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CBO’s Douglas Elmendorf And Bending The Cost Curve With Health Reform

douglase.jpgToday, in testimony before the Senate Budget Committee, Congressional Budget Office chief Douglas Elmendorf suggested that the health care legislation before Congress does not achieve “the sort of fundamental changes that would be necessary to reduce the trajectory of federal health spending by a significant amount.” “And on the contrary, the legislation significantly expands the federal responsibility for health care costs,” Elmendorf said:

But it is very hard to look out over a very long term and say very accurate things about growth rates. So most health experts that we talk with focus particularly on what is happening over the next 10 or 20 years, still a pretty long time period for projections, but focus on the next 10 or 20 years and look at whether efforts are being made that are bringing costs down or pushing costs up over that period. As we wrote in our letter to you and Senator Gregg, the creation of a new subsidy for health insurance, which is a critical part of expanding health insurance coverage in our judgment, would by itself increase the federal responsibility for health care that raises federal spending on health care.

Part of Elmendorf’s message is painfully obvious: investing in health care reform by providing Americans up to 400% of the federal poverty line with subsidies is going to cost the federal government a good deal of money — somewhere between $1 trillion and $1.5 trillion, to be exact. Progressives have always argued that in order to reduce the growth of health care costs in the long term and avoid the kind of catastrophic spending levels that could swallow-up our entire economy, we’re going to have to bring everyone into the health care system. As Elmendorf points out, that shows up on the federal books.

But the budget outline that passed the Senate Budget Committee requires a fully funded health reform bill, and both the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee are proposing different options to pay for reform and ensure that the bill does not add to the deficit. For his part, Elmendorf, is isolating the ledger of the federal government from the context of the entire system. In other words, since many of the savings from reform won’t be reflected in the federal budget, Elmendorf does not consider them. But modernizing the health care system (implementing electronic medical records, health information technology) and reforming the way Medicare and Medicaid reimburse providers will save money for the system as a whole. As Melinda Beeuwkes Buntin and David Cutler pointed out in a recent analysis, these savings can total to some $2 trillion. In fact, even the industry is on record as saying we can reduce the growth rate in annual health spending by 1.5 percentage points a year over the next 10 years, lowering spending overall health care spending by $2 trillion (this represents a 20 percent reduction in projected growth.) Elmendorf is looking at the trunk of the elephant and not the whole.

Still, what’s most peculiar about the Elmendorf statement is the suggestion that lifting the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health benefits is one of the few ways to bend the cost curve. Technically, such an approach would save the government a good deal of money, but would it bend the curve? As Elise Gould points out in a brief for the Economic Policy Institute, there is no evidence that the exclusion — or this idea that health care costs are increasing because Americans are “cavalier” about the price of health care — “is a primary driver of price increases in health care. In fact, the tax exclusion has been around for decades, even during periods of low health care inflation.”

In testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee, Elmendorf walked back his comments, saying that in some ways federal spending will increase and in some ways it will decrease. When pressured by the Republicans on the committee, Elmendorf did not directly confirm his accusations.

Climate Progress

Black Chamber of Commerce CEO Calls Barbara Boxer A Racist

In an Environment and Public Works hearing today, National Black Chamber of Commerce CEO Harry Alford accused Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) of being a racist. Alford, an opponent of the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act, attacked Boxer for being “racial” when she cited the NAACP’s support of clean energy and climate legislation. Saying he took “offense as an African American and a veteran,” he asked why she didn’t quote an “Asian” instead:

Madam chair, that is condenscending [sic] to me. I’m the National Black Chamber of Commerce, and you’re trying to put up some other black group to pit against me. . . .

All that’s condescending, and I don’t like it. It’s racial. I don’t like it. I take — I take offense to it. As an African-American and a veteran of this country, I take offense to that. You’re quoting some other black man — why don’t you quote some other Asian or some — I mean, you’re being racial here. And I think you’re getting on a path here that’s going to explode, in the Post. . . .

We’ve been looking at energy policy since 1996. And we are referring to the experts, regardless of their color. And for someone to tell me — an African-American, college-educated veteran of the United States Army — that I must contend with some other black group and put aside everything else in here. This has nothing to do with the NAACP, and really has nothing to do with the National Black Chamber of Commerce! We’re talking about energy. And that — that road the chair went down, I think is God awful.

