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Advantage 1 is the economy
Two internal links---first is coverage:
US is locked into slow growth crisis now -- upward trends are short-
term
John Ross 17, Senior Fellow at Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies, Renmin
University of China, former Professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 6/12/2017,
“Why the US economy remains locked in slow growth,”
http://ablog.typepad.com/keytrendsinglobalisation/2017/06/why-the-us-economy-
remains-locked-in-slow-growth.html
The latest US economic data confirms the US remains locked in a prolonged period
of slow growth with major consequences for geopolitics and destabilising consequences for US
domestic politics. ¶ The latest US economic growth data¶ Almost no international issue is more crucial
for economic and geopolitical strategy than economic trends within the US. It is therefore crucial
to have an accurate analysis of these. Regarding such a serious issue and such powerful forces there is no merit in ‘pessimism’,
underestimating US growth, and no merit in ‘optimism’, overestimating US growth – there is only a virtue in realism.¶ This article
therefore analyses the latest US GDP data. The conclusion is clear. The dataconfirms the US fundamentally
remains in a period of medium/long term slow growth which will last for at least a minimum of
several years.¶ Strikingly, taking a period of 15 years after the beginning of the international
financial crisis, average US growth will be slower than after the beginning of the
Great Depression in 1929. Analyses which appear in parts of the media claiming the
US is entering a significant new period of rapid growth are fundamentally in error – for
reasons analysed in detail blow.¶ Such slow US growth necessarily has major geopolitical
consequences and provides a backdrop for continuing instability and turns in US
politics. The recent period within US politics has already seen:¶ Trump selected as Republican Party Presidential candidate
against the wishes of that Party’s establishment, and elected President against the opposition of the overwhelming major of the US
mass media.¶ Since Trump’s election sharp clashes have continued within the US political establishment with leaks against the
President by the US security services, the President’s sacking of the FBI head, investigations by the US Congress and US police of
close aides to the President, and open campaigns to force the President to change policies or to remove him from office by major US
media such as the New York Times and CNN.¶ Within the Democratic Party a serious challenge mounted to the Party
establishment’s candidate Clinton by the first figure declaring themselves to be a socialist to receive major US public support for
almost a century – Sanders.¶ As US medium/long term slow economic growth will continue sharp turns and tensions in US politics
will not disappear but are likely to continue.¶ The consequences for US relations with China flowing from this situation, and
geopolitical tensions between the US and its traditional allies such as Germany shown for example at the recent G7 summit, are
analysed at the end of this article. The conclusion is that China’s constructive approach to the Trump administration is clearly
correct but that the risk of sharp turns in the situation must be taken into account due to the tensions within the US created by its
historically low growth.¶ This prolonged period of slow growth in the US, and in the advanced economies in general, combines with
China’s own transition to ‘moderate prosperity’, and then to a ‘high income’ economy by World Bank international standards, to
create under Xi Jinping a qualitatively new period in China’s development.¶ The Great Stagnation¶ Starting with the global
background to the latest US economic data, a
defining feature of the present overall international
situation is extremely slow growth in the advanced Western economies.¶ In nine years
since the 2008 international financial crisis average growth in the advanced Western economies is already almost as slow as during
the ‘Great Depression’ of the 1930s and by the end of 2017 it will be significantly slower . By 2016, total
GDP growth in the advanced economies in the years since 2007 was only 10.1% and by the end of 2017, on IMF projections, the
growth in the advanced economies after 2007 will be lower than in the same period after 1929 – total growth of 12.3% in the 10 years
after 2007 compared to 15.1% in the 10 years after 1929.¶ Even more strikingly IMF
data projects that future
growth in the advanced Western economies, following the international financial
crisis, will be far slower than in the same period after 1929. IMF projections are that by 2021,
fourteen years after 2007, total growth in the advanced economies will be less than half that in the 14 years after 1929 – average
annual growth of only 1.3% compared to 2.9%, and total growth of 20.6% compared to 49.8%.¶ This data is shown in Figure 1. An
aim of this article is instead to carry out the necessary factual checks that the latest US data does not represent a break with long-
term trends.¶ US GDP growth¶ In the 1st quarter of 2017 US GDP was 2.0% higher than in the first quarter of 2016.[1] To evaluate
this 2.0% growth, given that a market economy inherently displays business cycles, it is necessary to separate purely cyclical trends
from medium/long term ones. Failure to do so leads to false analysis/statistical trickery – comparing a peak of the business cycle
with the trough will exaggerate growth, while comparing the trough of the business cycle with the peak will understate growth. Such
cyclical effects may be removed by using a sufficiently long term moving average that cyclical fluctuations become averaged out and
the long term structural growth rate is shown. Figure 2 therefore shows annual average US GDP growth using a 20-year moving
average – a comparison to shorter term periods is given below.¶ Figure 2 clearly shows that the fundamental trend of the US
economy is long-term slowdown. Annual average US growth fell from 4.4% in 1969, to 4.1% in 1978, to 3.2% in 2002, to 2.2% by 1st
quarter 2017. That is, the most fundamental long term growth trend in the US economy is that it has been slowing for half a century.
The latest US GDP growth of 2.0% clearly does not represent a break with this long term US economic slowdown but is in line with
it.¶ Per capita¶ US per capita GDP growth follows the same falling trend. Figure 3 shows a 20-year moving average for US per capita
GDP growth. Annual average US per capita GDP growth fell from 2.8% in 1969, to 2.7% in 1977, to 2.4% in 2002, to 1.2% by the first
quarter of 2017. The latest US data shows no break with this trend of long term slowdown - it is in line with it and continues these
long term trends.¶ This data
shows clearly claims the US economy is currently ‘dynamic’
driven by a ‘wave of innovation’ are therefore factually false – a pure propaganda myth repeated by
US media such as Bloomberg with no connection with factual trends. US per capita
growth has in fact fallen to a low level.¶ This fall of US per capita GDP growth to a low level clearly has major political
implications within the US and underlies recent domestic political events. Very low US per capital growth, accompanied by
increasing economic inequality, has resulted in US median wages remaining below their 1999 level – this prolonged stagnation of US
incomes explaining recent intense political disturbances in the US around the sweeping aside of the Republican Party establishment
by Trump, the strong support given to a candidate for president declaring himself to be a socialist Sanders, current sharp clashes
among the US political establishment etc.¶ Cycle and trend¶ Turning from long term trends to analysis of the current US business
cycle it may be noted that a 5-year moving average of annual US GDP growth is 2.0%, a 7-year moving average 2.1% and the 20-year
moving average 2.2%. Leaving aside a 10-year moving average, which is greatly statistically affected by the severe recession of 2009
and therefore yields a result out of line with other measures of average annual growth of only 1.4%, US average annual GDP growth
may therefore be taken as around 2% or slightly above. That is, fundamental structural factors in the US economy create a
medium/long term growth rate of 2.0% or slightly above. Business cycle fluctuations then take purely short term growth above or
below this average. To analyse accurately the present situation of the US business cycle therefore recent growth must be compared
with this long-term trend.¶ Figure 4 therefore shows the 20-year moving average for US GDP growth together with the year on year
US growth rate. This shows that in 2016 US GDP growth was severely depressed – GDP growth in the whole year 2016 was only 1.6%
and year on year growth fell to 1.3% in the second quarter. By the 1st quarter of 2017 US year on year GDP growth had only risen to
2.0% - in line with a 5-year moving average but still below the 20-year moving average.¶ As US economic growth in
2016 was substantially below average a process of ‘reversion to the mean’, that is a
tendency to correct exceptionally slow or exceptionally rapid growth in one period
by upward or downward adjustments to growth in succeeding periods, would be
expected to lead to a short-term increase in US growth compared to low points in 2016. This would
be purely for statistical reasons and not represent any increase in underlying or medium/long US term growth. This normal
statistical process is confirmed by the acceleration in US GDP growth since the low
point of 1.3% in the 2nd quarter 2016 – growth accelerating to 1.7% in 3rd quarter
2016 and 2.0% in 4th quarter 2016 and 1st quarter 2017.¶ President Trump’s administration may of
course claim ‘credit’ for the likely short term acceleration in US growth in 2017 but any such short-term shift is
merely a normal statistical process and would not represent any acceleration in underlying US growth. Only
if growth continued sufficiently strongly and for a sufficiently long period to raise
the medium/long term rate average could it be considered that any substantial increase in
US economic growth was occurring. The latest US growth data, 2.0% year on year, however does not represent
any acceleration in US growth compared to longer term averages and is therefore in line with the pattern of US slow growth and does
not represent a break with it.
We find that in both panels increased health insurance coverage is associated with faster
economic growth . In the United States, we find evidence that Medicaid coverage increases both macroeconomic growth
and employment growth. However, our results also suggest that in their efforts to capitalize on the economic benefits of expanding
health insurance, legislators would be wise to implement policies that control per-enrollee costs. To the extent that the economic
implications of increased state-supported health care coverage are a key aspect of the ongoing debate in the health insurance policy
arena, our findings could inform future reforms.¶ Social Policy and Economic Growth¶ Previous studies of the
relationship between social policies and state economic growth find inconsistent
effects (see e.g., Blair and Premus 1987; Crain and Lee 1999; Dye 1980; Erickson 1987; Fisher 1997; Helms 1985;
Jiwattanakulpaisarn et al. 2009; Jones 1990; Jones and Vedlitz 1988; Newman 1983; Schneider 1987). Some find positive
relationships between spending and economic growth, others a negative relationship, and still others find no relationship at all.2
Work on the specific relationship between health spending and economic growth is very limited. For example, a report issued by the
Department of Health and Human Services (2008, 47) reviewing the literature on government health spending and economic
growth concluded that “[g]iven that most
of the literature in this area is based on anecdotal
reports or descriptive evidence, there is significant scope for improving the
current methods by using longitudinal data and more rigorous empirical
analysis .” Their own empirical tests using a panel dataset including 13 years of state spending data suggested a positive
relationship between government expenditures on health and state economic growth, a result contrary to that found in Jones
(1990).¶ Because health problems worsen when unaddressed, cities paying for emergency care of uninsured populations may pay
significantly more for the health problems that result from putting off care than places that pay upfront for preventative care
(Baicker and Chandra 2006 Baker, Fisher, and Wennberg 2008; Bamezai and Melnick 2006). In fact, Baicker and Chandra (2004,
184) find that spending and health outcomes are inversely related perhaps because “the use of intensive, costly care…crowds out the
use of more effective care.” Scholarship on the relationship between health care spending in health outcomes suggests a complex
relationship. Fisher and others (2007) find that additional spending on Medicare patients tends to be associated with higher
numbers of procedures rather than improved health outcomes. Other research suggests that health care spending does produce
improved outcomes but only in particular populations (i.e., infants due to a decrease in infant mortality) (Gallet and Doucouliagos
2015). While the relationship between health care spending and health outcomes is complex, the relationship between spending on
health insurance and health care outcomes may be more straightforward. Health insurance may lead to more desirable health care
outcomes directly (through care which addresses extant diseases/infirmities) and indirectly (through preventative care), and
healthcare spending is not a simple proxy for the prevalence of health care insurance (see Anderson and Frogner 2008; Anderson
and Poullier 1999).¶ Over the last decade, there has been an increase in attention to assessing social programs to see if they “work.”
In the health care policy arena, these assessments tend to focus on one of two primary criteria: (1) health outcomes, or (2) fiscal
efficiency. If health insurance is supposed to make people healthier, we can evaluate Medicaid (for example) based on the health
related outcomes of program participants (e.g., Baiker et al. 2013). But states (and politicians) also have to weigh if a program is
“worth the cost” given that there are other calls on the public purse. These assessments focus more on if a program saves more
money than it spends over time or leads to economic growth that helps the state recoup its costs (in terms of making up lost or
increasing tax revenue for example) or an increase in employment growth that makes the state economy stronger. If providing public
health insurance strengthens the economy and reduces the net cost of the program, it should enjoy broader support. Policy experts
disagree about the net costs of existing state-sponsored health insurance programs, the focal point of this article. Below, we review
these arguments. ¶ Pro: Expanding State Sponsored Health Insurance is Worth the Cost¶ First, increasing
access to
health insurance could positively affect labor supply and demand . Access to health
insurance increases the ability of people to remain in the workforce because it
keeps them healthier and increases the likelihood that they will be available for
work. While this can increase overall lifetime earnings and decrease employee
turnover, it also could reduce the number of people reliant on other government
social programs such as social security, food stamps, housing assistance, etc.
Moreover, access to health insurance, particularly through the government may
eliminate “job lock ” and encourage entrepreneurial activities such as starting a
new business or investing in research that could create more jobs for others (see e.g.,
Sterret, Bender, and Palmer 2014). ¶ Likewise, larger government sponsored programs could alleviate some inequalities in the
system (Sterret, Bender, and Palmer 2014). For example, under an employee-sponsored health insurance regime, firms with more
elderly or disabled employees, pregnant women, and so on, pay more for health care than firms who have employees that are
cheaper to cover. The financial incentives generated by this insurance regime may encourage firms to either discriminate against
certain workers (American Civil Liberties Union 2002), decrease wages (Gruber 1994) and investments, or decrease hiring
additional workers (especially new full time workers) (Baicker and Chandra 2006) as health care costs become a larger percentage
of labor costs. For these reasons, increasing government sponsored health insurance could increase employment and economic
growth by increasing the labor supply and eliminating market inefficiencies. ¶ Looking specifically at Medicaid, some evidence
suggests that expanding Medicaid coverage could increase economic and employment growth. Baiker and others (2013) harnessed
he unique “experimental” expansion of Medicaid in Oregon to test how Medicaid coverage affected individual health outcome and
economic security. While Medicaid access did not improve all health outcomes, “Medicaid coverage decreased the probability of a
positive screening for depression, increased the use of many preventive services, and nearly eliminated catastrophic out-of-pocket
medical expenditures” (Baiker et al. 2013). A related study demonstrated that those participating in the Medicaid expansion had
“lower out-of-pocket medical expenditures and medical debt (including fewer bills sent to collection), and better self-reported
physical and mental health than the control group” (Finkelstein et al. 2012).3¶ State-sponsored health insurance
may boost economic growth through other means as well. Providing lower income
individuals with state health insurance can increase tax revenues by keeping
families and individuals out of debt that would otherwise keep them from paying
their taxes. For example, as the cost of health care has increased in the United States, lack of health insurance
has become the largest driver of bankruptcy (Himmelstein et al. 2009). Expenses associated
with significant health issues also decrease the ability of families to invest in activities
that would increase their economic position and thus increase taxable income. For
example, a study by Collins and others (2012) found that 36 percent of young adults had medical debt, and of those 31 percent had
put off education and career plans, 28 percent were unable to meet their basic financial obligations because of medical bills, and 32
percent could not make their student loan or tuition payments. ¶ A
third mechanism through which state sponsored
health insurance could bolster economic growth is as a direct economic stimulus (see e.g., Pauly 2003):
expenditures on health care increase both wages and the number of jobs in the
health care sector. To the extent that expenditures on health care lead to new treatments and cures that decrease
morbidity and infirmity, spending can result in a large financial gain for the country. (Aaron
2003; Murphy and Topel 2006).z
job creating engine . They need certainty so they can make prudent decisions about
payroll, budgets and product development.¶ Running a small business is hard enough. The current
chaos in Washington makes it that much more difficult.¶ Instead of tearing down the ACA
and taking health coverage away from people and small businesses, we should be
building on the gains and achievements of healthcare reform and work together on
a bipartisan basis to fix what’s not working.¶ The ACA has had a positive impact all across
America, but it needs commonsense repairs and strengthening . My message to Republican leaders in
Congress and President Trump is: stop undermining the ACA, and let’s work together to improve America’s healthcare system.
“engineering and manufacturing are hands-on and iterative, and our most
innovative appliance-design work is done in the United States. At a time when
speed to market is everything, separating design and development from
manufacturing didn’t make sense.”¶ ¶ This trend is likely to continue as companies
recognize higher U.S. worker productivity, rising labor and energy costs abroad
and logistical advantages here at home. Couple that with global demand for high quality American-made
products, and it is hard not to be bullish about America’s long-term opportunities.¶ ¶ The key now is building
capacity and investing in our country’s small business supplier base so that these
firms can better support global manufacturers and help bring more jobs back to
the United States — and both the government and the private sector have a role to
play in making this possible.¶ The United States has some of the world’s most
innovative small suppliers and entrepreneurs. We have the types of small
businesses that, with the right support, can go toe-to-toe with China (particularly
on the higher end of the value chain) or with Germany’s famed Middlestand companies.¶
Businesses around the world are taking notice. Foreign companies like Lenovo,
Ikea, Nissan, Airbus, Siemens are starting or growing U.S. operations, and they
are looking for networks of U.S.-based suppliers to support them.¶ So how do we build on
this momentum?¶ Related: How to land contracts with corporate clients¶ Today, U.S.-based, forward-thinking
companies are looking at their supply chains very differently. They are working
together to co-innovate, they are helping supply the capital and skills their small
suppliers need, and they are operating as partners.¶ At the U.S. Small Business Administration, we
are leading a government-wide effort called the American Supplier Initiative to support small suppliers.¶ Between 250,000 and
750,000 U.S. businesses are part of commercial and government supply chains. We are using our experience and the best practices
we have developed overseeing the federal government’s $100 billion small business contracting program to help more small firms be
successful commercial suppliers. Here’s how:¶ Making connections: We are connecting small and large businesses together through
matchmaking activities and through public private partnerships like IBM’s Supplier Connection, a portal that makes it easier for
small businesses to connect to supply chain opportunities.¶ Access and opportunity: The Washington Post highlighted a recent
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) report that concluded that the “future of manufacturing will consist of smaller firms
that may not always have enough money to train workers, commercialize new products and procure financing on their own.Ӧ Our
agency has a $100 billion loan portfolio to help get capital to these businesses. We also train and counsel more than a million
business owners each year. And, as I highlighted in the second blog in this series, the president’s budget proposes $40 million for
intensive entrepreneurial training to support established firms that are well positioned for growth. The training is tailored to ensure
that entrepreneurs get the skills, resources, counseling and long-term business planning advice they need to be part of corporate
supply chains.¶ Creating ecosystems: A key component of a thriving manufacturing base is a network of nimble suppliers. At the
SBA, we launched the first official federal government cluster initiative in 2010; today, the federal government is invested in more
than 50 clusters across the country.¶ The goal of these clusters is to leverage, integrate and better align all of a region’s assets (local
industries, skill base of local workforce, economic development agencies, universities and community colleges). These ecosystems
are a proven tool for attracting and strengthening regional manufacturing and for boosting exports.¶ In addition, as part of the
American Supplier Initiative, the SBA is supporting efforts to fund supply chain mapping techniques.¶ This is only the beginning. All
across the country there
are small suppliers ready, able and willing to make America’s
corporations more productive, more innovative and more globally competitive. As
those supplier networks grow and connect, they will serve as a magnet to bring
more manufacturing and more jobs back to our shores.¶ That’s how we can
accelerate economic growth , strengthen the middle class and make America
more globally competitive.
