Obamacare Architect Jonathan Gruber’s Self-Defeating Strategy to Sell the Health Care Law

For a sense of exactly how the deceptions that
Obamacare architect Jonathan Gruber has described played out in the
selling of the law, it’s worth reading Jake
Tapper’s piece at CNN
on Gruber, Obama, and the health law’s
Cadillac Tax.

Tapper points to a statement by President Obama at a July 2009
health care townhall on the reasoning behind the tax, and then
juxtaposes it with a recently unearthed remark by Gruber indicating
that the purpose of the tax is not what Obama described. In fact,
it’s pretty much the opposite. 

At a town hall meeting on health care on July 23, 2009 in Shaker
Heights, Ohio, Obama explained
that the thinking of the Cadillac tax
 was to target plans
that spend unnecessarily and excessively, thus driving up health
care costs, such as a $25,000 plan, “so one that’s a lot more
expensive and a lot fancier than the one that even members of
Congress get.”

The thinking, Obama explained, was that “maybe at that point
what you should do is you should sort of cap the exclusion, the tax
deduction that is available, so that we’re discouraging these
really fancy plans that end up driving up costs.”

The President at that point hadn’t yet signed off on a Cadillac
tax (he would eventually) but he did make the pledge: “what I said
and I’ve taken off the table would be the idea that you just
described, which would be that you would actually provide — you
would eliminate the tax deduction that employers get for providing
you with health insurance, because, frankly, a lot of employers
then would stop providing health care, and we’d probably see more
people lose their health insurance than currently have it. And
that’s not obviously our objective in reform.”

Gruber’s
explanation of the thinking was a little bit different. To be
precise, it was the opposite of what Obama said.

Gruber starts by noting that economists really don’t like the
tax subsidy for employer-provided health insurance, that it’s
terrible public policy, but that politically it’s very difficult to
end. Here’s how Tapper describes the rest of what Gruber
says. 

Gruber said the only way those pushing for Obamacare could get
rid of the tax subsidy for employer provider health insurance was
to tax the more generous, or Cadillac, plans — “mislabeling it,
calling it a tax on insurance plans rather than a tax on people
when we all know it’s a tax on people who hold those insurance
plans.”

The second way was have the tax kick in “late, starting in 2018”
and have its rate of growth tied to the consumer price index
instead of to the much higher rate of medical inflation.
Eventually, the 40% tax on the more expensive plans would impact
every employer-provided insurance plan.

“What that means is the tax that starts out hitting only 8% of
the insurance plans essentially amounts over the next 20 years
essentially getting rid of the exclusion for employer sponsored
plans,” Gruber said. “This was the only political way we were ever
going to take on one of the worst public policies in America.”

As Tapper writes, this is exactly what Obama promised
had been “taken off the table.”

This is an issue on which Gruber can presumably speak with some
authority. By Gruber’s
own account
, he was in the room with President Obama when the
Cadillac tax was designed, and that it was designed in order to
avoid the political backlash that Obama believed was sure to
accompany any effort to get rid of the employer tax exclusion in a
straightforward manner. 

Now, as it happens, I think Gruber was right on the merits of
the subsidy for employer benefits: It’s bad policy.

But Obama didn’t really make the case that it was bad policy.
Instead, he said that ending the employer tax break
was something he wouldn’t do, and that he didn’t support ending it
because doing so would lead to negative consequences. 

And then, behind closed doors, he said the more or less the
opposite: He agreed that it was a problem, and that it needed to
go, and worked with Gruber to devise a mechanism that would
eventually end it or significantly reduce its effects. 

Even if you like the result, even if you agree that the tax
exclusion was a problem that needed to be addressed, this is not a
good policy process. It’s built on manipulation and obfuscation
rather than on straightforward argument about the merits of a
change, and it ends up producing workaround policies that are made
as much to conceal their purpose as to produce a desired effect.
It’s not about convincing the public; it’s about misleading them
and hoping they don’t catch on.