Watch the exchange:

Alford, whose organization has received at least $275,000 $350,000 from ExxonMobil, was invited by the Republican members to testify. He purported to have “a deep understanding of small and minority-owned businesses” and spoke on behalf of the “black community” in his opening statement. He cited a flawed economic analysis of Waxman-Markey commissioned by his organization that estimates extreme costs for reducing our dependence on coal and oil.

As Sen. Boxer noted, it seems “relevant” that other organizations with “a deep understanding” of the “black community,” such as NAACP and 100 Black Men of Atlanta, see the threat of global warming and the opportunity in a clean energy future.

Later in the hearing, Alford argued, “Let me speak for the African-American community, because I am African American.”

Update

On WSJ’s Washington Wire, Siobhan Hughes notes:

The debate about race appeared to leave Democrats grumpy. When Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe, the top Republican on the panel, interrupted Sen. Tom Carper, the Delaware Democrat snapped: “Damn it. I want to be given the respect that I gave you.”


Update

,Grist‘s Kate Sheppard reports:

Alford conceded that addressing climate change “should be a no-brainer,” but he called for an energy plan that expands the use of oil, gas, and coal. Befuddling? Perhaps not, when you note that Alford’s group has received $350,000 from ExxonMobil since 2003 and Alford has a history of offering up climate skeptic talking points.


Update

,On Blog For Our Future, Isaiah Poole writes:

Well, as an African American I don’t know what the hell Alford was upset about — other than the fact that Alford was shown that his shilling for the right is not appreciated in much of the community he claims to represent. . .

For a man who compares seeking to organize a union through a person-to-person card-check drive to the efforts of Southern segregationists to violently suppress the black vote, a complaint that Boxer citing a resolution by the NAACP on climate change in a climate change hearing is somehow “racial” and something that would “explode” is certainly audacious. Condescending, though, is more apt.

So let’s be clear: Harry Alford does not speak for the African-American community. He does not speak for me. He speaks for a cabal of conservative obstructionists who are hell-bent on protecting the old order of oil companies being unaccountable to the environment, employers being unaccountable to their workers—and of African Americans who won’t pimp for the interests of corporate America being kept in their place.


Update

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Climate Progress

NCDC: Second hottest June on record — and once El Nino really kicks in, expect global temperatures “to threaten previous record highs”

Fast on the heels of the fourth warmest May on record, NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center reports:

Based on preliminary data, the globally averaged combined land and sea surface temperature was the second warmest on record for June, and the January-June year-to-date tied with 2004 as the fifth warmest on record.

NCDC notes that the ocean temperature was the warmest on record.  In fact, it was a full 0.11°F warmer than the 2005 record.  This is almost certainly the new El Ni±o on top of the long-term warming trend (see NOAA says “El Ni±o arrives; Expected to Persist through Winter 2009-10″³ “” and that means record temperatures are coming and this will be the hottest decade on record).

And no, I don’t think the monthly data tell us much about the climate.  But I know reporting it annoys the deniers.  Also, the deniers have been touting the supposedly cool June temperatures over parts of this country (although the lower 48 in fact had the 49th warmest June on record, and Alaska had the 21st warmest).  “Across parts of Africa and most of Eurasia,” however, “temperatures were 3°C (5°F) or more above average.”  Such warming may be coming to the US later in the year.  It typically takes several months for the El Ni±o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) to impact global temperatures.

Once again, the geographical distribution of the warming continues to be really, really bad news for those worried about the permafrost permamelt, since temps are running upwards of 3°-5°C (5.4°-9°F) warmer than the 1961-1990 norm over much of Siberia, as NCDC’s figure shows:

Read more

Security

Human Rights Watch On Goldberg’s Concern Trolling

goldberg1Defending himself against the inference (a perfectly reasonable one to draw from yesterday’s post) that he believes that Human Rights Watch officials “shouldn’t talk to Arab audiences about Israel,” Jeffrey Goldberg writes:

No! Of course not. What I’m suggesting is that they shouldn’t fund-raise in Arab countries, especially un-free Arab countries — by bragging about their opposition to Israel, and by invoking the greatest bogeyman of all, the Jewish lobby. It’s just so tacky it’s hard to believe Ken Roth, the group’s director, would ever endorse this practice.

I think it’s relevant to note here that Ken Roth never endorsed this practice. Nor is there any evidence that any HRW representative ever engaged in it. This is all Goldberg’s invention.