American power. Readers in other countries may be tempted to react to this judgment with a dose of schadenfreude, finding more than a
little satisfaction in America’s difficulties. Such a response should not be surprising. The US and those representing it have been guilty of hubris (the US
may often be the indispensable nation, but it would be better if others pointed this out), and examples of inconsistency between America’s practices and
its principles understandably provoke charges of hypocrisy. When America does not adhere to the principles that it preaches to others, it breeds
resentment. But, like most temptations, the urge to gloat at America’s imperfections and struggles ought to be resisted. People around the globe should
be careful what they wish for. America’s
failure to deal with its internal challenges would come
at a steep price. Indeed, the rest of the world’s stake in American success is nearly as
large as that of the US itself. Part of the reason is economic. The US economy still accounts for
about one-quarter of global output. If US growth accelerates, America’s capacity to
consume other countries’ goods and services will increase, thereby boosting
growth around the world. At a time when Europe is drifting and Asia is slowing,
only the US (or, more broadly, North America) has the potential to drive global economic
recovery . The US remains a unique source of innovation. Most of the world’s citizens communicate
with mobile devices based on technology developed in Silicon Valley; likewise, the Internet was made in America. More recently, new technologies
developed in the US greatly increase the ability to extract oil and natural gas from underground formations. This technology is now making its way
around the globe, allowing other societies to increase their energy production and decrease both their reliance on costly imports and their carbon
emissions. The US is also an invaluable source of ideas. Its world-class universities educate a significant percentage of future world leaders. More
People and
fundamentally, the US has long been a leading example of what market economies anddemocratic politics can accomplish.
governments around the world are far more likely to become more open if the
American model is perceived to be succeeding. Finally, the world faces many serious
challenges , ranging from the need to halt the spread of w eapons of m ass
d estruction, fight climate change, and maintain a functioning world economic order that
promotes trade and investment to regulating practices incyberspace, improving global health, and preventing armed
conflicts . These problems will not simply go away or sort themselves out. While Adam
Smith’s “invisible hand” may ensure the success of free markets, it ispowerless in the world of geopolitics. Order requires the
visible hand of leadership to formulate and realize global responses to global
challenges. Don’t get me wrong: None of this is meant to suggest that the US can deal effectively with the world’s problems on its own.
Unilateralism rarely works. It is not just that the US lacks the means; the very nature of contemporary global problems suggests that only collective
responses stand a good chance of succeeding. But multilateralism
is much easier to advocate than to
design and implement. Right now there is only one candidate for this role: the US.
No other country has the necessary combination of capability and outlook. This brings me
back to the argument that the US must put its house in order – economically, physically, socially, and
politically – if it is to have the resources needed to promote order in the world. Everyone should
hope that it does: The alternative to a world led by the US is not a world led by China, Europe, Russia, Japan, India,
or any other country, but rather a world that is not led at all. Such a world would almost certainly
be characterized by chronic crisis and conflict. That would be bad not just for Americans, but
for the vast majority of the planet’s inhabitants.
calamity. It has been the great accomplishment of the U.S.-led world order in the 70 years since the end of the Second World
War that this kind of competition has been held in check and great power conflicts have been avoided.
The role of the United States, however, has been critical. Until recently, the dissatisfied great and medium-size
powers have faced considerable and indeed almost insuperable obstacles to achieving their objectives. The chief obstacle has been
the power and coherence of the order itself and of its principal promoter and defender. The
American-led system of
political and military alliances, especially in the two critical regions of Europe and East Asia, has
presented China and Russia with what Dean Acheson once referred to as “situations of strength”
in their regions that have required them to pursue their ambitions cautiously and
in most respects to defer serious efforts to disrupt the international system. The system has served
as a check on their ambitions in both positive and negative ways. They have been participants in and for the most part beneficiaries
of the open international economic system the United States created and helped sustain and, so long as that system was functioning,
have had more to gain by playing in it than by challenging and overturning it. The same cannot be said of the political and strategic
aspects of the order, both of which have worked to their detriment. The growth and vibrancy of democratic government in the two
decades following the collapse of Soviet communism have posed a continual threat to the ability of rulers in Beijing and Moscow to
maintain control, and since the end of the Cold War they have regarded every advance of democratic institutions, including
especially the geographical advance close to their borders, as an existential threat—and with reason. The continual threat to the basis
of their rule posed by the U.S.-supported order has made them hostile both to the order and to the United States. However, it has
also been a source of weakness and vulnerability. Chinese rulers in particular have had to worry about what an unsuccessful
confrontation with the United States might do to their sources of legitimacy at home. And although Vladimir Putin has to some
extent used a calculated foreign adventurism to maintain his hold on domestic power, he has taken a more cautious approach when
met with determined U.S. and European opposition, as in the case of Ukraine, and pushed forward, as in Syria, only when invited to
do so by U.S. and Western passivity. Autocratic rulers in a liberal democratic world have had to be careful.
The greatest check on Chinese and Russian ambitions, however, has come from the combined military power of the United States
and its allies in Europe and Asia. China, although increasingly powerful itself, has had to contemplate facing the combined military
strength of the world’s superpower and some very formidable regional powers linked by alliance or common strategic interest,
including Japan, India, and South Korea, as well as smaller but still potent nations like Vietnam and Australia. Russia has had to
face the United States and its NATO allies. When united, these military powers present a daunting challenge to a revisionist power
that can call on no allies of its own for assistance. Even were the Chinese to score an early victory in a conflict, they would have to
contend over time with the combined industrial productive capacities of some of the world’s richest and most technologically
advanced nations. A weaker Russia would face an even greater challenge.
Faced with these obstacles, thetwo great powers, as well as the lesser dissatisfied powers, have had to hope
for or if possible engineer a weakening of the U.S.-supported world order from within. This
could come about either by separating the United States from its allies, raising doubts
about the U.S. commitment to defend its allies militarily in the event of a conflict, or by various means wooing
American allies out from within the liberal world order’s strategic structure. For most of the past decade, the reaction of American
allies to greater aggressiveness on the part of China and Russia in their respective regions, and to Iran in the Middle East, has been
to seek more reassurance from the United States. Russian actions in Georgia, Ukraine, and Syria; Chinese actions in the East and
South China seas; Iranian actions in Syria, Iraq, and along the littoral of the Persian Gulf—all have led to calls by American allies and
partners for a greater commitment. In this respect, the system has worked as it was supposed to. What the political scientist William
Wohlforth once described as the inherent stability of the unipolar order reflected this dynamic—as
dissatisfied
regional powers sought to challenge the status quo, their alarmed neighbors
turned to the distant American superpower to contain their ambitions.
The system has depended, however, on will, capacity, and coherence at the heart of
the liberal world order . The United States had to be willing and able to play its part as
the principal guarantor of the order, especially in the military and strategic realm. The order’s
ideological and economic core —the democracies of Europe and East Asia and the Pacific—had to remain
relatively healthy and relatively confident . In such circumstances, the combined political, economic, and
military power of the liberal world would be too great to be seriously challenged by the great powers, much less by the smaller
dissatisfied powers.
It is crucial for both economic and geopolitical perspectives to have an accurate analysis
of trends in the US economy. The publication of the latest revised US GDP figures is therefore important as it
provides the latest opportunity to verify these developments. This data confirms the fundamental trends in the US economy under
Trump:¶ The US remains locked in very slow medium and long-term growth – particularly in
terms of per capita GDP growth.¶ Due to extremely weak growth of the US economy in 2016 a
purely short-term
cyclical upturn is likely in 2017 - but any such short-term cyclical upturn will be far
too weak to break out of this fundamental medium and long-term trend of US slow
growth.¶ This article analyses these economic trends in detail, considers some of their geopolitical consequences, and their
impact on domestic US politics.¶ US GDP and per capita GDP growth¶ In the 1st quarter of 2017 US GDP was 2.1% higher than in the
first quarter of 2016. Making an international comparison to other major economic centres:¶ US total GDP growth of 2.1% was the
same as the EU’s 2.1%.¶ Making a comparison to the largest developing economies, US 2.1% growth was far lower than China’s 6.9%
or India’s 6.2%.¶ This data is shown in Figure 1¶ However, in terms of per capita GDP growth the US was the worst performing of the
major international economic centres, because the US has faster population growth than any of these except India. US annual
population growth is 0.7%, compared to 0.6% in China and 0.4% in the EU – India’s is 1.3%. The result therefore, as Figure 2 shows,
is that US per capita GDP growth in the year to the 1st quarter of 2017 was only 1.3% compared to the EU’s 1.7%, India’s 4.9% and
China’s 6.3%.¶ In summary US per capita GDP growth is very weak – only slightly above 1%.¶ Figure 1¶ image¶ Figure 2¶ image¶ ¶
Business cycle¶ In order to accurately evaluate the significance of this latest US data it is necessary to separate purely business cycle
trends from medium/long term ones – as market economies are cyclical in nature failure to separate cyclical trends from long term
ones may result in seriously distorted assessments. Purely cyclical effects may be removed by using a sufficiently long term moving
average that cyclical fluctuations become averaged out and the long term structural growth rate is shown. Figure 3 therefore shows
annual average US GDP growth using a 20-year moving average – a comparison to shorter term periods is given below.¶ Figure 3
clearly shows that the fundamental trend of the US economy is long-term slowdown. Annual average US growth fell from 4.4% in
1969, to 4.1% in 1978, to 3.2% in 2002, to 2.2% by 1st quarter 2017. The latest US GDP growth of 2.1% clearly does not represent a
break with this long-term US economic slowdown but is in line with it.¶ Figure 3¶ image¶ ¶ Cycle and trend¶ Turning from long term
trends to analysis of the current US business cycle, it may be noted that a 5-year moving average of annual US GDP growth is 2.0%, a
7-year moving average 2.1% and the 20-year moving average 2.2%. Leaving aside a 10-year moving average, which is greatly
statistically affected by the severe recession of 2009 and therefore yields a result out of line with other measures of average annual
growth of only 1.4%, US average annual GDP growth may therefore be taken as around 2% or slightly above. That is, fundamental
structural factors in the US economy create a medium/long term growth rate of 2.0% or slightly above. Business cycle fluctuations
then take purely short-term growth above or below this average. To analyse accurately the present situation of the US business cycle
therefore recent growth must be compared with this long-term trend.¶ Figure 4 therefore shows the 20-year moving average for US
GDP growth together with the year on year US growth rate. This shows that in 2016 US GDP growth was severely depressed – GDP
growth in the whole year 2016 was only 1.6% and year on year growth fell to 1.3% in the second quarter. By the 1st quarter of 2017
US year on year GDP growth had only risen to 2.1% - still below the 20-year moving average.¶ As
US economic growth
in 2016 was substantially below average a process of ‘reversion to the mean’, that
is a tendency to correct exceptionally slow or exceptionally rapid growth in one
period by upward or downward adjustments to growth in succeeding periods,
would be expected to lead to a short-term increase in US growth compared to low
points in 2016. This would be purely for statistical reasons and not represent any
increase in underlying or medium/long US term growth. This normal statistical process is
confirmed by the acceleration in US GDP growth since the low point of 1.3% in the 2nd quarter 2016 – growth accelerating to 1.7% in
3rd quarter 2016, 2.0% in 4th quarter 2016 and 2.1% in 1st quarter 2017.¶ Given the very depressed situation of the US economy in
2016 therefore some increase in speed of growth may be expected in 2017 for purely statistical reasons connected to the business
cycle.¶ Figure 4¶ The economic and domestic US political conclusions of the trends shown in the latest US data are therefore clear¶
US economic growth in 2016 at 1.6% was so depressed below even its long term
average that some moderate upturn in 2017 is likely. President Trump’s administration may of
course claim ‘credit’ for the likely short-term acceleration in US growth in 2017 but any such short-term shift is merely a normal
statistical process and would not represent any acceleration in underlying US growth.
Only if growth continued
sufficiently strongly and for a sufficiently long period to raise the medium/long
term rate average could it be considered that any substantial increase in
underlying US economic growth was occurring.¶ This fall of US per capita GDP
growth to a low level clearly has major political implications within the US and underlies
recent domestic political events. Very low US per capita growth, accompanied by increasing economic inequality, has resulted in US
median wages remaining below their 1999 level – this prolonged stagnation of US incomes explaining recent intense political
disturbances in the US around the sweeping aside of the Republican Party establishment by Trump, the strong support given to a
candidate for president declaring himself to be a socialist Sanders, current sharp clashes among the US political establishment etc.¶
Even a short-term cyclical upturn in the US economy, however, is likely to be translated into increased economic confidence by US
voters. This may give some protection to Trump despite current sharp political clashes in the US with numerous Congressional
investigations of President related issues and virtually open campaigns by mass media such as the New York Times and CNN to
remove the President. The latest opinion poll for the Wall Street Journal showed that men believed the economy had improved since
the Presidential election by 74% to 25%, while women believed by 49% to 48% that the economic situation had not improved. ¶ In
terms of geopolitical consequences affecting China:¶ The short term moderate cyclical upturn in the US economy which is likely in
2017 will aid China’s short term economic growth – particularly as it is likely to by synchronised with a moderate cyclical upturn in
the EU. Both trends aid China’s exports¶ Nevertheless, due
to the very low medium and long-term US
growth rate the US will not be able to play the role of economic locomotive of the
G20. In addition to economic fundamentals IMF projections are that in the next five years China’s contribution to world growth
will be substantially higher than the US. It is therefore crucial China continues to push for economic progress via the G20 and China
has the objective possibility to play a leading role in this.¶ Very
slow growth in the US in the medium and longer
term creates a permanent temptation to the US political establishment to attempt to
divert attention from this by reckless military action or ‘China bashing’ . China’s foreign
policy initiatives to seek the best possible relations with the US are extremely correct but the risks from such
negative trends in the US situation, and therefore of sharp turns in US foreign policy,
must also be assessed.
Cost and certainty on the individual exchanges is key to solve job lock
– studies
Bradley T. Heim 17, Professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at
Indiana University, PhD in Economics from Northwestern University, Lang Kate Yang,
4/272017, The impact of the Affordable Care Act on self-employment, Health
Economics, accessed via Wiley Online Library
It is well known that the cost and availability (or lack thereof) of health insurance has the
potential to impact self-employment decisions, since leaving a wage and salary job
often entails the loss of employer sponsored health insurance. Further, surveys
performed by the National Federation of Independent Business find that the rising
cost of health insurance is perennially a top concern among small business
owners. 1 As a result, laws that reform the health insurance market, particularly for those
who are self-employed, may impact the level of self-employment in the United
States. In this paper, we use data from the Current Population Survey to provide evidence on whether the most recent of such reforms, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), has impacted the level of self-
employment in the United States.¶ ¶ Self-employed individuals who do not receive an offer of employer-sponsored or government insurance 2 (either directly or through a spouse) and who wish to purchase
insurance generally must do so in the nongroup health insurance market. Prior to the ACA, even healthy insurance seekers on the private nongroup market often faced high premiums due to adverse selection in
the market, and those with poor health or preexisting conditions generally faced even higher risk-rated premiums or were unable to purchase a policy altogether.¶ ¶ The ACA makes several federal-level changes to
regulations in the private nongroup health insurance market. 3 For health insurance policies that begin in January 2014, it implements modified community rating regulations, which limit the extent to which
insurance companies may charge different premiums based on health status, and guaranteed issue regulations, which prevent insurance companies from excluding anyone based on preexisting conditions. In
addition, it contains subsidies for low-income taxpayers with family income up to 400% of the federal poverty level (FPL) to purchase health insurance and for small firms to provide health insurance for their
employees. Beginning on October 1, 2013, these insurance policies were offered on health insurance exchanges, some of which were operated by individual states and some of which were operated by the federal
government.¶ ¶ The first year of exchange operation was marred by numerous well-publicized difficulties in the function of the federal exchange and many state exchanges, but the second year of exchange
operation went more smoothly. 4 However, numerous state and federal lawmakers have called for repeal of the ACA. In addition, a number of markets have recently experienced decreased participation by insurers
as some large insurers have pulled out of participating in the exchanges, 5 and a number of state cooperative insurers have become insolvent, 6 which may call into question the long-term viability of the
employment, which may delay any effect.¶ ¶ In this study, we analyze data from the 2010 to 2015 Current
Population Survey (CPS) to provide evidence on the impact of the ACA on the level
of self-employment. The CPS is a nationally representative survey of U.S.
households and is administered every month. Its timeliness and inclusion of labor
force participation information make CPS an appropriate data source for
analyzing changes in self-employment upon the implementation of the ACA.¶ ¶ We pursue two
identification strategies. In the first, we utilize the fact that the pre-ACA individual health insurance environment differed across states regarding community rating and guaranteed issue regulations. To identify
the impact of the ACA on self-employment, we compare the change in self-employment rates pre- and post-ACA implementation in states that had no such regulations (or had a subset of these regulations) and for
which the ACA is a substantial change in policy, to states that had regulations similar to the ACA regulations and for which the ACA is a smaller change in policy. The former group constitutes the treatment states,
while the latter the comparison states.¶ ¶ In the second identification strategy, we utilize differences across individuals in whether they had employer-sponsored health insurance (ESI) prior to 2014, and examine,
among those who had such insurance, whether having a characteristic (spousal coverage, older age, or a large family) that would make them more (less) likely to be insurable if they left their job is associated with
higher (lower) levels of transitions to self-employment. Such a relationship has previously been interpreted as evidence of entrepreneurship lock. 7 We test this difference-in-differences analysis in the pre-ACA
period (from November 2010 to December 2013) and the results confirm the expected impact of the aforementioned individual characteristics on entrepreneurship lock. We then adopt a triple-differences strategy
with pre- and post-ACA implementation as the third level of difference to investigate whether the estimated prevalence of entrepreneurship lock has declined following the implementation of the ACA.¶ ¶ Our
results suggest that the implementation of the nongroup market reforms and establishment of health insurance exchanges due to the ACA in 2014 did not lead to an overall increase in self-employment in states
that lacked similar provisions in their individual health insurance markets prior to 2014. We also do not find that the ACA differentially increased self-employment among individuals who may have been likely to
face entrepreneurship-lock in the pre-ACA period. We do, however, find statistically significant positive impacts in states that lacked the ACA nongroup market provisions in the second year of implementation
results
(when exchanges functioned properly and people had sufficient time to adjust their employment status) among individuals eligible for insurance subsidies. Taken together, these
suggest that the ACA led to increased self-employment only in cases in which the
uncertainty surrounding the exchanges was sufficiently reduced (due to the exchanges functioning properly),
the cost of insurance was sufficiently low (among low- and moderate-income individuals who qualified for subsidies), and individuals had time to
adjust.
become a crisis. Millions are now being covered through the law, but they're
older, sicker and more expensive to insure than anyone anticipated. To
compensate, health plans are raising premiums, in some cases by a lot—the largest insurer
in Texas wants to jack up rates for individual plans by an eye-popping 60 percent next year.¶ A close look at what's really keeping the
exchanges underwater suggests that some of the problems are self-inflicted wounds by Obama and his administration; others are the
handiwork of Republican saboteurs, who undercut the safeguards intended to help companies weather the uncertainty of the new
law. And overall, the system has been weighed down by one big miscalculation: Health
insurance amounts to a
guess about how much customers’ health care is going to cost in the long run, and
in many states Obamacare health insurers guessed wrong.¶ None of the problems are
insurmountable, but if they aren’t fixed, the law could find itself in a mounting crisis—
what observers call a “death spiral”— in which competition vanishes, costs skyrocket, and a dwindling pool of
insurers offer policies so expensive that health insurance is as out of reach as it ever was.¶ Politically, the repair job isn’t trivial: It
requires a bipartisan decision to stabilize the Obamacare markets, a consensus that has been unattainable in the politically toxic
atmosphere on Capitol Hill since the law was passed six years ago without a single Republican vote. With this year’s enrollment
season set to open just one week before Election Day, the turbulence in the exchanges could be a wildcard in the presidential
contest–and threaten Obama’s signature domestic achievement.¶ The
gulf between Obamacare's success
covering citizens and its failures on the insurance front isn't just an accidental side
effect: It's a direct result of the key selling point of the law, that coverage is now
accessible to all Americans. Health care finance experts point to a handful of policy changes that could bolster the
exchanges and ensure that people in states like North Carolina can still buy health insurance five and 10 years from now. That would
require an honest reckoning with what’s gone wrong–and the legislative resolve to enact fixes. “There’s
plenty to be
worried about,” said Don Taylor, a health policy expert at Duke University who has tracked Obamacare in his home state
of North Carolina and across the country. “The answer is more policy—not doing nothing.” ¶ So just
what is that new policy supposed to look like?¶ ANY LAW AS ambitious and complex as the ACA is going to be a work in progress.
