By Kevin D. Williamson
Monday, May 13,
2024
Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Rep. Ro Khanna of
California introduced
a bill last week that, in their telling, would “eliminate” medical debt.
But there are two sides to every debt: One party’s liability is
another party’s asset. And we have a word for taking away people’s
assets by force: robbery.
Sanders and Khanna’s legislation would amount to robbing
Americans, declaring that debts owed to them are no longer valid or binding.
And why should those Americans be made to forfeit their property? Because they
did something unforgivable: They helped people to get health care.
And there you have it: American progressivism, 2024 A.D.
The Sanders-Khanna plan—which thankfully has no chance of
becoming law anytime soon—would “cancel” something on the order
of $250 billion in medical bill debt owed mostly to Americans by other
Americans. It would make it illegal to collect medical debts incurred prior
to the bill’s enactment. It would censor credit-reporting agencies and forbid
them from recording medical debts. And it would, of course, include some
payoffs to politically connected institutions and influential
constituencies.
The two gentlemen put out a wonderfully illiterate
press release, which includes this just fascinating line: “Unpaid medical
bills can ruin credit scores and make it challenging to get a loan, take out a
mortgage, or buy a car.” You don’t say? Failing to make good on previous debts
makes it less likely that people will lend you money in the future? Well, raise
my rent!
Wait until they hear about how interest rates work.
***
Debt is a wonderful thing with a bad reputation.
It’s partly the word debt that bothers
people: If I were to write that access to credit is a
wonderful thing, fewer people would object. But credit and debt are so deeply
intertwined as to be in a great many cases essentially the same thing. Debt is
a way of pulling forward in time the benefits of one’s income and/or assets. If
you are going to make more than enough money to pay for a house over the course
of the next 40 years, a mortgage allows you to have the benefit of owning the
house now rather than in 40 years. Yes, you pay for the privilege of using
someone else’s money to buy a house today, but you get some pretty significant
benefits: a place to live, first and foremost.
You also get the enjoyment that comes from owning your
house and thus not having to negotiate with a landlord if you want to paint the
bedroom or get new flooring. You get financial relief from having to pay rent,
and you get an asset that helps you to build wealth and that may, if you are
lucky, appreciate at a rate that exceeds the interest you pay on the debt. Even
if your new home doesn’t appreciate that much, building equity is still
generally a better deal for you financially than paying rent. Yes, there are
costs associated with homeownership, too: insurance, taxes, upkeep, interest,
etc. In some cases, these will outweigh the benefits of buying a house. But, in
either case, most people who want a house want it soon rather than in 40 years,
both because they prefer owning to renting and because of the financial
benefits associated with owning.
That’s an obvious and familiar example, but there are
lots of others. Many, many businesses have lumpy income but regular expenses:
You may do 90 percent of your business during a few busy months (or even weeks)
but have payroll to meet year-round, along with rent, utilities, insurance, and
everything else. Or maybe your business gets most of its income on the last day
of the month (as an apartment owner does) or in an unpredictable fashion.
You may have heard the jargony phrase “short-term
commercial paper,” which refers to promissory notes companies issue to pay for
regular operating expenses rather than trying to pay those obligations out of
current income. This is really, really helpful if you are, for example, a car
dealership: You know about how many cars you can expect to sell in the next
quarter, but do you really want to pay for all that inventory up front? You may
not even have the cash on hand to do so. You’d much rather get your cars now
and pay for them in three months or six months or nine months, after you have
sold them and have the money to do so. As I understand it, car dealerships
often operate with very
modest profit margins, so it’s not like you are going to fund this
quarter’s inventory out of the 3 percent profit you made from last quarter’s
sales.
Businesses also make money by being creditors, and not
just in the obvious way banks and other lenders do. Imagine that you are a
modest provider of building supplies and construction services. Your clients
are building houses, and they often don’t have the money to pay for everything
they need upfront. In fact, it might be a year or more before you get paid for
the goods and services you are providing. If you happen to be sitting on a
gigantic pile of money, that’s no big deal. But that isn’t how most businesses—or
most people—operate. One thing a business can do is borrow money against its
receivables—against the money it is owed by its customers—or even sell those
debts outright to a third party, who buys them at a discount that you are
willing to pay in exchange for getting your money now and transferring the risk
of non-payment (and the trouble and expense of debt collection) to somebody
else.