I spoke to Sarah Leah Whitson, director of Human Rights Watch’s Middle East and North Africa division, and asked her to respond to Goldberg’s characterization of HRW’s work and fundraising practices. Whitson acknowledged that “obviously our work in Israel is of interest in the Middle East,” but that “the common perception in the region is that, as an American organization, we’re too soft on Israel”:

In talking about our work, we point out that we are as critical of Israel as we are of every other country in the Middle East. That really comes as a surprise to people in the Middle East when they hear that, because they have the opposite perception.

As to Goldberg’s charge that HRW was raising money by “invoking the greatest bogeyman of all, the Jewish lobby,” Whitson laughed, saying “there’s no way to talk about our work on Israel without [noting] attacks against Human Rights Watch from right-wing pro-Israel groups.” Whitson said that such criticism was brought up to counter the common perception that HRW is “too soft on Israel,” and not as some sort of insidious anti-Semitic fund-raising ploy.

One shouldn’t even have to point this out, but discussing HRW’s work on Israel (wherever and with whomever, even with, yes, Arabs) is obviously not the same as “bragging about HRW’s opposition to Israel.” Discussing the very real and intense hostility that right-wing pro-Israel groups show toward HRW’s reporting — hostility to which Jeffrey Goldberg has, through sloppy and tendentious journalism, now added some weight — is obviously not the same as invoking “the Jewish lobby.” The real question here is what Goldberg’s interest is in conflating these things.

Politics

Conservative Education ‘Experts’ Want Less Lincoln And More Jesus In Texas Textbooks

texaswebThe Dallas Morning News reported last week that conservative “experts” advising the state of Texas on school curriculum are arguing that the state’s social studies and history textbooks are giving “too much attention” to some of U.S. history’s most prominent civil rights leaders. David Barton, one of the so-called “experts,” claimed Hispanic labor leader César Chávez “lacks the stature, impact and overall contributions of so many others.” A colleague on the panel agreed, also singling out Thurgood Marshall for exclusion:

To have César Chávez listed next to Ben Franklin” – as in the current standards – “is ludicrous,” wrote evangelical minister Peter Marshall, one of six experts advising the state as it develops new curriculum standards for social studies classes and textbooks. [...]

Marshall also questioned whether Thurgood Marshall, who argued the landmark case that resulted in school desegregation and was the first black U.S. Supreme Court justice, should be presented to Texas students as an important historical figure. He wrote that the late justice is “not a strong enough example” of such a figure.

According to a draft of the proposed new textbook standards, “biographies of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Stephen F. Austin have been removed from the early grades.” At the same time, Peter Marshall wants more teaching of Christianity’s role “in America’s past“:

Marshall…also recommends that school children get a better understanding of the motivational role the Bible and the Christian faith played in the settling of the original colonies. [...]

“In light of the overwhelming historical evidence of the influence of the Christian faith in the founding of America, it is simply not up to acceptable academic standards that throughout the social studies (curriculum standards) I could only find one reference to the role of religion in America’s past,” Marshall said in his review.

Actual education professionals in Texas appeared dismayed at Marshall and Barton’s assessment. “It is what we expected from unqualified political activists put on this so-called panel of experts,” said Dan Quinn of the nonprofit Texas Freedom Network. “This is yet another step toward politicizing our children’s education.” Jesus Francisco de la Teja, chairman of the history department at Texas State University said, “Whether you approve or disapprove of what [Chavez] did, there is no doubt about his contribution to bettering the lives of an untold number of Americans of limited economic means and education.”

Barton, a former vice chairman of the Texas Republican Party also insisted on emphasizing “republican” values in Texas’ curriculum:

[Barton] said that because the U.S. is a republic rather than a democracy, the proper adjective for identifying U.S. values and processes should be “republican” rather than “democratic.” That means social studies books should discuss “republican” values in the U.S., his report said.

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports that the social studies review panels will meet later this month and post their “initial recommendations” online with “final adoption” set for next March. But “[t]he debate here has far-reaching consequences,” the New York Times noted last January when Texas debated how evolution should be taught in schools, because “Texas is one of the nation’s biggest buyers of textbooks, and publishers are reluctant to produce different versions of the same material.”