Almost from the moment Medicare passed in 1965, Congress has been revising it, and even now it undergoes changes every year.
Most insurance companies say they remain committed to offering Obamacare plans, and as long as they stay in the business, the
exchanges are unlikely to implode.¶ In some states, such as California and Washington, the system is working fine. More than 9 in 10
health plans made money selling Obamacare policies to individuals during the first year of enrollments, according to McKinsey’s
analysis. But in states like North Carolina, it's becoming increasingly clear that the assumptions the law was built on just haven't
held up. “The pool is far less healthy than we forecast,” said Brad Wilson, CEO of Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina, in an
interview with POLITICO. “We need more healthy people.”¶ North Carolina’s Obamacare story started out just as the administration
hoped it would: More than 350,000 people signed up for insurance the first year it was offered. Just two insurance companies were
offering polices through the state's "insurance exchange"—the marketplace that lets individuals without workplace coverage buy
their own coverage–but in 2015 they were joined by a third carrier, UnitedHealth Group. Sign-ups that year surged above 550,000.
This year, the state saw another 10 percent bump, topping 600,000.¶ But as those customers demanded health care, costs started to
mount. In 2014, medical claims in the individual market for both Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina and Aetna exceeded 90
percent of premiums paid, according to financial filings. Last year, those costs soared above 100 percent of premiums for all three
carriers competing in North Carolina. Altogether,
medical claims hit $3.2 billion–nearly $100
million more than premiums the insurers collected. Throw in administrative costs
on top of that, and it becomes clear that the insurers lost tens of millions of dollars
on their individual market business, most of it coming through the exchange. This
year, all three insurers stopped paying commissions to brokers for selling
individual plans, hoping to suppress enrollments and limit their losses.¶ The companies
are still analyzing how and why their initial estimates for setting their rates and writing policies were so off the mark. The largest
insurer, the nonprofit Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina, has repeatedly stated it can’t continue to sustain the losses it
endured during the first two years of Obamacare enrollment, and it is currently weighing whether it will continue competing on the
exchange at all for 2017. Though the insurer has submitted plans to do business again in every county in the state, it plans to hike
rates nearly 20 percent on average. A final decision on 2017 participation won’t be made until August.¶ “All options are on the table,”
Wilson said—even getting out of the Obamacare business.¶ If Blue Cross Blue Shield does decide to abandon the North Carolina
exchange— which most observers believe is unlikely this year—it would potentially leave just two companies, Aetna and Cigna,
offering Obamacare policies in the state. And neither of those companies intend to compete statewide in 2017, instead offering
policies in select counties. The worst-case scenario is that residents of some North Carolina counties would be left with just one–or
even zero–insurers. Nobody knows precisely what that would mean for consumers at this point, but at the very least exchange
shoppers would have fewer choices and higher prices.¶ “That would be very scary for lots of people,” said Ciara Zachary, health policy
analyst at the North Carolina Justice Center, a liberal advocacy group.¶ The troubles in North Carolina’s exchanges are not unique.
POLITICO’S analysis of financial filings for exchange carriers in a dozen states shows continued struggles in 2015. Health
plans competing on the exchanges in Colorado and Oregon, for example,
collectively paid out at least 20 percent more in medical costs on their individual
customers than they received in premiums, leaving insurers tens of millions of
dollars in the red.¶ In New York, most plans are losing money, including the much ballyhooed startup insurer Oscar,
which has attracted hundreds of millions in venture capital funding by promising to shake up the insurance market with tech-savvy
innovations. But Oscar sustained medical claims of $180 million on its roughly 50,000 New York customers last year. That’s nearly
$1.50 paid out in medical claims for every $1 collected in premiums–a burn rate that is clearly unsustainable.¶ Not all exchange
markets have proven to be financial quagmires. The exchange market in Florida, for example, appears to be on a path toward
financial stability. Fewer than half of competing carriers operated in the black in 2014, according to McKinsey’s analysis. But of the
nine competing plans for which 2015 data were available, just one–UnitedHealth–had medical claims that exceeded premiums on
its individual market business. Among the remaining plans, medical claims accounted for 86 percent of premiums. That’s right
where insurers need to be to at least break even.¶ There are no simple explanations for the huge difference in financial performance
for Obamacare insurers competing in different states. Though it's a national law, health insurance varies widely from state to state:
the populations are different, the medical cultures are different, and each state has its own business landscape. The local political
responses have been different, too, but that's not always the main story: both Florida and North Carolina enrolled a lot of people
despite having a state government that strongly opposed the health law.¶ One likely factor is the amount of competition among
hospitals, doctors and other health care providers, which determines their ability to dictate reimbursement rates. In southeastern
Minnesota, for example, where the Mayo Clinic is the dominant provider, the cheapest midlevel plan available to a 40-year-old
through the state’s exchange this year was $329 per month. That’s roughly 20 percent higher than in the rest of the state.¶ “The more
competition you have, the better the pricing,” said Mario Molina, CEO of Molina Healthcare, which is selling exchange plans in nine
states. “In some markets where there’s very little competition it’s difficult to get the prices that health plans need.”¶ But looming over
the whole conversation is the blunt question of just who signs up for Obamacare in each state, and how sick they are. In the dry
language of insurance companies, customers are called their “risk pool”—and when it comes to Obamacare, the pool is way riskier
than they wanted.¶ SO WHAT WENT wrong? Like all insurance, Obamacare is built on the idea of shared risk: A small number of
customers with big medical bills needs to be offset by a much wider group who pay monthly premiums but rarely access care.
The biggest problem plaguing the
Theoretically, they balance out, and insurers collect their profits off the top.¶
exchanges is that for many states, the balance has turned out to be way off. Fewer
individuals signed up for coverage than projected, and they’ve proven sicker and
more expensive than insurers had expected.¶ Before the ACA, there were a handful of ways insurers could
balance their risk pool. One big tactic was just to avoid covering sick people, filtering out individual customers who appear likely to
need lots of expensive medical care. But Obamacare made that type of discrimination illegal: One big selling point of the law was
that everyone would be eligible to sign up.¶ In
the new insurance landscape, where carriers must
take all comers, no matter how sick and costly, the simplest way to ensure a viable
risk pool is to make it as large and diverse as possible.¶ For Obamacare, that has turned out to be a
bigger problem than anyone anticipated. Three years ago, the Congressional Budget Office projected that 24 million Americans
would be enrolled in exchange plans in 2016. The reality: barely half that number signed up this year–and that number is certain to
erode as people stop paying their insurance bills or find jobs that include coverage. The Obama administration’s stated goal is now
just 10 million enrollments by the end of 2016.¶ Why so low? In part, it's because fewer people got kicked off their work plans than
expected. Initially, the architects of the plan thought many employers would stop offering insurance and let people buy their own on
the Obamacare market. That didn't happen. “Employers have not ‘dumped’ employees to the extent that some people feared and
predicted,” said Ceci Connolly, CEO of the Alliance of Community Health Plans. It was good news for those workers, but not so good
for the exchanges’ actuarial health.¶ And in part the small size of the Obamacare pool is because of a self-inflicted wound by Obama
himself. For years, in selling the ACA, Obama had been repeating a talking point: "If you like your health care plan, you can keep it."
But in late 2013, as the first open-enrollment season loomed, millions of Americans received notices that their plans were being
canceled because they didn’t meet the coverage requirements of the health care law. Republicans relentlessly mocked the president’s
failure to keep his pledge. PolitiFact called it the 2013 “Lie of the Year.”¶ In response to the blowback, the administration decided
that those old plans didn’t have to be canceled after all–people could keep them through 2017, even if they didn’t comply with the
new rules. That move may have quelled the political uproar, but it also cut off a potential flow of millions of customers who may
otherwise have signed up for new plans in the fledgling Obamacare exchange markets.¶ Not all states extended those plans, and
some insurers phased them out on their own. But McKinsey estimates that heading into the 2016 enrollment season, 3.7 million
Americans were still in those old individual plans. And it’s likely that an awful lot of them are quite healthy, given that they were able
to obtain coverage even when health plans were free to discriminate against people with pre-existing conditions.¶ A viable risk pool
also needs healthy customers. The most desirable customers are young, from 18 to 34—the so-called young invincibles—who might
not want to sign up at all, because they don't think they'll need health care.¶ To
encourage all Americans to sign
up, Obamacare includes a cudgel: You have to pay a tax penalty if you aren't
covered in a qualified health plan. In reality, there are numerous exemptions–and
the penalty has proven too low to induce younger Americans to buy insurance. The
fine maxed out this year at $695, or 2.5 percent of income, whichever is higher.
Healthy, younger people (some of whom may be eligible for subsidies but not
realize it) often figure it’s cheaper to pay the fine than shell out money on health
insurance that they don’t think they’ll need. That may or may not make financial sense for them as
individuals, but it's hurting the broader system. For markets to be sustainable financially, experts
estimate that 35 percent of customers should be between the ages of 18 and 34. In
reality, right now, just 28 percent of customers fall in that group.¶ Obamacare also includes a
restriction on timing: Exchange customers are supposed to sign up only during the annual open-enrollment period. That’s designed
to prevent people from gaming the system and getting insurance only when they need medical care. But there are exceptions to the
timing rule--you can sign up for Obamacare when you've switched jobs and lose your work coverage, for instance. And insurers
complain that these exceptions are far too numerous and easy to game. Most troubling to insurers, there’s been no rigorous
verification process to corroborate that Obamacare customers are truly eligible for special enrollment periods—that they really did
change jobs, that they weren’t just claiming to have done so because they had just gotten a scary diagnosis or banged up their knee
and now wanted health care. Many health plans have found that customers who come in through special enrollments run up bigger
medical bills than other people. Pennsylvania’s Independence Blue Cross, for example, says people who enroll outside the standard
window have 30 percent more medical expenses.
2
Weak ACA implementation is driving growth in medical tourism –
strengthening the mandate key
Renee-Marie Stephano 12, JD in Health Law, Villanova University School of Law,
7/9/2012, US HealthCare Reform’s Effect on the US Medical Tourism Marketplace,
http://medicaltourismassociation.com/en/us-healthcare-reform-s-affect-on-the-us-
medical-tourism-marketplace-white-paper.html
The United States has been in a healthcare crisis for years. It is estimated that
more than 50 million Americans and growing are without health insurance and over
120 million are without dental insurance. A common misperception is that the average American without health insurance does not
have the financial means to purchase health insurance, but it is estimated the average American without health insurance makes
approximately $50,000 dollars per year. Those Americans who do not have the financial means to purchase health insurance are
typically provided coverage, called Medicaid, by the state and federal government. The definition of an uninsured American varies
and has become a political debate as different political parties argue different definitions and numbers.¶ At
the end of
March 2010, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) and the
reconciliation bill were passed into law. US Healthcare Reform should have a very positive impact on the
growth of outbound medical tourism leaving the United States while having no impact on the continued growth of both foreign
patients coming into the US for healthcare treatment (inbound medical tourism), or on American healthcare consumers who travel
regionally throughout the US for healthcare treatment (Domestic medical tourism).¶ Healthcare Reform
will most
likely drive up the costs of health insurance in the US to an unsustainable level. It is
estimated that in 2020, health insurance costs for a family could range from $30,000 to $40,000 per year. Under Healthcare
Reform, these health insurance costs should be higher. While
Healthcare Reform’s intention is to
insure more Americans, it may have the opposite effect of creating more
uninsured due to high health insurance costs. Healthcare Reform is pushing more
employers, insurers and health insurance agents to examine implementing
medical tourism. With health insurance and healthcare costs in the US rising at a
much faster pace under Healthcare Reform, the medical tourism industry is
expected to see growth in 2013 and very strong growth occurring in 2014, as the
major parts and mandates of Healthcare Reform are implemented and health
insurance cost increases are felt more clearly.¶ The passage of Healthcare Reform has made sweeping
changes and has changed healthcare as we know it in America. Very few people in the US, including government officials, employers
and insurance companies, understand its true impact or have even read the entire Healthcare Reform legislation. Unfortunately,
even after reading the Healthcare Reform bill, there are many unanswered questions because the bill creates new governmental
entities whose duties will be to create new regulations, rules and guidelines of how Healthcare Reform will work and what the actual
defined benefit levels will be. It will take several years for industry participants to fully understand the full effect Healthcare Reform
will have on their business.¶ To complicate the matter of the lack of understanding of Healthcare Reform’s true effect, one must
understand the law, and the cost of understanding and complying with the law and the layers of government involvement within it.
The Healthcare Reform Law is almost 3,000 pages, and there are almost 13,000 pages of regulations. In drafting regulations and
interpretations the IRS, Health and Human Services, and many other agencies have not really even gotten started yet on creating
those regulations, rules and interpretations. There are approximately 180 government committees, bureaus, commissions, boards,
within the different agencies involved in providing the rules, regulations, interpretations and enforcement of the law. One can only
imagine how many years and the amount of analysis and education it will take for employers, insurance companies and individual
healthcare consumers to fully understand the law and its impact.¶ Healthcare Reform did not create a public option or a government
plan, so the insurance marketplace will still be run by private industry, specifically the fully insured and self-funded health plans.
Some of the major changes in Healthcare Reform will be the waiving of pre-existing conditions, the elimination of annual and
lifetime limits, the expanding of dependant coverage to age 26 (Caterpillar Inc, when the law was first passed in 2010, estimated that
expanding the dependant age to 26 will cost the company $20 million per year more), providing level or equal premiums for those
who are sick or healthy, the creation of “essential benefits,” the creation of health insurance exchanges (where Americans can
purchase health insurance) and mandating the purchase of health insurance by Americans or a penalty must be paid. Healthcare
Reform also lowers the insurance premiums for elderly Americans artificially and raises it for younger Americans, specifically at a
three to one ratio, where elderly Americans cannot be charged more than 3 times that of a younger American even though actuarially
they should be charged five to six times the price of a younger American.¶ Preventative Services¶ Healthcare Reform required that
preventative services be included for newly enrolled insured plans by the fall of 2010 or within six months of enactment of the bill
for existing health insurance plans. Specifically, the following benefits must be included:¶ ¶ Evidence-based items or services with a
rating of ‘A’ or ‘B’ in the current recommendations of the United States Preventive Services Task Force;¶ Immunizations
recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with respect
to the individual involved;¶ For infants, children and adolescents, evidence-informed preventive care and screenings provided for in
the comprehensive guidelines supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration;¶ For women, additional preventive
care and screenings provided for in comprehensive guidelines supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration; ¶ For
women, the recommendations issued by the United States Preventive Service Task Force regarding breast cancer screening,
mammography and prevention shall be considered the most current other than those issued in or around November 2009.¶ For
those qualified health plans that will be required to provide this preventative coverage without cost-sharing for preventive services
that are rated ‘A’ or ‘B’ by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, these services could be recommended immunizations, preventive
care for infants, children and adolescents and additional preventive care and screenings for women.¶ Pre-Existing Conditions¶ The
waiving of pre-existing conditions will have both positive and negative effects on the health insurance industry. The waiving of pre-
existing conditions clauses, which started in 2010 for children and will begin in 2014 for adults, will drive up the costs of health
insurance in the US. For those who are sick and have health conditions this can be a positive step forward, because there are many
Americans who were previously denied health insurance because of a pre-existing condition or who could not afford to purchase
health insurance because of the high premiums. For many of these Americans that health insurance and health care were
inaccessible for, they could not afford to receive the proper medical care, which resulted in the worsening of their health conditions
and, later in life, much higher medical expenses. Also, many of these Americans did not have access to preventative services to catch
serious health conditions at an early stage, due to lack of access to proper or affordable health care. For
these
Americans, the waiving of the pre-existing conditions clauses and the lowering of
health insurance premiums, which will be subsidized by healthy Americans that
will have their insurance rates increased, will provide them access to more
affordable healthcare for the first time.¶ Unfortunately there are also some
negative side effects to this. Even though pre-existing conditions clauses will be
waived starting in 2014, with the costs of a family health insurance plan rising to
$30,000 to $40,000 a year by 2020 or earlier, many of these sick Americans with
pre-existing conditions may not be able to afford to pay the health insurance
premiums. Also, insurance premiums for individuals who are healthy will increase in order to subsidize sicker Americans who
have pre-existing conditions. This is because the law requires healthy and sick people to pay the same health insurance premiums.
The only variations allowed in the charging of health insurance premiums are for age, tobacco use and geographic location.¶
Healthcare Reform does not properly incentivize Americans to purchase health
insurance. The fines for not purchasing health insurance in 2014 start at $95, and increase each year. Compared to
rising health insurance costs in the next 10 years, the fines, which were originally
meant to force the majority of Americans to buy health insurance, are small and
will fall short of their intended goal. This would mean many Americans can make
the decision to not purchase health insurance, not engage in healthy lifestyles or
behaviors or focus on preventative medicine and instead wait until they are sick
and then purchase guaranteed-issue health insurance with no pre-existing
conditions clauses at a “fair price subsidized by the healthy.” This penalizes Americans who have
engaged in healthy behavior and lifestyles and who have planned and paid for health insurance every month in anticipation of one
day possibly becoming ill or sick. People who have always paid for health insurance and maintained a healthy lifestyle are in
actuality being penalized in the form of their health insurance premiums increasing. An example of this is as follows:¶ In 2014, Joe,
who is 45 and whose health insurance costs $1,200 a month makes a decision to not pay for health insurance and instead to pay the
$95 fine for the year. He chooses not to buy health insurance because he knows when he does get sick with a major health condition
he can purchase health insurance at any time and immediately be covered. Joe smokes a pack of cigarettes per day, drinks alcohol
each day, eats fast food for meals and does not exercise.¶ Jane is 45, healthy and her health insurance costs in 2014 would be $1,200
a month. She pays her premiums each month. She exercises five times per week, eats healthy food and does not drink or smoke.
Under Healthcare Reform, Jane and Joe’s health insurance premiums must cost the same. Joe will eventually develop serious health
conditions because of his lifestyle and when he buys health insurance later in life it will automatically cover everything at the same
price as Jane. Starting in 2014, Jane’s insurance premiums will have to increase significantly for the eventuality and potential of
people like Joe waiting until they are very sick and need health insurance to purchase it.¶ The
rise of health
insurance premiums will have a very positive effect on the medical tourism
industry. Because of the potential for skyrocketing health insurance costs, many employers and insurance companies will
start to implement medical tourism as one of the only means to lower healthcare costs.
