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Yglesias

The Economics of Yore

Mark Thoma gives us some of the old economic nostalgia:

There was also a difference in the employee-employer relationship, at least as I observed it growing up in a working class family (my dad worked at a parts counter at a tractor store at that time). There seemed to be an understanding that workers had families to raise. Somehow, my parents – a worker at a parts counter and a peach factory worker – owned a house in a decent neighborhood and while it was tough some months, we had health care through my dad’s job and most of the middle class trappings (even if we did get a color TV much later than the neighbors). He didn’t work at a great big place or anything, probably ten to twenty employees total, but they still had health care, etc. It’s hard to imagine two workers my parents age (in their later 20s) working at those jobs and being able to afford those things today.

Now like all liberals these days, I agree with the broad spirit of this message. From 1947 to 1973 or so, economic gains were broadly distributed. During the past 25 years, however, economic gains have gone disproportionately to a small elite. We should change that. Etc. Wages rates and social welfare aside, however, it’s worth thinking a bit about the “cost” side of the economics of yore. I learned recently, for example, that “The Levitt ranch measured 32′ by 25′ and came in five different models,” i.e., the house was only 800 square feet, and it would actually be illegal to build an apartment that small in my neighborhood. Meanwhile, part of a neighborhood being “decent” means that it’s safe from crime, and despite the crime drop of the 1990s, the violent crime index of 2005 was more than twice as high as in 1965.

In short, there are factors beyond wages that are conspiring to make middle class homeownership more difficult than before.

Politics

Hillary to right-wing ideologues: Leave the 12-yr old alone.

In New Hampshire today, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) addressed the right-wing smear campaign against 12-year old Graeme Frost. “They put pictures of him on these websites. Made it seem like it was wrong that his family sought help to take care of their son after he was injured,” said Clinton. “Attacking a 12-year old boy and his family because they stood up for the principle that children in the richest country in the world should not be deprived of health care? We can’t let that go on.” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2007/10/hillary-graham-frost.320.240.flv]

Politics

Gibson: Whites commit suicide, blacks ‘shoot and move on.’

A student in Cleveland yesterday shot four people at a high school before killing himself. On his radio show that day, Fox News’s John Gibson claimed that he “could tell right away” that the shooter was white:

He killed himself. Hip-hoppers do not kill themselves. They walk away. Now, I didn’t need to hear the kid was white with blond hair. Once he’d shot himself in the head, no hip-hopper. [...]

And I could tell right away ’cause he killed himself. Black shooters don’t do that; they shoot and move on.

Listen to the segment here.

Politics

Fewer U.S. Citizens Enroll In Medicaid Due To Conservatives’ Proof-Of-Citizenship Regulations

bushkidsc.jpg Enrollment in Medicaid, the public health insurance program for our most vulnerable population, declined in 2006 for the first time in nearly a decade. A new report by the Kaiser Family Foundation finds that enrollment growth among the elderly and disabled was 40 percent less in 2006 than it was in 2005. Additionally, the number of children and parents enrolled in Medicaid decreased by 113 percent during this same period.

While this decline is in part due to two positive factors — an improved economy and low unemployment — another factor is at play: the conservatives’ cumbersome new regulation requiring proof of citizenship and identity when applying for Medicaid coverage.

This law was enacted in large part to prevent undocumented immigrants from enrolling in public programs such as Medicaid illegally even though evidence showed that illegal enrollment of undocumented immigrants into the program is not a problem.

What the law has done, however, is caused a drop in enrollment of eligible individuals. Reports are showing that the new rules have “contributed to slower enrollment growth in fiscal year 2007 and caused significant delays in processing applications and increased the administrative burdens placed on states” and individuals. For example:

– Child Medicaid enrollment in Virginia has declined by 4.3 percent among white children.

– Child Medicaid enrollment in Virginia has declined by 5.0 percent for African-American children.

Conservatives and President Bush have claimed to want to “help millions of Americans enjoy better care, new choices, and healthier lives.” But instead, the government has increased barriers for U.S. citizens to attain health insurance, signaling that its priorities are not in line with what is best for the American people.

Meredith L. King

Yglesias

Social Security Card

Tons of people seem puzzled as to why I would need a physical Social Security card. The answer is that I need it as proof of Social Security Number in order to (belatedly) convert my New York driver’s license into a DC one.

Incidentally, service at the Social Security Administration office at 2100 M Street was very prompt. I’d sort of been expecting an interminable wait during which I could make a serious dent in The Conscience of a Liberal but my number got called almost as soon as I was finished filling out the brief form. The employees working at the office were polite and helpful. Bureaucracy works!

Politics

Rep. Murphy on smear of Graeme Frost.

CNN and the right wing have tried to argue that the Democrats poorly “vetted” the selection of Graeme Frost as the face of the SCHIP program. Speaking on the House floor last night, Rep. Chris Murphy (D-CT) said the Frost family was chosen specifically because their problems are the problems of many lower-income American families:

[The Frost family is] not living in destitute poverty, but they’re playing by the rules, doing everything that we ask them to do, paying their taxes and contributing to society. [...] And so this is the kind of family that we’re talking about. A family that’s done everything we’ve asked. A family that’s getting by, but because their son has an injury that excludes him from most private insurance, he has no other recourse than the SCHIP program, a stop gap solution until the family can try to find some insurance program that will cover them.

Referring to the right-wing smear campaign, Murphy said, “It’s pretty indicative of how low the other side is prepared to go to try to undermine children’s health care.” Watch it:

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