Justice

Sotomayor Hearing Live-Blog, Day 4

This week, the Wonk Room will live blog Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s confirmation hearings.  Yesterday, Senate conservatives mostly repeated the same tired attacks that failed to gain traction earlier in the week, apparently thinking they could do the same thing over and over again and expect a different result.  As Sotomayor’s time in the hotseat comes to an end today, we’ll see if her opponents have actually figured out something new to say.  We will be updating this thread throughout the day.

soto-day-4

6:37: Apparently, while your humble blogger was prepping for a radio interview, John McGinnis, a right-wing law professor railed against citing foreign law because it is just as unacceptable as citing the Bible or the Koran in an opinion.  Do we really need to make the same joke about Scalia, the Talmud and unelected Rabbis again?

4:07: Your humble blogger needs to step away for a moment.  Let him know what he misses.

4:01: Interesting exchange between Specter and the firefighters.  Specter asks the firefighters if they doubt Sotomayor’s good faith, both say that they are not lawyers and have no insight into that question, they simply testified because they were invited to tell their stories and they wanted to tell them.

3:58: Hatch is dwelling on the dead horse claim that all nine justices disagreed with Sotomayor in Ricci.

3:43: Klobuchar and Specter get in a politeness war over

3:40: Graham to Ricci: we are one generation removed from a time when the color of your skin and your last name were the only thing that mattered when you tried to get a job.  Now we are trying to find balance.

3:37: Lindsay Graham (!) pushes back against Chavez’s claim that Sotomayor has a record of racial politics, noting that the ABA reached a different conclusion.  Also notes that Republicans frequently pick people for political jobs because they are minorities, adding that doing so is just “good politics.”

3:32: Morgenthau (who is white) notes that he was a founding board member of PRLDEF.

3:24: CBS: “Sotomayor Confirmation a Done Deal

3:22: Sessions: “It’s not like anyone is opposed to the Voting Rights Act, I voted for it.”  Sessions hasn’t always felt that way.  He once called the VRA a “piece of intrusive legislation.”

3:21: Sessions: “We’re going to do that crack cocaine thing we talked about.”  After laughter breaks out, he corrects himself, saying that he meant that he will support reducing the crack/powder disparity.

3:09: Peter Kirsanow, who just testified as a Republican witness, has some interesting views about internment camps for Arab-Americans.

3:06: Linda Chavez, a leading opponent of civil rights laws and Fox News commentator, opens her testimony with “I testify today not as a wise Latina woman.”  Keep it classy, Ms. Chavez.

2:58: Ben Vargas, the other firefighter, is now testifying.  Like Ricci, he emphasizes the essential role that firefighters play in protecting people’s lives, and his belief that he was judged on the basis of his race.  Like Ricci, we agree that Vargas is an heroic man who was caught up in circumstances he could not control.  He lost his case because of a binding precedent, not because of any verdict on his character.

2:50: Ricci’s remarks focus on the great deal of specialized knowledge that firefighters must have, his belief that the test that he took did a fine job of testing this knowledge, and how hard he worked to pass the test.  To be clear, no one doubts that Ricci, a man who spent his entire career running into burning buildings to save people’s lives, is a dedicated and heroic firefighter.  As a judge, Sotomayor’s job was not to decide whether Frank Ricci is sympathetic–he would have won that case in a walk–the issue is what the law requires.  In this case, Second Circuit precedent simply wasn’t on Ricci’s side.

Read more

Yglesias

The Future of Workforce Preparation

jof_06-1

I didn’t really “get” what the CEA’s report on The Jobs of the Future was all about. It basically seemed to be saying what we already know—job growth will be largely concentrated in meds and eds, health care and education. And also that college graduates will be better off than those relying on high school diplomas. But Micah Kordsmeier explains that the important part is the ideas for “unlocking the limited success of job training and re-training programs.”

That makes sense! America does a hodgepodge of training and retraining initiatives under the Workforce Investment Act and “[r]esearch suggests that WIA participants benefit from the program, on average, although quality is uneven.” In essence, if we can build on the things that work and cut out the underperforming programs, we’d be in much better shape. They also make the key point that the best way to make sure that “post-high school” people have the skills they need is to make sure that they actually graduate high school with a solid basis of knowledge. As the CEA puts it “the most important ‘post-high school’ education and training reform is a strong early childhood and elementary and secondary education system.” The education elements of the Obama agenda haven’t gotten much attention yet, but the Teacher Incentive Fund boost cleared a key subcommittee mostly intact earlier this week and union leader Randi Weingarten put out a supportive statement yesterday about CAP’s work on incentive pay. So the wheels are turning.

