed out investment banking division (a poster tip for my OWS friends).  Despite having office walls decorated with really expensive diploma frames, Mr. Orszag has less real world experience than the White Rabbit in Allice in Wonderland… and the hole he has helped lead us into proves it.

Peter starts his argument with a brief history lesson of Ryan’s plan.  His initial claim is that a Ryan’s original plan of privatizing all of Medicare would raise health care costs because the large scale of Medicare gives it better bargaining power with providers than a private health insurance plan.  Lets put aside the simple argument that free market competition has been lowering the cost of all services in all instances for well over 300 years, and get into this one with some detail:

  • The first problem with his statement is that he compares a single insurance company to all of Medicare, as opposed to the HUNDREDS of insurance companies that would be competing for the business of that senior citizen.  The collective bargaining power of a national marketplace of insurance companies is at the table in a free market system, not one small company.
  • The very characteristics that Peter touts as cost advantages for Medicare –decreased compensation for services compared to private insurance and the low Medicare overhead, are the very reasons why the program is so inefficient and costly.  There is rampant and institutionalized fraud in Medicare claims because there is no “overhead” checking on it.  Insurance companies don’t have 30% overhead or more because they like wasting money. The annoying phone calls doctors and hospitals get from private insurance keep them honest.  The GAO estimated that $1 invested in investigating Medicare prepayment claims would save $21 dollars (your taxpayer dollars!) in improper claims… but the absence of the “profit motive” Peter sneers at in his article means they don’t care about waste. After all, it is not their money they are spending and there are no bonuses for saving yours. The CBO and Peter don’t account for such issues in their analysis, because they have never lived in the real world.  People like them predicted in 1965 that Medicare would cost $9 Billion in 1990 — Actual cost: $67 Billion.  Since then the program has expanded to over $500 billion a year.  The government doesn’t have a record of “just kind of missing” cost estimates.  If the CBO had been put in charge of predicting the size of the Big Bang, God would have been preparing for a universe 10 inches wide.  The government has definitively proven that only private industry can control costs. So how, may you ask, does decreasing the compensation per service increase waste?  Simply put, the doctors need to check more service boxes to make up for the margin they lost.  Since no one is minding the ledger, they can do this completely unhindered.  Would you rather pay for one service with a cost of $100 or two services costing $80 each.  The “two service” approach has been happening on a national level for over 40 years now.  It could not happen in a free market.

The next major point made by Mr. Orszag doesn’t require any real world experience to debunk.  It reads like an IQ test for children trying to get into a good grade school.  He claims that choice will be reduced for the elderly because Medicare beneficiaries will choose to leave Medicare for private plans, and the number of doctors in the Medicare system will decrease, thereby reducing choice.  Let that one sink in for a moment… Yeah, Mr. summa cum laude at Princeton actually wrote that.   It gets better. He goes on to site studies that show that if 50% of seniors leave Medicare, the number of doctors accepting Medicare will go down by 40%…  Again, let that one sink in.  Let’s put it in numbers: If you have 10 doctors per 100 Medicare patients pre-Paul Ryan, that gives you a 1/10 ratio.  Post 50% of Medicare beneficiaries leaving the plan, you now have 6 doctors per 50 Medicare patients. That is a 1.2/10 ratio…. 1.2/10 > 1/10 last time I checked.  There are more doctors per Medicare patient under the doomsday scenario he presents!  Either Mr. Orszag needs to repeat third grade or he believes that the Bloomberg readers tuning in between recess and nap time haven’t gotten there yet…

Time For the Invoice

So, what is the cost to each of us and our children for the spectacular job Bush and Obama have done prolonging, I mean, saving us from certain doom and destruction?  A group from Stanford economists from the Hoover Institute lay out the numbers for us in the WSJ today.  If it doesn’t frighten you then you are obviously one of our international readers (welcome to www.realitybatslast.com!)

The Magnitude of the Mess We’re In

9-18 Update by Bryce- Reading this column about the ‘Mess We’re In’ prompted two thoughts:

1. Who in their right mind would want to be the Captain as the USS Titanic tries to make it’s way forward through these waters? None of the problems enumerated in the article have easy solutions; just very painful and difficult ones. And if you are a conservative Captain, the press will be sabataging every move you make.

2. Republicans would be wise to avoid the Messianic thinking that swept Obama into power. Dear Leader cannot make these problems go away. Not Obama; not Romney. Turning this big ship around will take much more than the election of a new Captain. A new Captain is necessary, but certainly not sufficient.

And the Outsourcer of The Century Award Goes To…

President Barack Obama!