The waiving of pre-existing
conditions and requiring sick and healthy Americans to pay the same price for
health insurance destroys the underwriting process and can put an employer or
insurance company in a difficult position of potentially losing a significant amount
of money, meaning medical claims incurred by the insurance carrier or employer
exceed insurance premiums collected. Medical tourism provides a
“hedge”/protection against this because if an insured utilizes the medical tourism
benefit it will lower medical claims costs.
their perspective, medical tourism presents a host of cruel ironies . Vast medico-
industrial complexes replete with the newest expensive technologies to provide
comparatively wealthy medical tourists hip replacements and facelifts coexist with
large swaths of the population dying from malaria, AIDS, and lack of basic
sanitation and clean water. A recent New York Times article entitled “Royal Care for Some of India’s Patients,
Neglect for Others,” for example, begins by describing the care given at Wockhardt Hospital in India to “Mr. Steeles, 60, a car dealer
from Daphne, Ala., [who] had flown halfway around the world last month to save his heart [through a mitral valve repair] at a price
he could pay.”10 The article describes in great detail the dietician who selects Mr. Steele’s meals, the dermatologist who comes as
soon as he mentions an itch, and Mr. Steeles’s “Royal Suite” with “cable TV, a computer, [and] a mini-refrigerator, where an
attendant that afternoon stashed some ice cream, for when he felt hungry later.”11 This treatment contrasts with the care given to a
group of “day laborers who laid bricks and mixed cement for Bangalore’s construction boom,” many of whom “fell ill after drinking
illegally brewed whisky; 150 died that day.”12 “Not for them [was] the care of India’s best private hospitals,” writes the article’s
author; “[t]hey had been wheeled in by wives and brothers to the overstretched government-run Bowring Hospital, on the other side
of town,” a hospital with “no intensive care unit, no ventilators, no dialysis machine,” where “[d]inner was a stack of white bread, on
which a healthy cockroach crawled.”13¶ These kinds of stark
disparities have prompted intuitive discomfort and
critiques in the academic and policy literatures. For example, David Benavides, a
Senior Economic Affairs Officer working on trade for the United Nations, has
noted that developed and developing countries’ attempts at exporting health
services sometimes come “at the expense of the national health system , and the local
population has suffered instead of benefiting from those exports.”14 Rupa Chanda,
an Indian professor of business, writes in the World Health Organization Bulletin that medical
tourism threatens to “result in a dual market structure, by creating a higher-
quality, expensive segment that caters to wealthy nationals and foreigners, and a
much lower-quality, resource-constrained segment catering to the poor.”15 While
the “[a]vailability of services, including physicians and other trained personnel, as
well as the availability of beds may rise in the higher-standard centres,” it may
come “at the expense of the public sector, resulting in a crowding out of the local
population.” 16 FOOTNOTE 16 BEGINS… 16. Id.; see also MILICA Z. BOOKMAN & KARLA K. BOOKMAN, MEDICAL
TOURISM IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES 176 (2007) (“Medical Tourism can thus create a dual market structure in which one
segment is of higher quality and caters to the wealthy foreigners (and local high-
income patients) while a lower quality segment caters to the poor . . . [such that]
health for the local population is crowded out as the best doctors, machines, beds,
and hospitals are lured away from the local poor.”). FOOTNOTE 16 ENDS… Similarly, Professor Leigh
Turner suggests that “ the greatest risk for inhabitants of destination countries is that
increased volume of international patients will have adverse effects upon local
patients, health care facilities and economies.” 17 He explains that the kinds of
investments destination-country governments must make to compete are in
“specialized medical centres and advanced biotechnologies” unlikely to be
accessed by “most citizens of a country [who] lack access to basic health care and
social services.”18 Furthermore, higher wages for health care professionals resulting
from medical tourism may crowd out access by the domestic poor.19 Thus, “[i]nstead of
contributing to broad social and economic development, the provision of care to patients from other
countries might exacerbate existing inequalities and further polarize the richest and poorest members”
of the destination country.20¶ The same point has also been made in several regional
discussions: Janjaroen and Supakankuti argue that in Thailand, medical tourism threatens to
both disrupt the ratio of health personnel to the domestic population and “create a
two-tier system with the better quality services reserved for foreign clients with a
higher ability to pay.”21 Similarly, the Bookmans’ claim that in Cuba, “only one-fourth of the beds
in CIREN (the international Center for Neurological Restoration in Havana) are
filled by Cubans, and . . . so-called dollar pharmacies provide a broader range of
medicines to Westerners who pay in foreign currency.”22 They describe a medical
system so distorted by the effects of medical tourism as “ medical apartheid,
because it makes health care available to foreigners that is not available to
locals.” 23 Numerous authors have made similar claims about medical tourism in
India.24 Similar concerns have even been raised as to medical tourism in developed countries. For example, an investigation by
the Israeli newspaper Haaretz concluded, “medical tourists enjoy conditions Israelis can only dream of, including very short waiting
times for procedures, the right to choose their own doctor and private rooms . . . [a]nd these benefits may well be coming at the
expense of Israeli patients’ care,” and suggested that allowing medical tourists to move to the front of the line on waiting lists for
services meant that “waiting times for ordinary Israelis will inevitably lengthen — especially in the departments most frequented by
medical tourists, which include the cancer, cardiac and in vitro fertilization units.”25
(Caballero-Anthony 2005 ) . ¶ Another factor that destabilizes regional human security is the large number of the
world’s poorest people residing in Southeast Asia who lack access to essential
medicines to treat these diseases, which argues strongly for health programs that emphasize prevention of
disease. Besides the expense factor, this lack of access is also due to poor infrastructure, lack of technical assistance and uncertain
quality of pharmaceuticals (International Dispensary Association 2009 ) . The production, distribution and use of counterfeit
medicines represent a thriving transnational crime in Southeast Asia. These fake drugs, either less than full strength or containing
no drug at all, also are an increasing public health problem for the region, often with tragic results (Fernandez et al. 2008 : 585,
Newton et al. 2008 : e32). Under-strength drugs are particularly insidious because they contain enough of the active compound to
foil screening tests yet not enough to treat the disease, while at the same time the reduced potency accelerates the evolution of drug
resistant strains of dangerous human pathogens.
Nuke war
Michael Auslin 17, PhD in History from the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign, former associate professor of History at Yale The End of the Asian Century:
War, Stagnation, and the Risks to the World’s Most Dynamic Region, January 2017,
accessed via Kindle for Windows - no page numbers available
How close is Asia to seeing conflict erupt, and where? Not every dispute threatens peace, but today, the
Indo-Pacific
region is regressing to a nineteenth-century style of power politics in which might
makes right. With the world’s largest and most advanced militaries other than the
United States, and including four nuclear powers , a conflict in Asia could truly
destabilize the global economy and spark a conflagration that might spiral out of control .¶ If you
are lucky, you might be near Pearl Harbor in Hawaii when one of America’s aircraft carriers is in port. One afternoon not long ago, I
watched the USS Ronald Reagan slowly steam out of Pearl Harbor into the vastness of the Pacific Ocean. The Ronald Reagan is an
apt symbol of how security risk has been managed in Asia: the United States has underwritten regional stability since 1945.
Today, however, the post– World War II order instituted by the United States is
increasingly stressed, at the very time when Washington is finding it difficult to
respond to crises in Europe and the Middle East. The economic and political risks discussed here are not isolated from
these security trends.¶ The immediate cause of rising insecurity is simple: as China has grown stronger, it has become more
assertive, even coercive. Beijing has embraced the role of a revisionist power, seeking to define new regional rules of behavior and
confronting those neighbors with which it has disagreements. Japan and Taiwan, along with many countries in Southeast Asia, fear
a risingChina, as does India, though to a lesser degree. That fear,
fueled by numerous unresolved
territorial disputes in the East and South China Seas and by growing concern over
maintaining vital trade routes and control of natural resources, is causing an arms
race in Asia. The region’s waters have become the scene of regular paramilitary
confrontations. ¶ These fears and responses are triggering more assertive policies on the part of all states in the region,
which only raises tensions further. At the same time, governments feel pressured at home to
demonize neighbors, encroach on territory, and refuse to negotiate on security
disputes. This is clearly what has happened in recent years in the Sino-Japanese relationship. We have already
gone through two turns of a “risk cycle”: uncertainty and insecurity, driven over the past
decade by China’s growing power and increasingly assertive and coercive behavior, and by the emergence of a de facto nuclear North
Korea. A third turn, to instability , could cause conflict and even war .¶ The “Asian
Century” thus may not turn out to be an era when Asia imposes a peaceful order
on the world, when freedom continues to expand, or when the region remains the engine of global
economic growth. What it imposes may instead be conflict and instability. The nations of the Indo-Pacific and
the world must prepare for the possibility of economic stagnation, social and
political unrest, and even armed conflict . The emergence of those would mark the end of the Asian Century.
That escalates
Russ Wellen 14, editor of Foreign Policy In Focus’ ‘Focal Points’ blog for the Institute
of Policy Studies, 12/19/2014, “The Threshold for Nuclear War Between Pakistan and
India Keeps Dropping,” http://fpif.org/threshold-nuclear-war-pakistan-india-keeps-
dropping/
Most people think that, since the end of the Cold War, chances that a nuclear war will break out are
slim to none. Though some nervousness has surfaced since the Ukraine crisis, it’s true that, barring an accident, the United States and Russia are unlikely to attack each
other with nuclear weapons. Southeast Asia is another matter, as Gregory Koblentz warns in a report for the Council of Foreign Relations titled Strategic Stability in the Second
Nuclear Age. Interviewed about the report by Deutsche Welle, Koblentz pointed out: “The only four countries currently expanding their nuclear arsenals are China, India,
Pakistan and North Korea.” China, for example, is developing mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles to prevent its stationery ICBMs from becoming sitting ducks, as well as
material to build 200 nuclear weapons, about as many as Great Britain currently has. Koblentz told Deutsche Welle: Altogether,
Pakistan has deployed or is developing eleven different nuclear delivery systems including
ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and aircraft. As if terrorism , such as the
Mumbai attacks of 2008, and territorial disputes , such as over Jammu and Kashmir, don’t make relations
between Pakistan and India volatile enough, a new element has been introduced.
Pakistan is now seeking to develop low-yield t actical n uclear w eapon s (as opposed to
strategic ― the big ones) to compensate for its inferiority to India in conventional weapons and
numbers of armed forces. Koblentz told Deutsche Welle: Since the conventional military imbalance between India and Pakistan is expected to grow thanks to India’s larger
compensate for its conventional inferiority will likely be an enduring feature of the
nuclear balance in South Asia. What makes tactical weapons so dangerous is that,
by blurring the distinction between nuclear and conventional weapons , they turn
nuclear weapons from unthinkable to thinkable . Equally as dangerous, Koblentz explains: The introduction of
t actical n uclear w eapon s may lead Pakistan to loosen its highly centralized command and
control practices. Due to their short-ranges (the Nasr/Hatf-IX has a range of about 60 kilometers), these types of weapons need to be deployed close to the
Thus are lower-ranking officers granted “ greater authority
front-lines and ready for use at short-notice.
and capability to arm and launch nuclear weapons” which “raises the risk of
unauthorized actions during a crisis .” Another risk … is inadvertent escalation.
There is the potential for a conventional conflict to escalate to the nuclear level if
the commander of a forward-deployed, nuclear-armed unit finds himself in a ‘ use
it or lose it ’ situation and launches the nuclear weapons under his control before
his unit is overrun.” It’s all too vertiginous for words. Some in the United States might think that’s not our problem. Pakistan and India are digging their
own grave ― let them lie in it.” But, of course, nuclear war in Southeast Asia has the potential to turn the
entire world into a grave . To wit: Summary of Consequences of Regional nuclear war
between India and Pakistan (from studies done at Rutgers, the University of Colorado-Boulder and UCLA) If … • War is fought with 100
Hiroshima-size weapons (currently available in India-Pakistan arsenals), which have half of 1 percent (0.05%) of the total explosive power of all currently operational and
which is equal to nearly half the number of people killed during World War II • Weapons
detonated in the largest cities of India and Pakistan create massive firestorms
which produce millions of tons of smoke • 1 to 5 million tons of smoke quickly rise
50 km above cloud level into the stratosphere • The smoke spreads around the
world , forming a stratospheric smoke layer that blocks sunlight from reaching the
surface of Earth • Within 10 days following the explosions, temperatures in the
Northern Hemisphere would become colder than those experienced during the
pre-industrial Little Ice Age … This cold weather would also cause a 10% decline in average global rainfall and a large reduction in the Asian
summer monsoon. • 25-40% of the protective ozone layer would be destroyed at the mid-
exporting nations would likely cease exports in order to meet their own food needs. • Some medical experts predict that ensuing food shortages
would cause hundreds of millions of already hungry people, who now depend upon food imports, to
starve to death during the years following the nuclear conflict. When it comes to nuclear weapons, we truly
are all in it together. Many claim that whatever leadership the United States and the West might demonstrate in disarmament would be lost on Asian
nuclear-weapon states. But they fail to take into account how disarmament is becoming a norm all over the world including in Asia.
3
The United States federal government should:
- significantly increase penalties for the requirement to maintain
minimum essential health coverage
- appropriate out-of-pocket financial assistance for the Health
Insurance Marketplace
- expand premium financial assistance on the Health Insurance
Marketplace
- commit enforcement and outreach resources to these actions
4
The plan solves – strengthening the mandate, funding cost-sharing
and increasing subsidies is key to a balanced risk pool, higher
enrollement, competition, and lower premiums– working through
the ACA framework is key to stability
Cori Uccello 17, Senior Health Fellow at the American Academy of Actuaries, MA in
Public Policy from Georgetown University, Deep Banerjee, Director at Standard & Poor,
5/5/2017, The Individual Market at a Crossroads Transcript,
http://www.allhealthpolicy.org/the-individual-market-at-a-crossroads-5/
Let’s talk about the future a little bit. So, I’m
going to talk about two kinds of forecasts. One is
business as usual. What we mean by that is, everything stays with obviously some changes, but
no big overhaul to the rules of the marketplace. If that is the case, what do we expect? Well, we
expect 2017 to be a year when more insurance companies get to break even margin.
So, break even, zero percent , so no loss, break even margin. And then continued
improvement in 2018 where they get to small, single digit margins in this line of business. It
is still a very fragile market and it needs time to stabilize.
Probably the
more important discussion is business unusual or business interrupted
forecast. So, there is obviously a lot of pricing and insurer participation issues in the
marketplace today, going into 2018. One of the biggest things that we look at, is the
CSR, which there is some uncertainty about the future funding of that. The reason the
CSR is important — it’s not because just the dollar amount that goes towards it, but
more importantly it is paid to the insurance companies after the fact . So, the
insurance company on day one, accepts members who are CSR eligible and stop
paying out claims based on the fact that they will receive a CSR. The only receive
the federal government funding for the CSR later on. So, insurance companies don’t
want to be in the situation where they find out six months into the year, hey, guess
what, you don’t get that money anymore. What we expect to happen are two options available to insurance companies.
One, they would price with what we are calling an uncertainty buffer. So, let’s say they were expecting to price high single digit premium increases for
next year. They will probably tack on a little bit of this uncertainty buffer, because they don’t know what is going to happen. They can load the silver
plan with the CSR that they are not going to get. So, you will see the silver plan premiums go up. The second option, which is probably a little more
drastic, is they get more selective about participating. If
there is greater amount of uncertainty, they could
decide to pull out of certain counties or certain states. And the third one, which is probably important to
mention too, that the marketplace has a set of rules. If
the rules are changed after you are already playing
the game, it becomes harder to adjust. So, rules like the individual mandate or the special
enrollment periods, enforcement of that will also be critical for the future stabilization of
the marketplace. Perhaps we will talk about (indiscernible) later on, when questions come up.
SARAH DASH: Thank you so much, Deep, and let me turn it over to Cori Uccello. Thanks.
CORI UCCELLO: First I would like to thank Sarah and the Alliance for inviting me to participate today.
As others have already pointed out, we are in a different situation today then maybe we were a couple days ago, but I am going to still focus my remarks
at a fairly general level and discuss the kinds of actions that are needed to improve the stability and sustainability of the individual market. Before
getting to those potential improvements, I think it’s important for us to know what the goals are.
So, howis the market doing compared to these criteria? Well, the ACA dramatically reduced uninsured rates
and participation in enrollment in the individual market increased. Nevertheless, in general, enrollment in the individual
market was lower than initially expected, and the risk pool was less healthy than
expected. Now, in the market, competing rules do generally face the same rules. There is pretty much a level playing field. But, the
uncertain and changing legislative and regulatory environment have contributed
to adverse experience among insurers. This has led to a decrease in the number of
participating insurers both in 2016 and 2017 and there is an indication there will
be a further reduction of insurers in 2018. Continued uncertainty could lead to
more insurer withdrawals, leaving consumers with fewer plan choices or
potentially none at all. And as Deep has alluded to, insurer experience has stabilized, but the market itself is still
fragile .
This leads me to the actions that should be taken to improve the market. I feel like I’m piling
on here, but first and foremost is the need to fund the cautionary reductions. Not paying for these
reductions or even uncertainty about whether they will be funded , could lead to higher
premiums. As Karen said, the Kaiser Family Foundation has estimated that on average, not paying for those CSRs could result in premium
increases of nearly 20%. That’s on top of the premium increases that will already occur due to medical inflation and other factors.
Finally, it’s
important to not only take actions to improve the market, but also avoid
actions that could make things worse. So, for instance, allowing the sales of
insurance across state lines, or expanding the availability of association health
plans, could actually lead to market fragmentation and higher premiums. So, with that, I
will turn things over to Brian.
uninsured making over 300 percent of poverty are likely to purchase unsubsidized
individual coverage with a penalty of $750 per year, according to the survey.¶ To further evaluate the
need for a strong individual mandate, we modeled two reform scenarios with different levels of
penalties for the mandate. The “High Mandate” and “Low Mandate” scenarios
illustrate the effect of individual mandates on affordability and total number of
uninsured. The number of uninsured is estimated to be approximately 12.6 million people higher with the weakened
mandate.¶ Further, with
weak mandates, the risk pool of the individual market will be less
healthy, have much lower participation among younger members, and experience
much higher premium increases. The average medical claims of members in the
reformed individual market will be 50 percent higher than the average in the market today (not
including medical inflation). This would translate into premium increases of approximately $1,500 for single coverage and
$3,300for family coverage in today’s dollars.11¶ Younger, healthier members are particularly vulnerable to rating reform. They will
experience premium increases greater than 50 percent relative to the current market in most of the U.S.
With weak
mandate penalties coupled with guaranteed issue, it will be less expensive for many people to
choose to buy insurance only when needed. Strong mandates will draw nearly 3
million more young and healthy members into the reformed individual market. The
healthier insurance pool will result in premiums lower than reform with weak mandates.¶ Mandates serve to complement subsidies.
Subsidies will be most effective for individuals with low income levels. For the uninsured
earning 100-200 percent FPL, we estimate that more than 60 percent of them will purchase insurance because of subsidies.
However, more than 60 percent of the current individual market and about 20 percent of the uninsured have incomes above 300
percent FPL and will realize limited or no subsidy support. Over 18 million uninsured and existing individual market members are
ineligible for subsidies based on the proposed structures. Higher
income uninsured individuals are not
likely to take up coverage without a meaningful penalty .
The architects of the A ffordable C are A ct thought they had a blunt instrument to
force people–even the young and invincible–to buy insurance through the law’s
online marketplaces: a tax penalty for those who remain uninsured. It hasn’t
worked all that well, according to The New York Times, and that is at least partly to blame for soaring
premiums next year on some of the health law’s insurance exchanges. The full
weight of the penalty will not be felt until next April, says The Times, when those who have avoided
buying insurance will face penalties in the neighborhood of $700 a person. But even that might be
insufficient: For the young and healthy who are desperately needed to make the
exchanges work, it sometimes makes more sense for them to pay the Internal
Revenue Service than an insurance company charging large premiums, with huge
deductibles. “In my experience, the penalty has not been large enough to motivate people
to sign up for insurance ,” said Christine Speidel, a tax lawyer at Vermont Legal Aid. Some do sign up, especially those
with low incomes who receive the most generous subsidies, Ms. Speidel said. But others, she said, find that they cannot afford
insurance, even with subsidies, so “they grudgingly take the penalty.” The IRS says that 8.1 million returns
included penalty payments for people who went without insurance in 2014, the first
year in which most people were required to have coverage. A preliminary report on the latest tax-filing season, tabulating data
through April, said that 5.6 million returns included penalties averaging $442 a return for people uninsured in 2015. With the health
law’s fourth open-enrollment season beginning next Tuesday, Nov. 1, consumers are fretfully weighing their options, says The Times.
When Congress was drafting the Affordable Care Act in 2009 and 2010, lawmakers tried to adopt a carrot or stick approach:
subsidies to induce people to buy insurance and tax penalties “to ensure compliance,” in the words of the Senate Finance Committee.
But the requirement for people to carry insurance is one of the most unpopular provisions of the health law, and the Obama
administration has been cautious about enforcing it. The IRS portrays the decision to go without insurance as a permissible option,
not as a violation of federal law. The law “requires you and each member of your family to have qualifying healthcare coverage
(called minimum essential coverage), qualify for a coverage exemption, or make an individual shared responsibility payment when
you file your federal income tax return,” the IRS says at its website. Some consumers who buy insurance on the exchanges still feel
vulnerable. Deductibles are so high, they say, that the insurance seems useless. So some think that whether they send hundreds of
dollars to the IRS or thousands to an insurance company, they are essentially paying something for nothing, The Times points out.
