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The Number of People Helped by Obamacare is Far Larger Than the NYT SaysDean Baker / April 20, 2014
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When It Comes to Generating Jobs It Pays Not to Listen to the ExpertsDean Baker / April 19, 2014
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Labor Market Research Reports, April 7 – April 18, 2014The following reports on labor market policy were recently released:
CEPR and / April 18, 2014
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$15 Billion In Higher Pay: Cheap Fun for Republicans Over the Minimum WageDean Baker / April 18, 2014
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The Health Care Exchanges Need Healthy People, It Doesn't Matter If They Are YoungDean Baker / April 18, 2014
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NYT Says Doctors May Not Talk About Expensive Treatments, Doesn't Talk About Patent Monopolies That Make Them ExpensiveYet again the NYT has given us a piece talking about trade-offs between the cost and quality of health care. The piece reports that some doctors may not discuss certain treatments with patients because they consider these treatments too expensive. Unfortunately, the piece never discussed the role of patent monopolies in making these treatments expensive.
The point is simple but incredibly important. In some cases, for example open-heart surgery, a medical procedure may genuinely involve a substantial use of resources. In this case, it involves many hours of the time of highly-trained medical specialists. (The pay of these specialists is inflated by supply restrictions, but that is another question.) In such cases there can be an issue of whether some treatments are worth the economic cost. For example, should an otherwise healthy 90-year-old get open heart surgery when we know their life expectancy is just 2-3 years even assuming a successful operation.
However there is a very different story at issue in the cases discussed in this article. These cases all refer to the choice of drugs. The drugs that are very expensive do not necessarily involve a greater cost to the economy than the cheaper alternatives. They are expensive because the companies that sell them have patent monopolies or other protections that allow them to sell drugs at prices that are far above their free market price.
This distinction is important because if there are tough choices here it is only because government policy had created them. If all drugs were sold at their free market price, without patent protection, then the difference in costs would in almost all cases be trivial and doctors need not have any reservations about recommending the one they considered best based on their understanding of the evidence.
Of course patent monopolies serve a purpose in providing an incentive to drug companies to undertake research, but there are alternative mechanisms such as the $30 billion in annual direct public funding provided through the National Institutes of Health. Direct funding would not only eliminate the problems associated with figuring out how and whether to pay for expensive patent protected drugs, it would also likely lead to a much more efficient process and better medicine.
Dean Baker / April 18, 2014
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Latin America and the Caribbean
New Report Details Persecution of Public and Private Sector Union Activists in HaitiCEPR / April 17, 2014
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Joe Scarborough and His Band of Space Aliens Take on Paul KrugmanDean Baker / April 17, 2014
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Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León: Director of the DayDirectorships, 2008 - 2012: 5*
Total director compensation, 2008 - 2012: $3,626,109**
Average annual director compensation, 2008 - 2012: $725,222
Average compensation per full year of service as director: $244,276
Dean Baker / April 17, 2014
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The Washington Post Is Confused About Inflation, Economists Are NotDean Baker / April 17, 2014
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The I.M.F.'s Data Disagree With the NYT on the State of Russia's EconomyDean Baker / April 17, 2014
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Inspector General: USAID Project to Provide Housing Comes up ShortJake Johnston / April 16, 2014
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Will the Wall Street Journal Give Ed Lazear Space to Correct His Piece About Falling Work Hours?Dean Baker / April 16, 2014
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If We See Inequality Because of Technology, It's Because the Government Wanted Us to Have InequalityDean Baker / April 16, 2014
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Piketty in Washington: How to Reverse the Increasing Concentration of WealthMark Weisbrot / April 15, 2014
report informe
The Economic Importance of Women’s Rising Hours of Work: Time to Update Employment StandardsJohn Schmitt, Eileen Appelbaum and / April 15, 2014
report informe
Living in the Short-Run: Comment on Capital In the Twenty-First CenturyCEPR / April 15, 2014