Security

Anti-Immigrant Group Accuses Human Coyotes Of Threatening Wild Pigs, Bears, and Mountain Lions

The Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) released a video today that they claim documents the wildlife and environmental damage that undocumented immigrants and their “coyote smugglers” are inflicting on the Coronado National Forest in Arizona. The narrator, Janice Kephart, doesn’t have any scientific credentials and is no environmentalist. But that didn’t stop her from going green to promote CIS’ anti-immigrant agenda. Watch it:

Kephart doesn’t cite a single shred of evidence, but rather uses isolated “hidden camera” footage from “Borderinvasionpics.com” of wildlife pit against clips of suspected border-crossings to make the case that undocumented immigrants “have destroyed fragile Arizona ecosystems.” The same clips of “human coyotes and their clients” are played over and over to give Kephart more credence than she actually deserves. Kephart swears that the photos of strewn garbage and undergarments in trees once belonged to “illegal aliens,” not negligent backpackers or mischievous hikers. Kephart worries about what will happen to a bear or a mountain lion if it crosses the paths of humans:

“The animals frequently cross alien foot paths like this wild pig seen roaming on a trail also frequented by groups of men and women…A beautiful and hungry mature bear sniffs for food on a well-worn illegal path. This bear might be unwillingly in jeopardy…What if the bear encounters the human coyotes or a cartel next time?

Chances are that a giant hungry bear or mountain lion has a lot less to worry about than the individuals who bump into them.

CIS and Kephart have put out this video to raise “questions about environmentalists’ focus on stopping a border fence.” Biologists have warned that the 700-mile border wall currently under construction will threaten wildlife species. In 2008, Defenders of Wildlife sued the Bush administration for waiving three dozen federal environmental laws to start building the wall. The National Audubon Society, The Nature Conservancy, and the Sierra Club have all come out strongly against its construction. There’s isn’t documentation of any of these groups ever discussing the environmental impacts of immigrants that Kephart puts forth. In fact, a video released by the Sierra Club states “the proposed border wall will not stop human migration, but instead does unnecessary and serious harm to precious natural areas.” Watch it:

Politics

ADL’s Foxman: Obama ‘putting too much weight on solving’ the Israel-Palestine conflict.

abe-foxman-webEarlier this week, President Obama met with a number of prominent Jewish leaders to discuss the Israel-Palestine issue and to ask “to give him time to try his tactics for a Middle East peace.” The Anti-Defamation League’s Abe Foxman, one leader who attended, described his experience on a Jerusalem Post blog, saying that Obama gave some “grounds for reassurance” that he is handling the situation properly. But Foxman soon ran through a series of grievances with Obama’s policy, including his “outreach to the Muslim world…at Israel’s expense.” Shockingly, he then veered into his biggest complaint — that the Obama administration might actually achieve peace:

Still, I continue to sense that the administration is putting too much weight on solving the conflict. We all want to see progress and I have no problem with the administration view that the US must be much more engaged to achieve progress. But I am concerned when expectations rise dramatically, as when the president says that he expects the problem to be resolved in two years.

Foxman has previously criticized Obama’s Middle East envoy George Mitchell for being too “meticulously even-handed” and “fair” in his approach to the conflict.

Yglesias

The Cap and Trade Fight of a Better World

John Henke of The Next Right thinks Republicans are in a lose-lose situation on the cap and trade fight, “If the bill passes, they’ve lost a policy fight; if the bill fails, Republicans will not get credit for lower prices, but they will be blamed (fairly or not) for obstructing progress on environmental problems.” His solution:

What should Republicans do instead? Propose a carbon tax.

But, instead of a straight tax increase (as Democrats want), Republican should propose a carbon tax that replaces the payroll tax. That is revenue neutral, meaning there is no total tax increase.

All I can say is that I really, really, really wish that we were living in a world where there were a large bloc of Republicans willing to adopt this position in good faith. Then you’d have a situation where the strong climate advocates in the Democratic Party could negotiate with that bloc for a modified version of this approach. You’d have to make the math actually come out right rather than do an arbitrary tax-for-tax switch and I’d still want to see some complementary policies. But as Ezra Klein says the point is that when you have people arguing the policy merits in good faith then “you can try to compromise on the merits” and reach a result that’s much better than a compromise undertaken with people who are just acting as shake-down artists.

Sadly, I don’t think anyone is listening to Henke and the world will be a worse place for it.

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