It is very intuitive that the spectacular deluge of regulations and taxes unleashed on US industry by the 44th President would be extremely detrimental to business and grind our economy to a near stop.  The last time we saw a massive tax increase and regulatory takeover of the economy in the face of a recession was under Herbert Hoover in 1932. It would take the greatest war the world has ever seen to pull us out of the depression that resulted. If you need an illustration of how taxes and regulation hurt the economy, consider the following example from the med tech industry:

Lets say you are a running a small medical device company trying to survive in our so-called “free” country.  It costs you between $35 million and $90 million to get a new device approved for use in the US.  It also takes you between 5 and 10 years of R&D and regulatory to get FDA approval and there is well over a 75% chance that your company will fail along the way (run out of cash, the device doesn’t work, a test subject has a lawyer relative, etc). You watch as an unregulated low-cost internet industry takes over the VC community that used to fund medical technology ventures.  Your life is one of regulatory and financing hell and your family hates you because there is a good chance that the next bump in the road will be the end of your company.  The only humor in your life is a sad chuckle when you hear a delusional acquaintance say that it’s the NIH that actually ”invents” things.  You stay focused on the supposed pot of gold that waits for you at the other end of the minefield you’ve chosen to navigate.

Now imagine if, in addition to your woes, the President and Democratic congress declare an all-out war on your industry.  The FDA is given a “stonewall mandate” as internal whistleblowers are unleashed on the agency to root out any industry friendly regulators and blackball privileges are given to even low ranking officials.  Taxes are promised to be raised 33% on investment capital which will not only drain the pool of financing you need, but steer it even further towards low-cost unregulated alternatives like a college programmer with a hot idea.  Mid-tier med tech companies that might buy yours are run out of the nation or swallowed up by bigger companies because their small margins can’t take the special med tech tax in Obamacare (2.3% of revenues can look a lot more like 23% at the bottom line).  That same Obamacare med tech tax (used as Chicago-style punishment to the industry for not supporting Obamacare) drains billions of dollars from the pot of gold (med tech acquisition budgets) that you and other small med tech companies look to for cashing out after all the hard work.  Now you are competing with the other companies for a much smaller exit value, much like the animals in a nature special surrounding a small African watering hole during a drought…  And then your elected representatives in government add “comparative effectiveness studies” to the list of things your diminished money supply will somehow have to pay for.  These are studies that could stop most groups from compensating your technology, even if it somehow gets through the Obama FDA. You have to show that your technology is cost-effective… unlike nearly any technology right after launch before economies of scale can bring the price down!  At what point do you fold up shop and/or leave the country?

Am I being overdramatic? Look around you.  Pick up the paper.  What do you see?  And this is before the real regulations are slated to kick in…

Here is an example of one such company:

This next company obviously doesn’t have a lot of faith in what Obamacare will do for our markets.  If only the CEO had a chance to talk to the president about it…

It is hard to imagine that this the same country of 20 or even 10 years ago.  In my youth, there was a worry that the Russians would invade the US and replace freedom with socialism at the point of a gun.  The man who brought down the Red Army warned us it would happen another way, and only take a generation to accomplish:

Good Things Come…

Maybe?  We hope?

Since the Republican primary debates, the race has been on among politicians and media pundits to define who and what Romney is.  The one person to stay out of this frenzy has been… Romney.  The country is itching to oust one of the worst presidents in modern memory, but can’t shake the feeling that it is pulling a card out of a magician’s deck.  The consequences for Mitt could be losing the election.  Kimberly Strassel lays it out eloquently in her WSJ column today:

Strassel: Mr. Romney, Trust Your Pants

 

The Real Unemployment Story

One of the great unanswered mis-representations of the election season is the unemployment picture given by the media.  I would be willing to bet that most of the nation actually believes that the unemployment figure is hovering around 8%.  The real number is closer to 11% (and 19% if you add “under-employment” — part-time jobs that are placeholders for real work).  Lets all recall what Obama said about what would happen if he couldn’t turn those numbers around:

Lets hold him to it.   For more details on the dismal job numbers, take a look at the following news article in the Wall Street Journal:

Mortimer Zuckerman: Those Jobless Numbers Are Even Worse Than They Look

“Recovery”, by the numbers…

Reality tends to be theme here at realitybatslast.com, so we put a lot of importance on showing it by the numbers whenever possible.  It is especially important to study the numbers when our fearless leaders at the DNC this week decide to make honesty and truth themes of their convention. Probably the core “truth” bantered continually by their speakers is the idea that we are much better off than we were when Obama took office.  For most Americans, this statement rings about as true as the pitch of a Chinatown street vendor trying to sell a ”genuine” Louis Vuitton bag for $20…

The writers at www.investors.com felt the same way and were kind enough to provide their readers with some of the facts:

Better Off? Let’s Count the Ways We’re Not – Investor’s Business Daily