Which brings us around to medical debt.
In spite of what it may sometimes feel like from the
consumer side (ask me sometime how much money goes out the door when you have
four children in 20 months—answer: I don’t even know! But it was a lot!)
medical practices are not bottomless reservoirs of money. Some doctors make
tons and tons of money. I had a doctor in New York who worked on a
cash-on-the-barrelhead basis. His motto: “Unless your insurance card says
‘American Express’ on the front, I don’t want to see it.” When I discovered
that he owned more than one Ferrari, I suggested I might be paying him too
much. He scoffed: “Do you really want a doctor who can’t afford a Ferrari?” But
there are all kinds of doctors—and nurses, and nurse practitioners, and
technicians, and assistants, and schedulers, etc.—in the medical business, and
most of them are not diving into great big heaping piles of gold ducats like
Scrooge McDuck. And when those people lend you money—by providing you medical
care on the promise that you will pay for it—you should pay them back.
Generally speaking, people should always pay their debts.
I would say that nobody likes a deadbeat, but the American people have already
once elected a famously deadbeatish serial bankrupt president and may yet do so
again—unless they elect the guy who is running in part on his plan to enable
deadbeats who don’t want to pay back their student loans. But those guys are
not where you want to look for your moral yardstick.
We seem to have somehow forgotten that you should pay
your debts because you should keep your promises. Instead, we invent
implausible moral scenarios in which the person who lent someone else his money
to use is the bad guy, the so-called predatory lender—as though
there were no predatory borrowers. Or we invent categories of consumption that
have a special moral valence to them and insist that debts undertaken for these
benefits—education, homeownership, health care, etc.—are somehow invalid.
Sen. Sanders and Rep. Khanna insist that no one should
have to go into debt to pay for health care. Why not? Somebody has to pay for
it—nurses and radiology technicians have their own bills to pay, too—and, in
most cases, it makes sense that a benefit should be paid for by the person who
is enjoying the benefit. Of course, there is room for things like insurance and
social insurance programs for uninsurable risks, as well as old-fashioned
charity for people we don’t expect to be responsible for their own needs, such
as children and some severely disabled people. But ordinary, able-bodied adults
should be expected to be more or less responsible for themselves, which means
making good on their promises and paying their debts. If you want to shake your
fist and protest that we have a stupid health care system, you won’t get too
much argument from me. It would be good to know ahead of time whether that
procedure is going to cost $4,000 or $400,000, but good luck getting an answer
in advance rather than a bill after the fact. There is much in need of
reform.
But that doesn’t mean that you get to walk away from your
obligations.
The Sanders-Khanna proposal has lots of problems,
starting with the minor detail that the federal government might not actually
have any legitimate power to step in and simply cancel private debt. It is one
thing for the federal government to forgive debts owed to the federal
government—but there is no obvious constitutional basis for the federal
government to forgive debts owed to … well, to you, for example.
And though the fact is not widely discussed or understood, credit reporting is
ultimately a free-speech issue: Credit-rating agencies are asked for their
opinions on the creditworthiness of institutions and individuals, and the
government does not get to dictate to them what their opinions are or how they
form them. (No, the credit-rating agencies are not
always very good at their jobs. But in a free society, people are free to
be stupid and wrong and lazy.) But this probably is not a serious proposal: It
is left-wing Democrats (I’m lumping in the notionally independent Sen. Sanders)
looking to get some profile in election season and signal their willingness to
bribe voters with other people’s money.
The dumbest part of this—and that is saying something!—is
that every time the government steps in to provide relief to a class of
borrowers at the expense of lenders, it makes lenders less likely to want to
lend to those borrowers (and borrowers who are similar to them) in the future.
Ultimately, that means higher interest rates, bigger down payments and security
deposits, and less access to credit for everybody—but especially for those who
have lower incomes and less wealth or who have experienced financial troubles
that put them in default on earlier obligations. There’s an old proverb among
bankers that you don’t want to lend money to people who need it—the idea being
that you’d rather provide financing to moneyed parties who are likely to pay
you back without any arm-twisting—but we don’t really want to build a financial
system in which the poor have no access to credit.