Obama administration officials say that perception is wrong. Even people with high deductibles have protection against catastrophic
costs, they say, and many insurance plans cover common health care services before consumers meet their deductibles. In addition,
even when consumers pay most or all of a hospital bill, they often get the benefit of discounts negotiated by their insurers. The
health law authorized certain exemptions from the coverage requirement, and the Obama administration has expanded that list
through rules and policy directives. More than 12 million taxpayers claimed one or more coverage exemptions last year because, for
instance, they were homeless, had received a shut-off notice from a utility company or were experiencing other hardships. “The
penalty for violating the individual mandate has not been very effective ,” said Joseph J.
Thorndike, the director of the tax history project at Tax Analysts, a nonprofit publisher of tax information. “If it were
effective, we would have higher enrollment, and the population buying policies in
the insurance exchange would be healthier and younger.” “ If you make the
penalties tougher, you need to make financial assistance broader and deeper ,” said
Michael Miller, the policy director of Community Catalyst, a consumer group seeking health care for all. Steve’s Take: With the
exception of the “repeal and replace” camp, practically
everyone agrees that insurance companies
are a necessary ingredient in the exchanges for the ACA to function the way it was
intended. And, for insurance companies to remain in the exchange, they need more
healthy people, fewer sick people or a combination of the two. Both sides of the
aisle agree that insurance companies should not be able to reject people with pre-
existing conditions, which means sick people in need of care will remain,
according to Forbes. That means a stronger mandate is required to get healthy
people into the insurance pools . Unfortunately, neither party seems to be discussing this possibility.
For more than 100 years, reformers in the United States argued for the passage of a n ational h ealth i nsurance program, a government guarantee that
every person is covered for basic health care. Finally in 2010, the United States took a major, though
incomplete , step forward toward universal health insurance.¶ The subject of national health insurance has seen six periods of
intense activity, alternating with times of political inattention. From 1912 to 1916, 1946 to 1949, 1963 to 1965, 1970 to 1974, 1991 to 1994, and 2009 to 2015 it was the topic of major national debate. In 1916, 1949,
1974, and 1994, national health insurance was defeated and temporarily consigned to the nation’s back burner. Guaranteed health coverage for two groups—the elderly and some of the poor—was enacted in 1965
with the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or “Obamacare,” the
through Medicare and Medicaid. In 2010,
stage was set for the expansion of coverage to millions of uninsured people. National
health insurance means the guarantee of health insurance for all the nation’s
residents —what is commonly referred to as “ universal coverage .” Much of the focus, as well as the political
contentiousness, of national health insurance proposals concern how to pay for universal coverage. N ational h ealth i nsurance proposals may also address
provider payment and cost containment .¶ The controversies that erupt over universal health care coverage become simpler to understand if one
the four basic modes of health care financing outlined in Chapter 2: out-of-pocket payment,
returns to
categories. Under the social insurance model, only those who pay into the program, usually
through social security contributions, are eligible for the program’s benefits. Under the public
assistance (welfare) model, eligibility is based on a means test; those below a certain
income may receive assistance. In the welfare model, those who benefit may not contribute, and those who contribute (usually through taxes) may not benefit
(Bodenheimer & Grumbach, 1992). The Wagner–Murray–Dingell bill, like the AALL proposal, was a social insurance proposal. Working people and their dependents were eligible because they made social
security contributions, and retired people receiving social security benefits were eligible because they paid into social security prior to their retirement. The permanently unemployed were not eligible.¶ In 1945,
President Truman, embracing the general principles of the Wagner–Murray–Dingell legislation, became the first US president to strongly champion national health insurance. After Truman’s surprise election in
1948, the AMA succeeded in a massive campaign to defeat the Wagner–Murray–Dingell bill. In 1950, national health insurance returned to obscurity (Starr, 1982).¶ Medicare and Medicaid¶ In the late 1950s, less
than 15% of the elderly had health insurance (see Chapter 2) and a strong social movement clamored for the federal government to come up with a solution. The Medicare law of 1965 took the Wagner–Murray–
Dingell approach to national health insurance, narrowing it to people 65 years and older. Medicare was financed through social security contributions, federal income taxes, and individual premiums. Congress
also enacted the Medicaid program in 1965, a public assistance or “welfare” model of government insurance that covered a portion of the low-income population. Medicaid was paid for by federal and state taxes.¶
In 1966, at age 66, Elena Peoples was automatically enrolled in the federal government’s Medicare Part A hospital insurance plan, and she chose to sign up for the Medicare Part B physician insurance plan by
paying a $3 monthly premium to the Social Security Administration. Elena’s son, Tom, and Tom’s employer helped to finance Medicare Part A; each paid 0.5% of wages (up to a wage level of $6,600 per year) into
a Medicare trust fund within the social security system. Elena’s Part B coverage was financed in part by federal income taxes and in part by Elena’s monthly premiums. In case of illness, Medicare would pay for
most of Elena’s hospital and physician bills.¶ Elena’s disabled younger brother, Marvin, age 60, was too young to qualify for Medicare in 1966. Marvin instead became a recipient of Medicaid, the federal–state
program for certain groups of low-income people. When Marvin required medical care, the state Medicaid program paid the hospital, physician, and pharmacy, and a substantial portion of the state’s costs were
to have made social security contributions to gain eligibility to the plan. Medicaid , in
contrast, is a public assistance program that does not require recipients to make
contributions but instead is financed from general tax revenues. Because of the rapid increase in Medicare costs,
the social security contribution has risen substantially. In 1966, Medicare took 1% of wages, up to a $6,600 wage level (0.5% each from employer and employee); in 2015, the payments had risen to 2.9% of all
wages, higher for wealthy people. The Part B premium has jumped from $3 per month in 1966 to $104.90 per month in 2015, higher for wealthy people.¶ The 1970 Kennedy Bill and the Single-Payer Plan of the
Many people believed that Medicare and Medicaid were a first step toward universal
1990s¶
health insurance. European nations started their national health insurance programs by covering a portion of the population and later extending coverage to more people. Medicare and
Medicaid seemed to fit that tradition. Shortly after Medicare and Medicaid became law, the labor movement, Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, and Representative Martha Griffiths of Michigan drafted
legislation to cover the entire population through a national health insurance program. The 1970 Kennedy–Griffiths Health Security Act followed in the footsteps of the Wagner–Murray–Dingell bill, calling for a
single federally operated health insurance system that would replace all public and private health insurance plans.¶ Under the Kennedy–Griffiths 1970 Health Security Program, Tom Peoples, who worked for
Great Books, a small book publisher, would continue to see his family physician as before. Rather than receiving payment from Tom’s private insurance company, his physician would be paid by the federal
government. Tom’s employer would no longer make a social security contribution to Medicare (which would be folded into the Health Security Program) and would instead make a larger contribution of 3% of
wages up to a wage level of $15,000 for each employee. Tom’s employee contribution was set at 1% up to a wage level of $15,000. These social insurance contributions would pay for approximately 60% of the
program; federal income taxes would pay for the other 40%.¶ Tom’s Uncle Marvin, on Medicaid since 1966, would be included in the Health Security Program, as would all residents of the United States. Medicaid
would be phased out as a separate public assistance program.¶ The Health Security Act went one step further than the AALL and Wagner–Murray–Dingell proposals: It combined the social insurance and public
assistance approaches into one unified program. In part because of the staunch opposition of the AMA and the private insurance industry, the legislation went the way of its predecessors: political defeat.¶ In 1989,
The essence of the Nixon proposal was the employer mandate, under which the federal
revived until the 1990s.
government requires (or mandates) employers to purchase private health insurance for
their employees.¶ Tom Peoples’ cousin Blanche was a receptionist in a physician’s office in 1971. The physician did not provide health insurance to his employees. Under Nixon’s 1971 plan,
Blanche’s employer would be required to pay 75% of the private health insurance premium for his employees; the employees would pay the other 25%.¶ Blanche’s boyfriend, Al, had been laid off from his job in
No longer
1970 and was receiving unemployment benefits. He had no health insurance. Under Nixon’s proposal, the federal government would pay a portion of Al’s health insurance premium.¶
crisis in health care access, President Clinton submitted legislation to Congress in 1993 calling for universal health
insurance through an employer mandate . Like the Nixon proposal, the essence of the Clinton plan was the
requirement that employers pay for most of their employees’ private insurance
premiums. The proposal failed.¶ A variation on the employer mandate type of n ational h ealth i nsurance is the voluntary
approach. Rather than requiring employers to purchase health insurance for employees, employers are given incentives such as
tax credits to cover employees voluntarily. The attempt of some states to implement this type of voluntary approach has failed to significantly
reduce the numbers of uninsured workers.¶ THE INDIVIDUAL-MANDATE MODEL OF NATIONAL HEALTH
INSURANCE¶ In 1989, a new species of national health insurance appeared, sponsored by the conservative Heritage Foundation: the individual mandate. Just as many states require motor
the Heritage plan called for the federal government to require all US
vehicle drivers to purchase automobile insurance,
residents to purchase individual health insurance policies. Tax credits would be made
available on a sliding scale to individuals and families too poor to afford health insurance premiums
(Butler, 1991). Under the most ambitious versions of the individual mandate, employer-sponsored
vary widely in their amount depending on characteristics such as household income and how much of a subsidy the architects of individual mandate proposals build into
the plan. In a generous case, a family might receive a $10,000 tax credit, subsidizing much of its health insurance premium. Another version of individual health insurance expansion is the voluntary concept,
supported by President George W. Bush during his presidency. Uninsured individuals would not be required to purchase individual insurance but would receive a tax credit if they chose to purchase insurance. The
tax credits in the Bush plan were small compared to the cost of most health insurance policies, with the result that these voluntary approaches if enacted would have induced few uninsured people to purchase
coverage.¶ The Massachusetts Individual Mandate Plan of 2006¶ Nearly 20 years after the Heritage Foundation’s individual mandate proposal, Massachusetts enacted a state-level health coverage bill
The Massachusetts plan, enacted under Republican Governor Mitt Romney, mandated that every
implementing the nation’s first individual mandate.
state resident must have health insurance meeting a minimum standard set by the
state or pay a penalty. The law provided state subsidies for purchase of private health insurance coverage to individuals with incomes below 300% of the federal poverty level if
they are not covered by Medicaid or through employment-based insurance. The law did not eliminate existing employer-based or
State officials are using every tool at their disposal to try to keep their
insurance marketplaces stable in the face of uncertainty from the Trump
administration over the future of ObamaCare.¶ Insurance commissioners are working with providers, advocates and
insurance companies to help keep the system running, but it’s an uphill climb. ¶ Insurers are skittish and
pleading for certainty from Washington . They want assurances that they will
continue to receive cost-sharing reduction (CSR) payments from the federal
government , which total about $7 billion this year. Those payments reimburse insurers for providing discounted insurance
to low-income ObamaCare enrollees.¶ They also want assurances that the administration will
enforce the mandate requiring people to have insurance or pay a penalty.¶ States don’t
have a lot of options , but some officials are actively trying to make sure the public is shielded as much as possible
from the consequences if Trump follows through on his promise to let ObamaCare “implode.”¶ “In general there’s not a
whole lot they can do , because states don’t have any more information about
what the Trump administration is doing than insurance companies, ” said Cynthia Cox of
the Kaiser Family Foundation.¶ Some states are letting plans file multiple sets of rates to account for the uncertainty. The strategy
can work, Cox said, if all insurers are on the same page. ¶ “The concern is that one company assumes the worst case scenario and
adds 40 percentage points on for uncertainty, and another assumes the best case and prices significantly lower,” Cox said. ¶ The
administration has been sending mixed signals about whether it will take the
dramatic step of ending payments to insurers . The CSRs have been paid on a monthly basis, but the
administration has not promised that will continue.¶ If the administration does cut off the CSRs, some states will add a surcharge
onto certain plans to cover the cost of losing those payments. ¶ California, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, for example, say they
will increase the cost of all the mid-level “silver” health plans that consumers can buy on the exchange. ¶ The idea is that by making
the silver plans more expensive, the other plans will be cushioned from the price increase. If the price of a silver plan increases, tax
credits that help customers purchase insurance will also increase.¶ But states will have to educate consumers about why the change is
taking place.¶ “Customers are going to be confused and [insurance] carriers will have to explain” why one plan is so much more
expensive than the others, Katherine Hempstead, senior adviser to the executive vice president at Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, said. ¶ So-called “silver loading” isn’t a new idea, Hempstead said, but if states decide they can’t wait for the
administration to make a decision, it becomes “more and more likely this is the situation states are going to be in.” ¶ Pennsylvania is
telling insurers to price as if there was no uncertainty, but Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner
Teresa Miller told The Hill that may have to change.¶ “ We were hoping we could keep rates in
single digits but if we don’t get certainty [from the administration] we will have to
let [insurers] build it in,” she said¶ If the CSRs were funded, rates would only
increase an average of 8.8 percent in the state’s plans. Without CSRs, Miller said rates
would rise over 20 percent on average . ¶ States are also preparing for the possibility that the
administration stops spending money to promote enrollment in the exchanges.¶ The Obama administration ran advertisements to
encourage enrollment, but Trump officials have signaled that promotion effort might come to an end. If that happens, states could
spend their own money on outreach and promotion.¶ Some states are better prepared for such a campaign than others; blue states
with an insurance department that supports the law are likely to have more resources available. ¶ Miller said her state is planning a
massive outreach effort. ¶ The goal is “to encourage Pennsylvanians to enroll in coverage and highlight the benefits if they do,” Miller
said. "We’re working with various stakeholders to develop and coordinate messaging.”¶ Miller said she wasn’t
sure the state could reach as many people as the federal government . ¶ “If all
of us have the same messaging, the same materials ... the hope is that we can reach a lot of people . I don’t know if we
can fill this gap completely , but we’re going to do everything we can,” she said. ¶ Michelle Osborne, chief deputy
insurance commissioner of North Carolina, said the state’s General Assembly would have to appropriate money for the department
to engage in outreach, but wouldn’t speculate if that might happen.¶ One thing states can’t do anything
about is the possibility that the Trump administration will stop enforcing
the individual mandate.¶ Without a mandate, insurers fear that only sick
people would remain in the market, causing premium increases.¶ According to a recent
Kaiser Family Foundation analysis, insurers factoring in the possibility that the
administration will not enforce the individual mandate increased their rates an
additional 1.2 to 20 percent. ¶ Cox said part of the problem is public perception .¶ “ It’s
not just that insurers assume [the mandate] won’t be enforced, it’s a public
perception that it won’t be. That’s a harder issue for states to address ,” she said.
Fifty state fiat is a voting issue---our interpretation is the neg gets to fiat a unitary
actor or body currently existing
---Fairness – makes research and ground impossible because the lit doesn’t
contemplate uniform nationwide action so they can always fiat through the best
solvency deficits
---Education – they drive the topic into the worst version that’s only tailored to
beat states rather than one that’s focused on core health care controversies
No solvency advocate is an independent voter – no comparative lit which makes
effective clash impossible
Reject the team because it’s a no cost option
Private and public employers were largely ineffective in opposing hospital rate
demands because (1) the rate setting systems were complex, (2) there was little to
no understanding of the economics of health car
e , and (3) employers could trade off health care benefits against lower wage
increases for their employees. The political power of hospitals, coupled with the
weakening of support from business for rate setting, made rate systems politically
vulnerable .
The development of price control and managed care systems by governmental
payers also diluted legislative and executive branch support for state-based
systems because they were no longer needed to control Medicaid and Medicare
cost growth. The governmental could always either mandate very low annual rate
updates or seek higher discounts on charges to balance budgets without having to
raise taxes. That approach did not antagonize hospitals generally because the hospitals could meet their revenue and
profitability targets through price discrimination—effectively taxing commercially insured populations.
Support for rate setting also eroded because of an increasingly general reliance in
the economy on market-based mechanisms . In health care, that reliance took the
form of managed care, which was very effective for a while, partly because those systems could use their newfound
negotiating leverage to obtain substantial price discounts from providers. Ultimately, however, managed care generated both a
consumer and a provider backlash to some of its perceived intrusions into care delivery. Managed care’s initial success at achieving
reduced rates of price increases also was countered by hospitals horizontally consolidating into large health care systems to alter
negotiating dynamics with the payers. That trend started a consolidation binge that has now gone through at least two waves and has
been a key driver of price increases over time.
Clearly, Trumphas a credibility problem that goes far beyond his tweets, which foreign leaders
have begun to recognize that they can simply ignore. Whereas until now it
appeared that America’s NATO partners were being frightened into spending 2
percent of GDP on defense needs, they may no longer have to do so. The Chinese
may feel more confident about maintaining, or even building upon, their aggressive
posture in the S outh C hina S ea. The Israelis may now look for clever ways to circumvent the
president’s admonition not to build more settlements, knowing that their support in Congress —
where Trump’s influence clearly has taken a blow — will remain as solid as ever. The Russians may surmise that
Plan of Action ( JCPOA ) if, as expected Congress passes new sanctions against the Tehran regime. And, most dangerously, the
mad Kim Jong Un may conclude that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s threats of military
action are baseless , and that he has nothing to fear from an administration that
cannot even mobilize its own party in Congress to pass the president’s high-
priority legislation .
The House non-vote also has serious ramifications for the administration’s national security budget proposals. The administration’s
budget reflected the president’s priorities: it called for a $25 billion increase in the Fiscal Year 2017 budget and a $54 billion increase
in the Fiscal Year 2018 national security budget, of which $52 billion was allocated to the Department of Defense, while reducing the
budgets of dozens of domestic programs. Congressional opposition to the president’s proposals, emanating from some Republicans
as well as Democrats, was mounting even before the Obamacare debacle. In its aftermath, there will be more resistance to the
domestic program cuts, which in turn will mean either that the defense budget be reduced, or that the sequester be lifted. The latter
prospect has just become more difficult, meaning that the president’s promises to bolster America’s forces also may ring hollow.
Should that be the case, it will fuel international cynicism about the president’s ability to deliver on his promises.
Congressional inaction on Obamacare was clearly a defeat for the president , but
having only been in office less than 100 days, he certainly has time to recover . There question is
whether he, or his advisors, will
recognize that blaming the speaker of the House is not the solution, and that the true “art of the deal,” is to
tone down the rhetoric and begin to find real ways to find common ground with the
Congress, including moderate Democrats , at least insofar as international security is concerned. This will
not be an easy transformation for President Trump. Nevertheless, unless he stops reveling in his outsider image, his fate will be that
of that other outsider president — Jimmy Carter, whose record in the White House was nothing short of dismal. It is a prospect that
the president and his aides surely will wish to avoid at all costs.
Looking at the world today, four areas appear to pose an especially high risk of sudden
crisis and conflict: North Korea, the S outh C hina S ea, the Baltic Sea region, and the
Middle East. Each of them has been the past site of recurring clashes, and all are primed to explode early in the Trump
presidency.
Why are we seeing so many potential crises now? Is this period really different from earlier presidential transitions?
It’s true that the changeover from one presidential administration to another can be a
time of global uncertainty, given America’s pivotal importance in world affairs and
the natural inclination of rival powers to test the mettle of the country’s new
leader. There are, however, other factors that make this moment particularly worrisome, including the changing nature of the
world order, the personalities of its key leaders, and an ominous shift in military doctrine.
Just as the United States is going through a major political transition, so is the planet at large. The sole-superpower
system of the post-Cold War era is finally giving way to a multipolar, if not increasingly fragmented,
world in which the United States must share the limelight with other major actors,
including China, Russia, India, and Iran. Political scientists remind us that transitional periods
can often prove disruptive, as “status quo” powers (in this case, the United States) resist challenges to their
dominance from “revisionist” states seeking to alter the global power equation. Typically, this can entail proxy wars
and other kinds of sparring over contested areas , as has recently been the case in
Syria, the Baltic, and the S outh C hina S ea.