And, as a result, it’s the sort of strategy that inevitably
backfires, even when it “works” in the sense that it produces a
legislative win. It attempts to avoid one sort of political
backlash, but ends up creating another. It’s
self-defeating. 

With Obamacare, the results are plain to see. If you want to
understand why public support for the health law is
so low
, this sort of thing is one of the reasons why.
People generally don’t like processes designed to mislead them, and
with Obamacare, they feel misled because, well, they
were. 

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FOMC Minutes Show Deflation-Wary Fed Not Worried About Global Growth

Having done nothing but rally since the FOMC statement on 10/29 that ended QE, the minutes provide little additional info aside from to note that some participants wanted to drop “considerable time”:

  • *MANY FED OFFICIALS SAW LIMITED IMPACT FROM GLOBAL SLOWDOWN
  • *FED OFFICIALS SAW NEED TO WATCH FOR INFLATION EXPECTATIONS DROP
  • *FOMC OPTED NOT TO MENTION FINANCIAL MARKET TURMOIL AFTER DEBATE

If they don’t mention, it never happened!!

Pre-FOMC Mins: S&P Futs 2045, USDJPY 117.75, 10Y 2.349%, Gold $1194

 

A reminder of the idiocy that occurred in stocks at the last Fed Minutes…

 

*  *  *

Full Statement

Oct 2014 Minutes by zerohedge




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The Biggest Myth About Investing In Europe

One of the more prevalent myths in recent weeks is that just because everyone who manages money hates Europe, which recently entered a triple-dip recession if one excludes the “contribution” to GDP from hookers and blow, then it must be a good buy. After all, the only strategy that has worked like a charm under central-planning is BTFD, no further comment necessary. In fact, it was JPM itself that two days ago gave the world 5 reasons to buy Europe and Sell the US (the main of which was hope that the ECB would finally start buying everything that isn’t nailed down at something more reasonable than the €3Bn/week snail’s pace of covered bond monetization).

Which is why the BTFDippier of the fast money is already rotating into a long-Europe mode: their entire thesis is that sooner or later the whales will have no choice but to follow the momentum chasers right back into Europe, because where else are they going to go: in the “safety” of the S&P’s 19x GAAP P/E?

In theory this would be a great strategy, if only in a world in which nobody actually does any fundamental homework and the only thing that matters is frontrunning the next great sucker. In practice, it is fatally wrong.

As the following observation from hedge fund Lyxor shows, while CTA and momentum strats have indeed bailed on Europe in recent months, the so-called smart money, the “global macro” funds never left.

Dispersion among strategies remains high, with CTAs leading the pack. In terms of positioning, momentum players recently turned short European equities (see chart). This is in stark contrast with discretionary managers, which remain long European equities. But the underperformance of Global Macro managers versus CTAs this year does not bode well for European equities.

 

 

L/S Equity is the worst performing strategy. Most of the disappointment came from European funds which suffered from their short exposure on energy services names (see page 4). US managers fared better as they held onto their long positions on retailers before Black Friday. Despite this, they failed from fully capturing the market rebound on the back of their low exposure to the energy sector, which experienced an unexpected rebound this week.

So all those momos hoping that just because they are doing what nobody else has possibly thought of, i.e., investing in beaten down markets, in hopes of frontrunning bigger investors, we have bad news: the only thing momo traders will be frontrunning is each other. And that, as CYNK most recently showed, always ends in tears.




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Welcome to the Recovery Part 2 – Washington D.C.’s Homeless Population Expected to Rise 16% in 2014

Screen Shot 2014-11-19 at 11.47.36 AM

Earlier this week, I published a post titled: Welcome to the Recovery – U.S. Child Homelessness Hits Record as Poverty in Mass. is Highest Since 1960. Here’s an excerpt:

While the general population is aware something is seriously wrong, people remain extremely confused about the root of the problem. This is because what’s happening all around us isn’t socialism and it isn’t free market capitalism. It is actually a return to something much more ancient and much more oppressive. It is a return to serfdom, neo-fedualism and oligarchy.