If you really want to relieve the medical debts of poor
people, then the best thing to do is to write them checks so they can pay their
debts off themselves: Easy-peasy—except that then you’d have to account for the
spending in the budget rather than pretend like debt relief is a magical
program that has no costs.
But telling medical providers that they cannot collect
debts owed to them is another way of telling them that they cannot provide
medical care that hasn’t been paid for in advance. That may be an unintended
consequence, but it is not an unforeseeable one.
If that’s an Economics for English Majors entry, then it
must be time for …
Words About Words
Related to the previous item. I have read some very dumb
things in the Washington Post—dumb things for which
the newspaper has recently been awarded a Pulitzer Prize, in fact!—but,
holy moly, this is the kind of dumbness that leaves me … dumbstruck.
In a
piece headlined “5 myths about Social Security as the program faces a
funding crisis,” personal-finance columnist (!) Michelle Singletary undertakes
a tour de force of abject buffoonery. The column begins:
Myth No. 1: Social Security is,
or will be, ‘bankrupt.’ Words matter.
Words matter is pretty much our motto around here, and it
is true that Social Security will not be bankrupt in the legal sense, because
we don’t have any bankruptcy law that covers federal programs. But Singletary
argues something very different: “The program is financed by payroll taxes, so
as long as workers pay into the system, money will always come in.” Okay. And,
then:
Even if Congress fails to act,
there will be enough projected income coming in to cover 79 percent of
scheduled benefits.
“We’re not bankrupt,” [Social
Security Administration chief actuary Steve] Goss said. “We’re not without
money. We just wouldn’t have that reserve to make up the full 100 percent.”
… It’s possible changes in the
law could reduce the future level of scheduled benefits, but one thing you
should not worry about is whether the money will be paid when you are ready,
Goss said.
Do you know what we call it when you have income but not
enough to pay your obligations, so you go through a legal process by means of
which you don’t pay the full 100 percent but some lower figure, such as 79
percent? Bankruptcy. What Singletary is saying is a “myth” is literally
how bankruptcy proceedings work.
(Also, this piece seems to have been edited by a drunk
baboon, with sentences clearly out of order, e.g.: “Think of the Social
Security Trust Funds like your savings account, Goss said. And the bank then
repays you, with interest, when you make a withdrawal.” Wha?)
(No offense to my dear friends in the baboon-American
community.)
Words matter.
Singletary also insists that the program’s finances are
going to work themselves out because … everybody wants them to! Seriously. She
writes: “Because so many Americans rely on Social Security, it’s not going
anywhere.” As though the fact that people rely on Social Security changed
anything about its underlying finances.
The unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare
today amount to $73 trillion over the next 75 years—almost $1 trillion a year
through the end of the 21st century. As Romina Boccia notes
over at the Cato Institute, under current policy “debt would exceed 500
percent of GDP by 2098,” which means that current policy ain’t gonna last
forever. Making good on the unfunded liabilities of our major entitlements
would mean raising almost another 4 percent of GDP in taxes—forever—just to
keep the status quo funded for two federal welfare programs
that disproportionately benefit relatively well-off people.
The thing about running a government on a debt basis is
that people have to believe in your story—that’s one meaning of the word credit—“believe,”
from the same root as creed.
When the choice comes down, as it ultimately will, to the
question of which howling mob Washington wants to face—the bond market or
grandmas expecting the Social Security benefits they have been
promised—somebody is going to be paid and somebody is going to get
stiffed.
My money is on the bond market getting paid.
In Conclusion
One of the ugliest parts of the criminal case currently
underway against Donald Trump was the effort of the former president’s lawyers
to use the fact that Stormy Daniels (whose real name is Stephanie Clifford) has
appeared in pornographic films to morally
discredit her. I’m libertarian about this stuff, and I
think of the pornography business the way I think about the heroin
business: I wouldn’t outlaw it, but I don’t think it is good for people. That
being said, do you know who also has appeared in pornographic films? Donald
Trump, who had cameos in three softcore porn films released by Playboy. Unlike
Daniels, he did not perform any actual sexual deeds in his porn films. And
isn’t that just like Trump? Looking for a payday while adding nothing to the
basic value proposition of the product. Such as it is.
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