This is where the personalities of key leaders enter the equation. Though President Obama oversaw constant warfare, he was
temperamentally disinclined to respond with force to every overseas crisis and provocation, fearing involvement in yet more foreign
wars like Iraq and Afghanistan. His critics, including Donald Trump, complained bitterly that this stance only encouraged foreign
adversaries to up their game, convinced that the U.S. had lost its will to resist provocation. In a Trump administration, as The
Donald indicated on the campaign trail last year, America’s adversaries should expect far tougher responses. Asked in September,
for instance, about an incident in the Persian Gulf in which Iranian gunboats approached American warships in a threatening
manner, he typically told reporters, “When they circle our beautiful destroyers with their little boats and make gestures that... they
shouldn’t be allowed to make, they will be shot out of the water.”
Although with Russia, unlike Iran, Trump has promised to improve relations, there’s no escaping the fact that Vladimir Putin’s
urge to restore some of his country’s long-lost superpower glory could lead to
confrontations with NATO powers that would put the new American president in a distinctly awkward position.
Regarding Asia, Trump has often spoken of his intent to punish China for what he considers its predatory trade practices, a stance
guaranteed to clash with President Xi Jinping’s
goal of restoring his country’s greatness. This should,
in turn, generate additional possibilities for confrontation , especially in the contested South China Sea.
Both Putin and Xi, moreover, are facing economic difficulties at home and view foreign adventurism as a way of distracting public
attention from disappointing domestic performances.
These factors alone would ensure that this was a moment of potential international crisis, but something else gives it a truly
dangerous edge: a growing strategic reliance in Russia and elsewhere on the early use of nuclear weapons to overcome deficiencies in
“conventional” firepower.
For the United States, with its overwhelming superiority in such firepower, nuclear weapons have lost all conceivable use except as a
“deterrent” against a highly unlikely first-strike attack by an enemy power. For Russia, however, lacking the means to compete on
equal terms with the West in conventional weaponry, this no longer seems reasonable. So Russian strategists, feeling
threatened by the way NATO has moved ever closer to its borders, are now calling for the early use of
“tactical” nuclear munitions to overpower stronger enemy forces. Under Russia’s latest military doctrine, major
combat units are now to be trained and equipped to employ such weapons at the first sign of impending defeat, either to blackmail
enemy countries into submission or annihilate them.
Following this doctrine, Russia has developed the nuclear-capable Iskander ballistic missile (a successor to the infamous “Scud”
missile used by Saddam Hussein in attacks on Iran, Israel, and Saudi Arabia) and forward deployed it to Kaliningrad, a small sliver
of Russian territory sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania. In response, NATO strategists are discussing ways to more
forcefully demonstrate the West’s own capacity to use tactical nuclear arms in Europe, for example by including more nuclear-
capable bombers in future NATO exercises. As a result, the “firebreak” between conventional and nuclear warfare -- that theoretical
barrier to escalation -- seems to be narrowing, and you have a situation in which every crisis involving a nuclear
state may potentially prove to be a nuclear crisis .
With that in mind, consider the four most dangerous potential flashpoints for the new Trump administration.
North Korea
North Korea’s stepped-up development of nuclear weapons and long-range ballistic missiles may present the Trump administration with its first great international challenge.
In recent years, the North Koreans appear to have made substantial progress in producing such missiles and designing small nuclear warheads to fit on them. In 2016, the
country conducted two underground nuclear tests (its fourth and fifth since 2006), along with numerous tests of various missile systems. On September 20th, it also tested a
powerful rocket engine that some observers believe could be used as the first stage of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) that might someday be capable of delivering a
nuclear warhead to the western United States.
North Korea’s erratic leader, Kim Jong-un, has repeatedly spoken of his determination to acquire nuclear weapons and the ability to use them in attacks on his adversaries,
including the U.S. Following a series of missile tests last spring, he insisted that his country should continue to bolster its nuclear force “both in quality and quantity,” stressing
“the need to get the nuclear warheads deployed for national defense always on standby so as to be fired at any moment.” This could mean, he added, using these weapons “in a
preemptive attack.” On January 1st, Kim reiterated his commitment to future preemptive nuclear action, adding that his country would soon test-fire an ICBM.
President Obama responded by imposing increasingly tough economic sanctions and attempting -- with only limited success -- to persuade China, Pyongyang’s crucial ally, to
use its political and economic clout to usher Kim into nuclear disarmament talks. None of this seemed to make the slightest difference, which means President Trump will be
faced with an increasingly well-armed North Korea that may be capable of fielding usable ICBMs within the coming years.
How will Trump respond to this peril? Three options seem available to him: somehow persuade China to compel Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear quest; negotiate a
disarmament deal directly with Kim, possibly even on a face-to-face basis; or engage in (presumably nonnuclear) preemptive strikes aimed at destroying the North’s nuclear and
missile-production capabilities.
Imposing yet more sanctions and talking with China would look suspiciously like the Obama approach, while obtaining China’s cooperation would undoubtedly mean
compromising on trade or the South China Sea (either of which would undoubtedly involve humiliating concessions for a man like Trump). Even were he to recruit Chinese
President Xi as a helpmate, it’s unclear that Pyongyang would be deterred. As for direct talks with Kim, Trump, unlike every previous president, has already indicated that he’s
willing. “I would have no problem speaking to him,” he told Reuters last May. But what exactly would he offer the North in return for its nuclear arsenal? The withdrawal of U.S.
forces from South Korea? Any such solution would leave the president looking like a patsy (inconceivable for someone whose key slogan has been “Make America Great Again”).
That leaves a preemptive strike. Trump appears to have implicitly countenanced that option, too, in a recent tweet. (“North Korea
just stated that it is in the final stages of developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the U.S. It won’t happen!”) In
other words, he is open to the military option, rejected in the past because of the high risk of triggering an unpredictable response
from the North, including a cataclysmic invasion of South Korea (and potential attacks on U.S. troops stationed there). Under the
circumstances, the
unpredictability not just of Kim Jong-un but also of Donald Trump leaves
North Korea in the highest alert category of global crises as the new era begins.
The South China Sea
The next most dangerous flashpoint? The ongoing dispute over control of the S outh
C hina S ea, an area bounded by China, Vietnam, the Philippines, and the island of Borneo. Citing ancient ties to islands in those
waters, China now claims the entire region as part of its national maritime territory. Some of the same islands are, however, also
claimed by Brunei, Malaysia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Although not claiming any territory in the region itself, the U.S. has a
defense treaty with the Philippines, relies on free passage through the area to move its warships from bases in the Pacific to war
zones in the Middle East, and of course considers itself the preeminent Pacific power and plans to keep it that way.
In the past, China has clashed with local powers over possession of individual islands, but more recently has sought control over all of them. As part of that process, it has begun
to convert low-lying islets and atolls under its control into military bases, equipping them with airstrips and missile defense systems. This has sparked protests from Vietnam
and the Philippines, which claim some of those islets, and from the United States, which insists that such Chinese moves infringe on its Navy’s “freedom of navigation” through
international waters.
President Obama responded to provocative Chinese moves in the South China Sea by ordering U.S. warships to patrol in close proximity to the islands being militarized. For
Trump, this has been far too minimal a response. “China’s toying with us,” he told David Sanger of the New York Times last March. “They are when they’re building in the South
China Sea. They should not be doing that but they have no respect for our country and they have no respect for our president.” Asked if he was prepared to use military force in
response to the Chinese buildup, he responded, “Maybe.”
The South China Sea may prove to be an early test of Trump’s promise to fight what he views as China’s predatory trade behavior and Beijing’s determination to resist bullying
by Washington. Last month, Chinese sailors seized an American underwater surveillance drone near one of their atolls. Many observers interpreted the move as a response to
Trump’s decision to take a phone call of congratulations from the president of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-wen, shortly after his election victory. That gesture, unique in recent American
presidencies, was viewed in Beijing, which considers Taiwan a renegade province, as an insult to China. Any further moves by Trump to aggravate or punish China on the
economic front could result in further provocations in the South China Sea, opening the possibility of a clash with U.S. air and naval forces in the region.
All this is worrisome enough, but the prospects for a clash in the South China Sea increased significantly on January 11th, thanks to comments made by Rex Tillerson, the former
CEO of ExxonMobil and presumptive secretary of state, during his confirmation hearing in Washington. Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he said,
“We’re going to have to send China a clear signal that, first, the island-building stops and, second, your access to those islands also is not going to be allowed.” Since the Chinese
are unlikely to abandon those islands -- which they consider part of their sovereign territory -- just because Trump and Tillerson order them to do so, the only kind of "signal"
that might carry any weight would be military action.
What form would such a confrontation take and where might it lead? At this point, no one can be sure, but once
such a
conflict began, room for maneuver could prove limited indeed. A U.S. effort to
deny China access to the islands could involve anything from a naval blockade to air and
missile attacks on the military installations built there to the sinking of Chinese
warships. It’s hard to imagine that Beijing would refrain from taking retaliatory
steps in response, and as one move tumbled onto the next, the two nuclear-armed countries might
suddenly find themselves at the brink of full-scale war. So consider this our second global high
alert.
If Hillary Clinton had been elected, I would have placed the region adjoining the Baltic Sea at the top of my list of potential
flashpoints, as it’s where Vladimir Putin would have been most likely to channel his hostility to her in particular and the West more
generally. That’s because NATO forces have moved most deeply into the territory of the former Soviet Union in the Baltic states of
Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania. Those countries are also believed to be especially vulnerable to the kind of “hybrid” warfare --
involving covert operations, disinformation campaigns, cyberattacks, and the like -- that Russia perfected in Crimea and Ukraine.
With Donald Trump promising to improve relations with Moscow, it’s now far less likely that Putin would launch such attacks,
though the Russians continue to strengthen their military assets (including their nuclear
war-fighting capabilities ) in the region, and so the risk of a future clash cannot be ruled out.
The danger there arises from geography, history, and policy. The three Baltic republics only became independent after the breakup of the USSR in 1991; today, they are members
of both the European Union and NATO. Two of them, Estonia and Latvia, share borders with Russia proper, while Lithuania and nearby Poland surround the Russian enclave of
Kaliningrad. Through their NATO membership, they provide a theoretical bridgehead for a hypothetical Western invasion of Russia. By the same token, the meager forces of the
three republics could easily be overwhelmed by superior Russian ones, leaving the rest of NATO to decide whether and in what fashion to confront a Russian assault on member
nations.
Following Russia’s intervention in eastern Ukraine, which demonstrated both Moscow’s willingness and ability to engage in hybrid warfare against a neighboring European
state, the NATO powers decided to bolster the alliance’s forward presence in the Baltic region. At a summit meeting in Warsaw in June 2016, the alliance agreed to deploy four
reinforced multinational battalions in Poland and the three Baltic republics. Russia views this with alarm as a dangerous violation of promises made to Moscow in the wake of
the Cold War that no NATO forces would be permanently garrisoned on the territory of the former Soviet Union. NATO has tried to deflect Russian complaints by insisting that,
since the four battalions will be rotated in and out of the region, they are somehow not “permanent.” Nevertheless, from Moscow’s perspective, the NATO move represents a
serious threat to Russian security and so justifies a comparable buildup of Russian forces in adjacent areas.
Adding to the obvious dangers of such a mutual build-up, NATO and Russian forces have been conducting military “exercises,” often in close proximity to each other. Last
summer, for example, NATO oversaw Anaconda 2016 in Poland and Lithuania, the largest such maneuvers in the region since the end of the Cold War. As part of the exercise,
NATO forces crossed from Poland to Lithuania, making clear their ability to encircle Kaliningrad, which was bound to cause deep unease in Moscow. Not that the Russians have
been passive. During related NATO naval exercises in the Baltic Sea, Russian planes flew within a few feet of an American warship, the USS Donald Cook, nearly provoking a
shooting incident that could have triggered a far more dangerous confrontation.
Will Putin ease up on the pressure he’s been exerting on the Baltic states once Trump is in power? Will Trump agree to cancel or
downsize the U.S. and NATO deployments there in return for Russian acquiescence on other issues? Such questions will be on the
minds of many in Eastern Europe in the coming months. It’s reasonable to predict a period of relative calm as Putin tests Trump’s
willingness to forge a new relationship with Moscow, but the
underlying stresses will remain as long as
the Baltic states stay in NATO and Russia views that as a threat to its security. So chalk
the region up as high alert three on a global scale.
The Middle East has long been a major flashpoint. President Obama, for instance, came to office
hoping to end U.S. involvement in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, yet U.S. troops are still fighting in both countries today. The
question is: How might this picture change in the months ahead?
Given the convoluted history of the region and its demonstrated capacity for surprise, any predictions should be offered with caution. Trump has promised to intensify the war
against ISIS, which will undoubtedly require the deployment of additional American air, sea, and ground forces in the region. As he put it during the election campaign, speaking
of the Islamic State, “I would bomb the shit out of them.” So expect accelerated air strikes on ISIS-held locations, leading to more civilian casualties, desperate migrants, and
heightened clashes between Shiites and Sunnis. As ISIS loses control of physical territory and returns to guerilla-style warfare, it will surely respond by increasing terrorist
attacks on “soft” civilian targets in neighboring Iraq, Jordan, and Turkey, as well as in more distant locations. No one knows how all this will play out, but don’t be surprised if
terrorist violence only increases and Washington once again finds itself drawn more deeply into an endless quagmire in the Greater Middle East and northern Africa.
The overriding question, of course, is how Donald Trump will behave toward Iran. He has
repeatedly affirmed his opposition to the nuclear deal signed by the United States, the European Union, Russia, and China and
insisted that he would either scrap it or renegotiate it, but it’s hard to imagine how that might come to pass. All of the other
signatories are satisfied with the deal and seek to do business with Iran, so any new negotiations would have to proceed without
those parties. As many U.S. strategists also see merit in the agreement, since it deprives Iran of a nuclear option for at least a decade
or more, a decisive shift on the nuclear deal appears unlikely.
On the other hand, Trump could be pressured by his close associates -- especially his pick for national security advisor, retired
Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, a notoriously outspoken Iranophobe -- to counter the Iranians on other fronts. This could
take a variety of forms, including stepped-up sanctions, increased aid to Saudi Arabia in its war against the Iranian-backed Houthis
in Yemen, or attacks on Iranian proxies in the Middle East. Any of these would no doubt prompt countermoves by
Tehran, and from there a cycle of escalation could lead in numerous directions, all
dangerous, including military action by the U.S., Israel, or Saudi Arabia. So mark this one as
flash point four and take a deep breath.
Going on Watch
Starting on January 20th, as Donald Trump takes office, the clock will already be ticking in each of these flashpoint regions. No one
knows which will be the first to erupt, or what will happen when it does, but don’t
count on our escaping at
least one, and possibly more, major international crises in the not-too-distant
future.
Midterms – GOP Bad
2AC – GOP Bad
Dems cant win back the House– eroding support
Douglas E Schoen 9/8, pollster and political consultant, was an adviser to President
Bill Clinton Andrew Stein, “Democrats’ top problem in 2018: the math’s still against
them”, http://nypost.com/2017/09/08/democrats-top-problem-in-2018-the-maths-
still-against-them/
In 2018, Democrats only need a net gain of 24 seats to gain control of the lower
body. Based on history, that should be a piece of cake. Yet , 2018 could be
different. Republicans may wind up retaining control of both chambers.¶ Why? Primarily, Democratic support
has eroded substantially since 2009.¶ In 2009, the Democrats held 256 seats in the House and 55 seats in the
Senate. Today they hold 194 and 46 respectively. In that time, Dems lost 21 House seats in the key
Midwestern states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana,
while Republicans gained 17 seats in these five states .¶ Failing to appeal to
working-class voters in key states won by Bill Clinton and Barack Obama was a
key part of Hillary Clinton’s downfall. But Hillary’s problem went well beyond
swing states; it was national. Overall, Trump won 2,622 counties, while Clinton only carried 490.¶ Why does this
matter? Because there are simply not enough coastal seats to be won for Democrats
to win the House .¶ Current data from the Cook Political Report support this conclusion. The data show that 10
districts nationwide are “toss-ups” and 22 districts “lean Republican,” meaning
Democrats must win virtually every competitive seat to take back the House.¶ Despite
Turn – dem turnout is inevitable but strengthening the ACA causes GOP base
backlash – swings the midterms
Jonathan Martin 17, Political Correspondent for the NY Times, co-author of the New
York Times best seller “The End of the Line: Romney vs. Obama: The 34 Days That
Decided the Election”, 2018 Dilemma for Republicans: Which Way Now on
Obamacare?, The New York Times,
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/28/us/politics/2018-dilemma-for-republicans-
which-way-now-on-obamacare.html
WASHINGTON — As they come to terms with their humiliating failure to undo the
Affordable Care Act, Republicans eyeing next year’s congressional campaign are
grappling with a new dilemma: Do they risk depressing their conservative base by
abandoning the repeal effort or anger a broader set of voters by reviving a deeply unpopular
bill even closer to the midterm elections?¶ The question is particularly acute in the House, where
the Republican majority could be at risk in 2018 if the party’s voters are
demoralized, and Democratic activists, energized by the chance to send a message
to President Trump, stream to the polls .¶ Sifting through the wreckage of a disastrous week, Republican
strategists and elected officials were divided over the best way forward. Some House Republicans pressed to move on to other issues
and notch some victories that could delight their own loyalists while not turning off swing voters.¶ “We’ve got a lot of time to do real
things on infrastructure, to do real things on tax reform, on red tape reform, and really get the American economy moving,” said
Representative Steve Stivers of Ohio, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, the House campaign arm. “We
do those things and we still have a lot of time to recover.”¶ “If you’re going to fumble the ball,” he added, “better to do so in the first
quarter of a football game.Ӧ Devising health care legislation that could appeal to both wings
of the House Republican Conference — the hard-line conservatives and more
moderate members — would require a nearly superhuman feat , added Representative Billy
Long, Republican of Missouri.¶ “Not unless Harry Houdini wins a special election to help us,” Mr. Long said about the prospects of
cobbling together a coalition that could agree on how to repeal and replace the health care law.¶ But other longtime Republicans
warned that if the party did not address what they have derided as Obamacare, an
issue that has been central to their campaigns for the last seven years, they would
incur a heavy political price in the midterm elections. ¶ Midterm campaigns have
increasingly become akin to parliamentary elections — referendums on the party
in power rather than on individual candidates, where turnout by dependable
partisan voters is the deciding factor.¶ “If they fall on their sword on this, they’re
going to get slaughtered ,” said former Representative Thomas M. Davis III, a Virginia Republican who himself was
once at the helm of the House campaign committee.¶ “ Where parties get hurt in midterms is when
their base collapses ,” Mr. Davis said. “Democrats are going to show up regardless
of what you do. If our voters don’t see us fulfilling what we said we were
going to do, they’ll get dispirited.” ¶ What troubles many Republican strategists
is the specter of the party’s most reliable voters being bombarded by reminders of
their leaders’ failure to address the health law. Th ey fear a recurring story line
sure to pop up every time insurance premiums increase, providers leave local networks, or , most
worrisome, Republicans fund President Barack Obama’s signature
achievement.