That post was actually the second in a recent series of pieces highlighting the real world impact of this so-called “economic recovery,” which is now supposedly in its fifth or sixth year, despite having provided little or no benefit to the average citizen. The first in the series was: Child Poverty Jumps by 2.6 Million in Developed World Since 2008, While Number of Global Billionaires Doubles.

continue reading

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Bob Marley’s Name Hoped to Launch Global Marijuana Brand

Bob MarleyLegal marijuana is an estimated
$2 billion a year industry in the United States. Alaska, Oregon,
and Washington, D.C. will be joining Colorado and Washington State
in legalizing marijuana within their jurisdictions. Local
municipalities around the country are experimenting with
decriminalization as well, while other countries are taking a
serious look at legalization as well. Uruguay legalized marijuana
in a contorted government controlling fashion earlier this year and
the country’s legalization project
could well fail
but that failure’s not stopping countries like

Guatemala
from considering their own legalization plans. Ten
years ago, the UN
estimated
the value of the global marijuana market at $141.8
billion, setting a benchmark the legal industry could end up
overtaking.

And while names like Kush, Purple Haze, or even Green Crack
might be recognizable across a wide range of users—geographically
and socio-economically—there’s not any single recognizable brand
name for the growing legal marijuana industry. Privateer Holdings,
a legal marijuana-oriented private equity firm, is hoping to change
that, by licensing the name of perhaps the world’s most well known
marijuana user, Bob Marley. NBC News
reports
:

Marley Natural will look like a modern consumer product, cleanly
packaged and marketed with the help of the same agency that branded
New Balance and Starbucks Coffee. The cannabis itself will be sold
as “loose packed” buds, oils or concentrate, executives said.
Sorry, folks, no pre-rolled joints.

“This is what the end of prohibition looks like,” said Brendan
Kennedy, the CEO of Privateer Holdings, which owns Marley Natural
and plans to run it out of a loft space on Manhattan’s Lower East
Side. “Bob Marley started to push for legalization more than 50
years ago. We’re going to help him finish it.”

According to Forbes, Marley is the fifth highest
earning
dead celebrity, ranked between Marilyn Monroe and
Elizabeth Taylor.

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America Throws Up Over Obama’s Immigration Executive Action Even Before It Is Announced

Ahead of President Obama’s address to the nation tomorrow to dictate his executive orders on immigration, potentially allowing millions of undocumented immigrants to stay legally in the US, a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll finds nearly half of Americans disapprove of his plan. Only a dismal 38% support the President taking this executive action… which makes us wonder if there has ever been so much revulsion at the policies of a standing President. It’s good to be king.


As NBC News reports,

Forty-eight percent oppose Obama taking executive action on immigration — which could come as soon as later this week — while 38 percent support it; another 14 percent have no opinion or are unsure.

 

 

Not surprisingly, these numbers largely break along partisan lines: 63 percent of Democrats approve of Obama taking executive action here, versus just 11 percent of Republicans and 37 percent of independents.

 

Latinos are divided, with 43 percent supporting the action and 37 percent opposing it.

*  *  *




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Obama Will Propose Executive Action to Fix ‘Broken Immigration System’ on Thursday

ObamaPresident Obama announced that he intends to use
executive action to reform “our broken immigration system.” He will
clarify exactly what that means at a White House press conference
on Thursday.

He criticized Congress for failing to address the issue and
explained that legislative inaction has left him no choice.

According to

The Washington Post
:

“Everybody agrees that our immigration system is broken.
Unfortunately Washington has allowed the problem to
fester for too long,” Obama said. “So what’ I’m going to be laying
out is the things I can do with my lawful authority as president to
make the system work better even as I continue to work with
Congress and encourage them to get a bipartisan, comprehensive bill
that can solve the entire problem.”

Obama will also travel to Del Sol High School in Las Vegas on
Friday to build support for his immigration vision.

Stay tuned.

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The Only Thing More Bullish Than Inflation Is….

Deflation. And not just deflation, but a deflationary bust! At least, such is the goalseeked logic of Cornerstone Marco, which has released a bullish (no really) note titled the Coming Deflationary Boom in the U.S.

In it the authors throw in the towel on the most conventional concept in modern economics, namely that for growth one needs stable inflation which in turn causes earnings growth and is low enough not to pressure multiples too high. Well, according to the BLS’ hedonic adjustments and courtesy of Japan’s epic exporting of deflation, inflation is nowhere to be seen (except if one eats pork or beef, or drinks milks), so it is time to give ye olde paragidm shift a try. The paradigm that the only thing more bullish for stocks than inflation, is deflation.

To wit:

The concept of a deflationary boom is a controversial one in economics. Truth be told it will not work in every economy. Indeed, a prerequisite for this to unfold is an economy driven by consumers. In that sense, it does not get more consumer-centric than the US. The second, and necessary, condition calls for a major decline in commodity prices ideally compounded by a strong currency to provide the fuel for growth. In essence, a decline in commodity and import prices creates disposable income the same way the Fed Funds rate cuts used to a decade ago.

 

 

Positioning for a deflationary boom is a binary event. After all, “deflationary” implies that stocks levered to lower inflation will have a powerful tailwind, these are what we like to call early cyclicals such as consumer, transports and other similar segments. Meanwhile, the “boom” part of the story implies that segments levered to growth, US growth in this case, also find a tailwinds. This should help the beleaguered financials to a better year in 2015 and also provides support for sectors like technology and some of the industrials. As we see it, “deflation” is going to become the operative word on the street … that and PE expansion since they typically go hand in hand. As always, we shall see.

Indeed we shall. Then again the only thing we will see is how every time there is deflation somewhere in the world, one after another central bank somewhere will admit its only mandate is to keep stocks at record highs and inject a few trillion in risk-purchasing power into what was once called a market.

One thing the authors do get right that the only benefit resulting from ever more liquidity is P/E (and make sure that is non-GAAP E post buybacls) multiples that are stretched several sigmas wider than anything seen in recent history, especially if one looks at GAAP EPS which at last check were just shy of 20x.

So to summarize:

  • In an “Inflationary” world, EPS growth that drives equity upside.
  • In a “Deflationary Bust“, the unprecedented multiple expansion that not only offsets declining EPS but leads to even recorder equity highs.

Rinse, repeat, because you just can’t lose!

And for the idiots in the audience, here is Cornerstone’s infographic for dummies which shows that no matter what happens in the world, stocks can only go higher!

We are just confused if the little person is the Fed chairmanwoman, and the green thing is the money printer in the basement of Marriner Eccles.

 




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VIDEO: Q and A With Andrew W.K.: “A Role Model for Fun”

“Q and A With Andrew W.K.: ‘A Role Model for Fun'” is the
latest video from Reason TV.

Watch above or click on the link below for video, full text,
supporting links, downloadable versions, and more Reason TV
clips.

View this article.

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Gold & Silver Surge, Recover Swiss Gold Poll Losses As EURCHF Hits Lows

It appears the FX and Precious Metals markets have as much faith in the pre-Swiss Gold Referendum polls as the Scots did before their referendum. The clearly leaked results sparked considerable weakness in gold and silver (and EURCHF surge), but once the data was released, markets began to creep back – perhaps questioning the plausibility of such a big swing in such a short amount of time. This surge was also helped by some unusually frank comments on Russian gold buying from the Russian Central Bank.  Gold, Silver, and EURCHF have all recovered the moves with the latter pressing towads cycle lows…

 

 

And EURCHF has roundtripped to cycle lows…

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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