DACA pounds the House – causes backlash and vulnerability
Sarah D. Wire 9/5, Reporter, 9/5/2017, “Trump's DACA decision could have a
sweeping effect on who controls the House in 2018, especially in California”, Los
Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-daca-california-congress-
20170905-story.html
The Trump administration’s decision to end the D eferred A ction for C hildhood
A rrivals program next year could have a broad effect on Democratic efforts to
retake control of the House in 2018, and nowhere more so than in California, where more
than a fourth of the estimated 800,000 recipients, often called Dreamers, are thought to live.¶ To secure the 24 seats they need,
Democrats are specifically targeting nine of the Golden State’s 14 Republican members of Congress, several of whom represent
districts with large minority populations. Stories of the 200,000 or so Californians affected by this decision will likely be a recurring
theme of campaigns for the next year.¶ Now that the president is putting the issue on Congress’ agenda, the
vulnerable
Republicans will be squarely in the center of the debate.¶ Nearly all of them have
opposed DACA, which delayed deportation for hundreds of thousands of Californians in the country illegally. Just two of
the GOP lawmakers with districts that could flip in the midterms publicly tried to persuade the president to leave DACA in place.¶
On Aug. 24, Reps. Jeff Denham of Turlock and David Valadao of Hanford joined four Republicans who represent heavily Latino
districts in other states in a letter to urge Trump to keep the deportation protections until Congress can craft a solution. Valadao’s
district is more than 75% Latino, and Denham’s is nearly 45% Latino, according to the 2015 census estimates.¶ Live coverage: Nation
responds to 'Dreamers' announcement »¶ “When you talk about Dreamers, kids who were brought here through no fault of their
own, already graduated, sat in a classroom next to our kids and graduated, it is a different conversation than the rest of the
immigration debate,” Denham recently told a group of local Dreamers.¶ Republicans have framed ending
DACA as a return to the rule of law, but that rationale ignores how this has become
an increasingly personal issue for people across the country who have watched
hundreds of thousands of emboldened young immigrants come out of the
shadows.¶ Valadao and Denham have said previously they don’t think President Obama should have created the program in
the first place, but they’ve also broken with their party to continue pushing for immigration legislation when GOP leadership said it
was time to move on. Denham and Valadao are the only California Republicans to co-sponsor a legislative fix proposed by
Republicans that would allow many Dreamers to stay. As late as Friday when early reports of Trump’s decision surfaced, they were
urging House Speaker Paul Ryan to let Congress come up with a solution.¶ On Tuesday, Valadao reiterated that Congress needs to
act before the program ends in March.¶ “I will do everything in my power to ensure those who were brought to the United States
through no fault of their own are not unjustly punished,” he said in a statement.¶ Denham has repeatedly pushed a bill to allow
Dreamers to earn citizenship through military service.¶ Those actions, and any possible fix that comes in the next six months, could
insulate Valadao and Denham from attacks Democrats surely will launch following Trump’s announcement. The focus on DACA also
might renew attention to their reelection races in the Central Valley.¶ Are you a DACA participant? We want to hear from you »¶ The
political fallout for other California Republicans — especially those representing districts with rapidly shifting demographics —
remains to be seen.¶ On Tuesday, several of the Orange County Republicans in tough races treaded a soft line in their public
statements, talking about Congress coming together for a solution or detailing what Dreamers contribute to the community. Several
said Dreamers shouldn’t be punished for being brought to the United States without their consent. Still, they avoided talk of a
pathway to citizenship and didn’t say they’d sign on to specific legislation.¶ ¶ ¶ “America is the only home most of these young people
have ever known and it is unjust to punish them for the actions of their parents,” Rep. Mimi Walters of Irvine said in a statement
that began with a dig at Obama for creating the program. “Congress should work to ensure their residency so that they can continue
to contribute to our community and strengthen our nation.Ӧ Republicans
including Rep. Devin Nunes,
whose Central Valley district is 50% Latino, and Rep. Ed Royce, whose Orange
County district is a third Latino and a third Asian, will be forced to talk about the
issue with just over 14 months remaining until they face voters.¶ Trump’s decision on
‘Dreamers’ is personal for some California members of Congress »¶ When Obama created the program through executive order in
2012, many Republicans argued he had overstepped his authority when he bypassed Congress.¶ On Tuesday, Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher of Huntington Beach said the former president created a “legal headache and public heartache” by acting alone.
Rohrabacher’s predominantly white district hasn’t experienced the same dramatic demographic shifts as those of his colleagues.¶
“However much we may sympathize with the hundreds of thousands of these children, many of whom have reached adulthood and
have become ‘Americanized,’ we in Congress must work to prevent such cynical loopholes from being created again by executive
fiat,” he said in a statement.¶ The more than 200,000 estimated California recipients have started businesses, attended college and
joined the economy full time. Many come from families of mixed legal status, meaning some of them can vote.¶ Democrats’
campaign arm already has been running campaign ads about Dreamers in districts
represented by Valadao, Denham and Rep. Steve Knight, The Hill newspaper reported. And it is probably just the beginning. ¶ In
the coming weeks and months, expect Democrats to try to pigeonhole Republicans
on how the program is crafted in Congress, and how they vote if it gets to that
point.
It’s too early to tell – a number of other issues besides health care could swing the
election
Lauren Gibbons 17, Reporter, 6/11/2017, “What factors might shape 2018 election
results? Michigan lawmakers weigh in”,
http://www.mlive.com/news/index.ssf/2017/06/could_the_health_care_debate_i.htm
l
Following major Democratic defeats in the 2016 presidential election and Congressional races throughout the country, some
progressives have looked to 2018 as a possibility to recoup losses and make a statement
against policies pushed by President Donald Trump and the Republican-majority Congress.¶ But Republicans are
busy laying groundwork to hold onto and advance gains made in 2016 in next
year's state and federal races. And several members of Michigan's Congressional delegation think it could be too
early to tell how 2018 will play out. ¶ U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Dearborn, was open about her concerns for the Democratic Party
in Michigan during both the 2016 primary and general elections. In a column for the Washington Post following the election - which
saw Trump taking the state for Republicans in a presidential election for the first time since 1988 - Dingell criticized her party,
particularly former candidate Hillary Clinton's campaign, for missing the signs and not taking states like Michigan seriously. ¶ "I
point blank said I thought Donald Trump could be president and that Michigan was not the blue state that everybody thinks that it
is," she said. "I turned out to be right, not happily."¶ Dingell warned those
thinking 2018 could be a slam
dunk for Democrats that many Trump voters believe he's doing exactly what he
said he would do during the campaign. ¶ "I think it's too early to know what is going to
happen , and I'm not making predictions, but this is not a slam dunk for either party," Dingell said. "We can't afford to take it
for granted, shouldn't take it for granted."¶ The 2018 election has the possibility of being
"transformative" for Democrats, said U.S. Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Flint Twp. But whether that
happens or not depends on a number of factors , including whether the current
enthusiasm is sustained and whether the Democratic Party can move beyond
criticism of the current administration. ¶ "Democrats have to offer something more than criticism," Kildee
said. "We probably don't need to offer criticism - Trump is offering a lot of that himself. We need to offer a
plan...the wind blowing in our direction isn't enough." ¶ U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Tipton, said the
2018 election cycle will go well for Republicans "if we do what we said we would do" and make a good faith effort to get meaningful
legislation passed through Congress. ¶ "We're well on our way, but we need to be better at messaging at times," he said.¶ How
Republicans respond to opposition coming from progressive groups like
Indivisible at public town halls and meetings could also impact how 2018 elections
play out, Walberg said. He said the town hall meetings he's hosted in 2017 have had record crowds - often filled with people
who oppose his views - but he said they have been constructive. ¶ "Those are my constituents too," he said. "I hear from them, I don't
agree with all that they're saying, but forces me to go back and do more research...I hear them, and I hope they hear me." ¶ U.S. Sen.
Debbie Stabenow, D-Lansing, said the women's marches that took place throughout the country following Donald Trump's
inauguration, health care demonstrations and other showings of activism are signs of people getting engaged in a way she hasn't
seen in a long time. ¶ "Folks were sitting back and letting politics happen without them - now they're realizing they have to be
involved," she said. "I think we will see a very different group of people showing up in 2018 - people who are much more activated." ¶
U.S. Rep. Brenda Lawrence, D-Southfield, said she's viewed the activism since the 2016 election as a "political awakening in our
country," and hopes that translates into people staying engaged in the political process. ¶ Several key policy issues,
including Trump's pulling out of the Paris climate accord, Congressional votes on repealing and
replacing Obamacare, the nomination of Betsy DeVos to head the Department of Education
and proposed budget cuts could be motivators going into the 2018 election cycle,
Lawrence said. ¶ "Elections have consequences," she said. "A lot of people had checked out of politics for whatever reason, but now
you see individuals who weren't normally activists or engaged standing up, asking questions and demanding results."
Russia
Russia hacks the midterm election – growing consensus
Alex Thompson 17, Reporter for Vice News, 7/10/2017, “Here’s exactly how Russia
can hack the 2018 elections”, https://news.vice.com/story/russia-hacking-2018-
midterms
But even the talk of a potential collaboration was confounding given that many current and former members of the American
intelligence community believe Russia will use cyberattacks to sabotage future elections and that the U.S. is vulnerable to attacks on
the most basic function of any democracy. The meddling in last year’s presidential election, which
the American intelligence community maintains was coordinated by Russia, could very
well be just a taste of what’s to come, and has the potential to infect hundreds of races around the
country in 2018.¶ “They will be back,” former FBI Director James Comey told Congress of the
Russians in June. And former Director of National Intelligence James Capper told CNN Thursday that he
believed the Russian government is stepping up its spying efforts now in order to
“ prep the battlefield for the 2018 elections .”¶ The emerging consensus among
national security and cybersecurity experts is that the United States’ election
systems remain vulnerable in three main areas: voting machines that do not have
paper records, voting registration databases that have weak cyber defenses, and
propaganda that’s disseminated through social media.¶ “There are ways that you
can interfere w
ith the tallying process and cast doubt on election results” — Richard Clarke¶ Old voting machines
could be manipulated without a trace of the hacker being detected. Names on voter rolls could be altered and create mass confusion
at the polls. And it’s unclear what social media companies are doing, if anything, to combat the proliferation of misinformation
disguised as news.¶ “The United States government sets standards for cybersecurity for banks and audits them, it sets standards for
privacy of electronic healthcare information, but there are no cybersecurity standards for its election systems,” said Richard Clarke,
the former national coordinator for Security Infrastructure Protection and Counterterrorism in the Clinton and Bush
administrations and the author of a new book about oncoming crises, titled “Warnings: Finding Cassandras to Stop Catastrophes.”¶
“There are ways that you can interfere with the tallying process and cast doubt on election results,” he added. “That creates a
disunity in the United States, which is one of Russia’s prime objectives.”¶ But it’s not just the election infrastructure that could be
compromised: People involved with Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign are also worried that hackers
will focus
their energies on the campaigns themselves in an attempt to recreate the same
kind of frenzy we saw around WikiLeaks’ release of John Podesta’s emails. The
breach of the campaign chairman’s emails and the Democratic National
Committee’s servers was an enormous coup, and experts believe Russia or others
will try to replicate it.¶ “We have to move quickly in a bipartisan way to better secure our campaigns,” Robby Mook,
Clinton’s campaign manager, told VICE News. “Campaigns are the smallest and briefest of startups
and lack the budget or expertise for world-class cybersecurity, yet they’re some of
the highest targets for world-class hackers .”
AT: Impeachment
Even a dem wave doesn’t cause impeachment
Bob Cesca 17, Political Commentator, Columnist at the Huffington Post, 1/31/2017,
“Forget impeachment: Donald Trump can be driven from office, but probably not that
way” , Salon, http://www.salon.com/2017/01/31/forget-impeachment-donald-trump-
can-be-driven-from-office-but-probably-not-that-way/
Simply put: Should
Trump be impeached? Absolutely. Will he be? Unlikely.¶ Then again,
midterm elections are around the corner. As a side note, an off-year election is also coming up next
November — the first of many chances for the left to infiltrate local and state governments, school boards, city councils, mayorships
and so on. Entering the establishment at the local level is a vitally crucial step in a long-term strategy of taking back the nation from
those who reject science, math and reality for “alternative facts.”¶ So, there’s that. Back to the 2018 midterms: On the
House
side, the Democrats will need to walk away with a net gain of 25 seats. That’s a
Herculean task, rivaling the gain of 31 seats the Democrats gained in the landmark
2006 midterms, in the midst of a failing war in Iraq and one year following
Hurricane Katrina. We don’t yet know how horrendously unpopular Trump will become, however — not to mention the
potential unpopularity of Republicans who foolishly lashed their wagons to the star of this flailing, unhinged cartoon character.¶ The
other X factor is whether Democrats and progressive activists will hunker down and unify enough to win. I’ve learned over many
heartbreaking elections that it’s unwise to bet on the Democratic establishment to be reliably hard-core with its tactics, especially
when fighting for red districts. Again, it’s possible, but it’s too early to call.¶ On
the Senate side, 33 seats are up
for re-election, as always. But the 2018 elections offer a terrible map for
Democrats. The Dems need to pick up a net of three seats, but most of the
contested seats for 2018 are already held by Democrats and, worse yet, only eight
Republican seats are in play. Simply put: The Democrats would need to successfully
defend all 25 of their seats, while winning three of eight Republican-held seats.
Anything can happen. We can’t yet know how toxic the Trump GOP brand will become by 2018, but the Democrats’
winning back the Senate with this map seems like a long shot , to put it mildly.¶ The upshot is
this: The Democrats need a majority in the House to impeach someone. They also
need votes of 67 senators to convict a person. (For that matter, they also need provable high crimes or
misdemeanors before anything else happens.) Without a multitude of Republican votes, the entire
Some federal and state lawmakers— including Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.—
also have been critical, launching hearings to investigate dramatic rate hikes and
introducing legislation to allow drugs to be imported from countries where prices
are held in check.53 This scrutiny from lawmakers is indicative of growing unrest
among their constituents . In 2017, 69 percent of consumers felt that a
pharmaceutical company—even if it could justify the price—should not be allowed
to charge indiscriminately for a medication, according to an HRI survey. Two years earlier only 52 percent
of consumers felt the same way. Consumers also told HRI that establishing government
controls on drug prices should be President Trump’s top priority when
considering ways to lower healthcare costs.
Drug companies are responding to this heightened scrutiny. After the uproar over EpiPen’s price
surpassing $600, Mylan took the unusual step of launching a generic version of its own product at a 50 percent discount.54 Other
companies have delayed the launch of drugs or shed products.55
Sector trade group, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America
(PhRMA), also has reevaluated its membership criteria. The group has changed its
bylaws to require members to spend a certain amount of money on r esearch and
d evelopment efforts.56 The new rules distance the group, which ousted 22 members with the rule
change, from companies whose strategy has been acquiring drugs from other companies and hiking their prices, rather than
developing new products.
Some pharmaceutical companies are addressing pricing and value on their own.
Last fall Allergan CEO Brent Saunders published a “social contract” with patients committing itself to greater transparency and to
limiting percent price increases within the year to the single digits.57 Since then, other manufacturers, including Novo Nordisk and
AbbVie, have made similar pledges.58
The fact that millions of U.S. residents do not possess health insurance negatively
affects our collective safety and homeland security preparedness level. The consequences
of uninsurance and its relation to homeland security are discussed here. Implementation of the A ffordable
C are A ct will expand health insurance to millions of U.S. residents not currently
covered. This expansion has significant potential to positively impact homeland
security preparedness in a variety of ways. These potential impacts are explored in this chapter, both from
the health perspective and the economic perspective.
A study published in Health Affairs journal in January of 2013 studied the early effects of the ACA on health insurance coverage and
access to care for young adults. The study by Benjamin Sommers et al. notes that between September of 2010 and December of 2011,
approximately three million uninsured adults between the ages of 19–25 gained health insurance coverage as a result of the ACA.167
This particular study demonstrated that not only did more young adults enjoy coverage gains, but also enjoyed increased access to
care, which is ultimately one of the primary goals of the law.168 As Shane Green noted in 2004, “A
nation’s greatest
defense against bioterrorism, both in preparations for and in response to an
attack, is a population in which an introduced biological agent cannot get a
foothold, i.e., healthy people with easy access to care.” 169
By expanding health insurance to 33 million more people through the
implementation of the ACA, the results of these studies support the likelihood that
this newly insured population will overall seek medical care earlier on, be in a
better state of health when seen, and have better health outcomes. This will have
positive ripple effects for homeland security in dealing with emerging disease,
bioterror, flu pandemic, mental illnesses, and potentially economic security.
Dream Act DA
Link UQ
Immigration reform will never pass and executive action makes the
impact inevitable
Jeff Florian 9-13, research analyst for Bloomberg BNA’s International HR Decision
Support Network, 9-13-2017, "Trump Forges Ahead With Immigration Agenda,"
Bloomberg BNA, https://www.bna.com/trump-forges-ahead-b57982087758/
Despite struggling to achieve legislative victories in the area of immigration, the Trump
administration has caused a massive shift in the way immigration statutes are being
interpreted and enforced, according to two immigration experts who spoke in a recent webinar.
Trump’s efforts to revamp the country’s immigration codes have been ineffective so far, said Prakash Khatri, an immigration
attorney who served as the first Citizen and Immigration Services Ombudsman within the Department of Homeland Security.
Perhaps the most high profile example was the president’s executive order restricting entry into the U.S. by people from six
predominantly Muslim countries, which was blocked by lower courts and awaits a final ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court later this
year.
Trump has also backed a bill that would cut immigration in half, but it faces major
legislative hurdles , Khatri said. "The challenge is that within each of the parties in Congress
you have those who really support particular statutory changes to immigration, and others
oppose them. So for Congress to come together to actually move forward on visa
legislation is really going to take an act of God in a sense," he said.
Nevertheless, the administration has made its presence felt by stepping up
enforcement efforts that bolster Trump’s focus on foreign nationals taking jobs away from Americans. "They are
not changing immigration law or regulation but instead are focusing on provisions that already exist in a
substantially greater way," Khatri said.
Federal enforcement agencies also have shifted their focus from employers to employees, said Jorge Lopez, an immigration attorney
with Littler Mendelson. "What I’m seeing is that ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) is requesting not only to review
the employer’s documents on the employee but also to actually talk to the employee," Lopez said. "So they are going out in the field
and asking employers to produce the employees."
Employees are also increasingly being removed from their workplaces following investigations. "I can’t say that ICE is doing it
robustly but they are moving in that direction without a doubt," Lopez said.
ho see no reason to stick around for a final stretch of inaction. Others stick around but grumble
to the press about lack of discipline and lack of progress—and as they look ahead to their next job, they often put
preserving their own reputations ahead of advancing their boss’s agenda. Trump’s
West Wing has a busy revolving door—he’s already lost two communications
directors, one press secretary, one chief of staff, and a national-security adviser,
among others—and the tenor of leaks about the White House, once largely a chronicle of internecine warfare, is increasingly
full of statements of disappointment and frustration about the president himself.¶ Another problem for a lame-duck president is that
exhaustion sets in. It’s the seven-, or in some cases, three-, year itch, as someone who was a fresh and exciting face at the start of his
term has become tired, boring, or irksome. Trump benefited from his outsize media personality during the campaign, but now he’s
paying for it. Barely a day goes by without a new Trump-involved controversy. The public, and even the journalists paid to care, have
become numb. Some of Trump’s aides and allies want him to take a less public approach, but that’s beyond him. He has one mode:
on, and public-facing. Just take his alleged vacation over the last week or two, which has produced a surfeit of presidential news even
by Trump standards.¶ As a result, most—though not all—presidents
see a slow slide in their approval
rating toward the end of their terms. Trump’s presidency has been one long slide ,
with his numbers now resting in the mid-30s.
Readiness Impact
Readiness inevitable
Travis J. Tritten 17, reporter for Task & Purpose, 2/22/17, “Military Readiness Crisis
Is Probably Overstated, Former Comptroller Says,”
http://taskandpurpose.com/military-readiness-crisis-probably-overstated-former-
comptroller-says/
The former comptroller says that the department has plenty of problems, but they are not as bad
as the service chiefs are painting them.
A former Defense Department comptroller said Tuesday the public should be skeptical of the dire
warnings of a readiness crisis coming from the military this year.
Earlier this month, vice chiefs for the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps came to testify on Capitol Hill, and for the third year
in a row painted an increasingly grim picture of grounded aircraft, units unready to fight and personnel shortages.
“There’s money available right now … This is a time when the services, if you will, want to put
their worst foot forward and make clear all the problems that are there,” Hale said during
a forum at the Brookings Institution, a liberal-leaning think tank in Washington. “So, I think we need to be a little
skeptical .”
Hale, who directed the Defense Department budget from 2009 to 2014, did
acknowledge what he deemed a small readiness problem. He said the military is experiencing a lack of spare
parts and training, and will need additional funding to focus on “full-spectrum” readiness to handle threats of conventional warfare
as well as terrorism and insurgencies.
“It is important to remember the Obama administration regularly proposed budgets that were $30 billion higher than Congress and
the president were able to approve ultimately, and some of that money would have gone to readiness,” Hale said. “Now, we need to
fix some of those problems.”
The extent of the military’s readiness also sparked political debate last summer during Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, when
retired Army Gen. David Petraeus and Michael O’Hanlon, a senior fellow at Brookings who also spoke Tuesday, argued that the
problems were overhyped.
Last week, Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said there had been a concerted effort
by the previous administration to downplay the effects of caps on defense spending and that now the military feels free to be more
open about its serious problems.
In testimony that echoed last year, the vice chiefs told the Armed Services Committee that only three out of 58 of the Army’s total
brigade combat teams are immediately ready to fight and 53 percent of Navy aircraft are not ready to fly.
defense hawks , such as Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., have raised an alarm on
Thornberry and other
military readiness and pushed for bigger defense budgets, but the effort has been largely thwarted
by federal spending caps passed by Congress beginning in 2011. Lawmakers have been unable to reach a deal to repeal the limits
designed to force more fiscal restraint on Washington.
But Trumphas made a defense buildup one of his top priorities and ordered the
Pentagon to come up with a plan that could become the basis for a budget proposal
to Congress.
That has raised hopes among lawmakers and the military that the political logjam on Capitol Hill over
the caps could finally be broken this year.
1AR
T-Public
CI
Prefer contextual evidence -- mandates that achieve universality are
national health insurance
OECD 4 – Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, Study on Private
Health Insurance, June 2004, “PROPOSAL FOR A TAXONOMY OF HEALTH
INSURANCE,” https://www.oecd.org/els/health-systems/31916207.pdf
A simplified classification of health insurance schemes into mandatory and
voluntary is proposed:
So unless Republicans opt to retain the mandate for several years, the states should
brace themselves for the collapse of their individual insurance markets . It’s that
simple.
But here’s a wild idea. Nothingprevents state legislatures from adopting their own
individual mandates. What if California, say, passed a law with the same structure as the federal
mandate, to go into effect when and if the federal mandate lapsed?
The gambit might not work . Insurers might still head for the hills because they
doubt that the Republicans will pass a viable replacement. But the California exchange is healthy and,
if a mandate replacement is in place by mid-2017, the economic picture for insurers in 2018 and 2019 won’t look all that different
than it does today. There’s a chance that California could save 1.6 million people from losing coverage.
Double Penalties---1AR
Causes penalty miscalculation---turns solvency
Linda J Blumberg 12, PhD in Economics from the University of Michigan, former
Health Policy Advisor to the Clinton Admnistration, Senior Fellow in Health Policy at
the Urban Institute, Lisa Clemans-Cope, December 2012, RECONCILING THE
MASSACHUSETTS AND FEDERAL INDIVIDUAL MANDATES FOR HEALTH
INSURANCE: A COMPARISON OF POLICY OPTIONS,
http://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/26301/412718-Reconciling-the-
Massachusetts-and-Federal-Individual-Mandates-for-Health-Insurance-A-Comparison-
of-Policy-Options.PDF
In some cases, the federal penalty for going without coverage will be higher than
the state penalty, and in other cases, the reverse will be true. Exhibit 3 compares the federal
individual mandate penalties for a single adult at different income levels in 2014, 2015, and 2016 with the Massachusetts penalties in
2012. Simulations with the Urban Institute’s Health Insurance Policy Simulation Model (HIPSM) suggest that the potential federal
penalty (in 2016 when fully phased in) will exceed the potential state penalty for 74 percent of Massachusetts families. In other
words, if all residents became uninsured once the federal reforms are fully implemented and the penalties are fully phased in,
approximately three-quarters of them would face a higher federal individual mandate penalty than a state penalty. The likelihood
that the federal penalty will be higher than the state penalty is greater for those with incomes below the state’s median than it is for
those with incomes above the median (87 percent versus 61 percent, respectively).¶ MASSACHUSETTS POLICY OPTIONS ONCE
THE FEDERAL INDIVIDUAL MANDATE IS IN PLACE¶ As the state prepares for full implementation of the ACA in January 2014,
state policymakers are considering whether and how to change provisions related to the Massachusetts coverage requirement. An
array of options exists, including complete repeal of the state requirement, preservation of the state requirement as it is currently
structured, and modification of the state mandate’s structure. We present these options below and discuss their advantages and
disadvantages.¶ COMPLETE REPEAL OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INDIVIDUAL MANDATE¶ Repealing
the state
requirement once the federal mandate is in effect would provide the simplest way
to reconcile differences between the state and federal laws. This straightforward approach could
bolster public support for the remaining elements of the state law. While public support for the 2006 Massachusetts law is currently
high—63 percent of Massachusetts residents polled in 2011 said that they supported it14—support might ebb in response to two
separate mandate requirements that appear redundant. In addition, two
sets of rules operating
simultaneously could cause confusion among Massachusetts residents. Perhaps more important, the
duplicative requirements could increase penalties for noncompliance to levels not
envisioned under either statute.
Politics DA
AT: NK
No chance of Korean escalation---Kim is just testing Trump
Bill Powell 16, veteran Asia correspondent for Newsweek, “Why the North Korea
Threat is Greatly Exaggerated,” 12/19/16,
http://www.newsweek.com/2016/12/30/north-korea-kim-jong-un-donald-trump-
foreign-policy-533749.html
Except letting Kim “evolve” is what we have already been doing; and if the conclusion one draws from the word unacceptable means
the U.S. should think about taking out the North’s nuclear capacity militarily, well, we’ve had that option for a long time, and
discarded it. Why? Because it probably guarantees a war on the Korean Peninsula, which no one wants .
And that includes Kim : The reason he wants nukes and ballistic missiles is to deter
this scenario from ever happening .
Of course, Kim may test Trump as he did Obama . As Stephan Haggard, a longtime North Korea watcher at
the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington points out, the average window for a North
Korean provocation bracketed around a U.S. election was “13 weeks for Kim Il
Sung, six weeks for Kim Jong Il and only four weeks for the young general.”
If the U.S. and its allies have specific intelligence that speaks to Kim’s intentions—that because his nuclear program is getting more
sophisticated, therefore he poses more of a threat now than he did, say, a year ago—then it’s fair to wonder whether he poses the
biggest threat to the U.S. Because it’s
unlikely his intentions have changed: With another
nuclear or missile test, he gets to strut before the home crowd , showing them he’s
going to poke whoever is in power in Washington; and he’s going to signal to the outside world: Don’t
even think about coming after us.
The impact of such a provocation, though, as Haggard suggests, is unlikely to change much .
There has never been any evidence that Kim or his father ever wanted a war with the U.S. or its
East-Asian allies, for a simple but extremely compelling reason: The North Koreans know they’d be wiped
out . That’s why the Obama administration may want to focus Trump’s attention on a few of the other pressing issues that are out
there. There are plenty to choose from.
AT: Russia
No risk of Russia war---neither side will escalate
Andrei Tsygankov 16, Professor at the Departments of Political Science and
International Relations at San Francisco State University, PhD from USC, “5 reasons
why the threat of a global war involving Russia is overstated,” Feb 19 2016,
http://www.russia-direct.org/opinion/5-reasons-why-threat-great-power-war-
involving-russia-overstated
Experts and politicians are warning of
The contemporary discussion of security interactions among major powers is depressing to participants and observers alike. us an increasingly
high likelihood of a military conflict – possibly a nuclear one – between Russia , on the
a “resurgent” Russia and vow to defend themselves from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “aggressive” actions in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Last month, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter accused
¶ tensions have
Russia of threatening the world order and starkly warned: “Make no mistake, the United States will defend our interests, our allies, the principled international order, and the positive future it affords us all.” The
possible military
European borders has done little to calm these fears. The Turkish decision to shoot down a Russian warplane by claiming violation of its airspace in November 2015 revived the discussion of Moscow’s
conflict with Istanbul and alleged preparations to NATO, of which Turkey is a member. More recently, the hype has been over the Kremlin’s
invade the Baltic States and the West’s need to respond.¶ In Russia, these threats and discussions are taken seriously, and the responsibility for these security tensions has been squarely placed on th e Western
powers. The frequently repeated charges are that the West and NATO have encircled Russia with military bases and refused to recognize Moscow’s global interests. Russian media have actively discussed the U.S. National Security Archive’s Cold War documents on a
nuclear attack against Russia and China declassified on Dec. 22, 2015. ¶ Last week, while attending the Munich Security Conference, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev compared the contemporary security environment with the one that led to the Cuban Missile
Crisis and reminded the audience of U.S. President John F. Kennedy’s words that “foreign policy can kill us." ¶ In the meantime, contradicting Medvedev, Russian experts often bemoan the fact that the Cold War was far more predictable and less dangerous than
today’s multipolar world. What many have initially viewed as a generally positive transition from the U.S. “diktat” is now presented as leading toward a great power war. ¶ This increasingly apocalyptic mood on both sides reflects a growing international instability
and breakdown of important communication channels between Russia and the West. Since the beginning of Ukraine crisis and up until the G20 meeting in Antalya in December 2015, the two sides have barely interacted. Appalled by Russia’s annexation of Crimea
and support for Ukrainian separatists, Western leaders pursued policies of sanctions and isolation, whereas the indignant Kremlin has sought to demonstrate its indifference toward such policies. ¶ Only since Antalya have Putin and U.S. President Barack Obama
alarmist
resumed their attempts to regularly discuss issues of importance. Western and Russia military, too, severed their contacts although the two sides have recently begun to coordinate their actions in the Syrian airspace. The aforementioned
views and arguments are misplaced because they underestimate the dangers of
the Cold War and overestimate those of today’s world ¶ . Despite some attempts to present the Cold War as generally stable, predictable, and
peaceful, this is not the time to feel nostalgic about it. Multiple crises from Berlin to Cuba and Afghanistan extended across much of the Cold War era. State propaganda on both sides was reinforced by an intense ideological confrontation accompanied by drills and
necessary preparations for a nuclear war.¶ The Oscar-nominated film “Bridge of Spies” directed by Steven Spielberg reproduces some of that hysterical atmosphere in the United States where the public was mobilized for any actions in support of the government. In
the Soviet Union it was no different. For the world outside the West and the U.S.S.R., this was not a peaceful, but rather an increasingly chaotic and violent time – the conclusion well documented by scholars of the Third World. ¶ Why today's world is less dangerous
powers are not inclined towards risky behavior when their core interests are at
stake. This concerns not only the nuclear superpowers, but also Turkey. The countries such as
prospect of confronting Russia's military should give pause even to overwhelmingly superior someone as hot-tempered
Erdogan
as Turkish President Tayyip ¶ NATO has been careful to not be drawn
. Even if Erdogan wanted to pit Russia against NATO, it wouldn’t work. So far,
or providing
by support for Ukraine. Unless Russia is the clear and proven
lethal military assistance and
aggressor, NATO is unlikely to begin World War III .¶ Russia remains a support Turkey and Second,
prevent regional conflicts from escalating U.S. or becoming trans-regional. Although its relative military capabilities are not where they were ten years ago, the
military and diplomatic resources are sufficient to restrain key regional players
in any part of the world. Given the power rivalry across several regions, proxy wars are possible and indeed are happening, but they are unlikely to
escalate .¶ Fourth, unlike the Cold War era, the contemporary world has no rigid alliance structure. The so-called Russia-China-Iran axis is hardly more than a figment of the imagination by American neoconservatives and some Russia
conspiracy-minded thinkers. The world remains a space in which international coalitions overlap and are mostly formed on an ad hoc basis.¶ Fifth, with the exception of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Greater Syria (ISIS), there is no fundamental conflict of values
and ideologies. Despite the efforts to present as incompatible the so-called “traditional” and “Western” values by Russia or “democracy” to “autocracy” by the United States and Europe, the world majority does not think that this cultural divide is worth fighting for.¶
Despite the dangers the world of we live in, it contains a number of important , even
pressure the opponent into concessions rather than to signal real various political and military
intentions. When such pressures do not bring expected results rhetoric of war , the and
Munich conference - suggest a growing recognition that the record of pressuring has Russia
As politics has become polarized, Congress has increasingly become a check only on presidents of
the opposite party . Recent presidents enjoying a same-party majority in Congress—Barack Obama in 2009 and 2010,
George W. Bush from 2003 through 2006—usually got their way. And congressional oversight might well be
performed even less diligently during the Trump administration.
The first reason to fear weak diligence is the oddly inverse relationship between
President Trump and the congressional Republicans. In the ordinary course of events,
it’s the incoming president who burns with eager policy ideas. Consequently, it’s the
president who must adapt to—and often overlook—the petty human weaknesses and vices of members of
Congress in order to advance his agenda. This time, it will be Paul Ryan , the speaker of the
House, doing the advancing —and consequently the overlooking.
Trump has scant interest in congressional Republicans’ ideas , does not share their ideology,
and cares little for their fate. He can—and would—break faith with them in an instant to further his own interests.
Yet here they are, on the verge of achieving everything they have hoped to achieve
for years, if not decades. They owe this chance solely to Trump’s ability to deliver a crucial margin of votes in a handful of
states—Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania—which has provided a party that cannot win the national popular vote a fleeting
opportunity to act as a decisive national majority. The greatest risk to all their projects and plans is
the very same X factor that gave them their opportunity: Donald Trump , and his famously erratic
personality. What excites Trump is his approval rating, his wealth, his power. The day could come when those ends would be
better served by jettisoning the institutional Republican Party in favor of an ad hoc populist coalition, joining nationalism to
generous social spending—a mix that’s worked well for authoritarians in places like Poland. Who doubts Trump would do it? Not
Paul Ryan. Not Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader. For the first time since the administration of John Tyler in the 1840s,
a majority in Congress must worry about their president defecting from them
rather than the other way around .
A scandal involving the president could likewise wreck everything that Republican congressional leaders have waited years to
accomplish. However deftly they manage everything else, they cannot prevent such a scandal. But there is one thing they can do:
their utmost not to find out about it.
“Do you have any concerns about Steve Bannon being in the White House?,” CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Ryan in November. “I don’t
know Steve Bannon, so I have no concerns,” answered the speaker. “I trust Donald’s judgment.”
Asked on 60 Minutes whether he believed Donald Trump’s claim that “millions” of illegal votes had been cast, Ryan answered: “I
don’t know. I’m not really focused on these things.”
What about Trump’s conflicts of interest? “This is not what I’m concerned about in Congress,” Ryan said on CNBC. Trump should
handle his conflicts “however he wants to.”
Ryan has learned his prudence the hard way. Following the airing of Trump’s past comments, caught on tape, about his forceful
sexual advances on women, Ryan said he’d no longer campaign for Trump. Ryan’s net favorability rating among Republicans
dropped by 28 points in less than 10 days. Once unassailable in the party, he suddenly found himself disliked by 45 percent of
Republicans.
As Ryan’s cherished plans move closer and closer to presidential signature, Congress’s
subservience to the president will likely intensify . Whether it’s allegations of Russian hacks of
Democratic Party internal communications, or allegations of self-enrichment by the Trump family, or favorable treatment of Trump
business associates, the
Republican caucus in Congress will likely find itself conscripted into
serving as Donald Trump’s ethical bodyguard.
The Senate historically has offered more scope to dissenters than the House. Yet even that institution will find itself
under pressure. Two of the Senate’s most important Republican Trump skeptics will be up for reelection in 2018: Arizona’s
Jeff Flake and Texas’s Ted Cruz. They will not want to provoke a same-party president —especially
not in a year when the president’s party can afford to lose a seat or two in order to discipline dissenters. Mitch McConnell is
an even more results-oriented politician than Paul Ryan—and his wife, Elaine Chao, has been offered
a Cabinet position, which might tilt him further in Trump’s favor.
Defense
Status quo solves readiness---no crisis in hard power or the defense
base
Michael O'Hanlon 16, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution; and David Petraeus,
retired Army general, commanded coalition forces in Iraq (2007-08) and in Afghanistan
(2010-11) and later served as director of the CIA, 8/9/16, “The Myth of a U.S. Military
'Readiness' Crisis,” The Wall Street Journal, p. ProQuest
U.S. military readiness is again a hot issue in the presidential election, but unfortunately the current
debate glosses over some of the most important facts . While Congress's sequestration-mandated cuts to
military spending have hurt preparedness, America's fighting forces remain ready for battle. They
have extensive combat experience across multiple theaters since 9/11, a tremendous high-tech
defense industry supplying advanced weaponry, and support from an
extraordinary intelligence community.
For those concerned that America's military is in decline or somehow not up to the next challenge, we offer a few reassuring facts:
* Thecurrent national defense budget of over $600 billion a year far exceeds the Cold War
average of about $525 billion (in inflation-adjusted 2016 dollars) and the $400 billion spent in 2001, according to official
Pentagon and Office of Management and Budget data. The national defense budget, which doesn't include Veterans Affairs or the
Department of Homeland Security, constitutes 35% of global military spending and is more
than that of the next
eight countries--including China and Russia--combined. Spending has been reduced from the levels
of the late Bush and early Obama years, but that isn't unreasonable in light of scaled-down combat operations abroad and fiscal
pressures at home.
* While some categories of aircraft and other key weapons are aging and will need replacement or major refurbishment soon,
most equipment remains in fairly good shape. According to our sources in the military, Army
equipment has, on average, mission-capable rates today exceeding 90%--a historically
high level . Marine Corps aviation is an exception and urgently needs to be addressed.
* The men and women of today's all-volunteer military continue to be outstanding and
committed to protecting America. Typical scores of new recruits on the armed forces qualification
test are now significantly better than in the Reagan years or the immediate pre-9/11
period, two useful benchmarks. The average time in service, a reflection of the experience of the force, is now about 80 months
in the enlisted ranks, according to Defense Department data. That is not quite as good as in the 1990s, when the average was 85-90
months, but is better than the 75-month norm of the 1980s.
While there are areas of concern, there is no crisis in military readiness. But that
doesn't mean the U.S. is good enough--especially in a world of rapidly changing technology, new threats emerging across several
regions, and a constantly evolving strategic landscape. Here are some of the most pressing issues:
Should the Army and Navy, considerably reduced in size in recent years, be modestly larger? Are the Air Force, Navy and Marine
Corps overemphasizing short-range tactical manned fighter jets in their aircraft modernization plans, and underemphasizing drones
and bombers? Can the Navy develop underwater robotics and unmanned systems more aggressively? How can the U.S. more
effectively counter other nations's ballistic- and cruise-missile capabilities? What more needs to be done to structure and enhance
Defense Department capabilities for operations in cyberspace? How should the military best prepare and structure forces for "advise
and assist" missions to the Middle East, Europe and elsewhere?
Beyond Defense Secretary Ash Carter's admirable initiatives, are there other ways the military can bring Silicon Valley and other
innovators into the defense world? How much larger does the defense budget need to be, and how should it be structured, in base
budget and supplemental funds for ongoing overseas operations? And what next steps might be needed to counter the growing
assertiveness of Russia and China?
The good news is that there are reasonable answers to each of these challenges that
are affordable and at least partially achievable . The bad news is that such issues are getting insufficient attention
in the continuing debate. It's time to remedy that.