Monday, April 30, 2007

It Pays to be Slim

Who pays the added costs associated with high rates of obesity? Most health insurance in America is purchased by employers, who negotiate a single rate to cover all of their employees. That might imply the employers (along with their slimmer workers) subsidize health expenditures on the obese. But Bundorf found otherwise. In the working paper “Incidence of the Healthcare Costs of Obesity,” published last year by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Bundorf and co-author Jay Bhattacharya, also a health economist at Stanford, compared the wages of obese and non-obese workers, taking into account whether or not the subjects had employer-sponsored health insurance.



They found that non-obese workers earn higher cash wages than their obese colleagues—but only in workplaces that offer health coverage. They concluded that employers are likely to be offering lower cash wages to obese workers to compensate for the higher cost of insuring them. In other words, the cost of being overweight is borne by the employee rather than the employer.



American.com





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Friday, April 27, 2007

Interesting Quote

"Studying life through a camera’s lens turns us into detached observers
reluctant to tear ourselves away from the role of clinical voyeur to
take action against the very inhumanity we witness and record."  New York Times



I take this to mean that because we surround ourselves with mere copies of life, the real thing, we are reluctant to act on the emotions drawn from those copies and lack the strength to change what we wish to see changed in life.



The quote comes from an interesting article on the film "Passio" which is debuting at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York.





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Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Green Tea - Slate Mag

Tax Revenues could Decrease Substantially...





But there's a more alarming explanation for the surge in tax revenues.

It could be that the orgy of speculation in recent years—in housing,

stocks, investment instruments—has generated an unexpected gusher of the types of tax revenues derived from flipping assets and trading

securities. And that suggests that with the housing boom over and the

stock market moving sideways, tax-revenue growth could be slowing down, and soon. Slate Mag



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Thursday, April 05, 2007

Perusing the net...

"You never really get the smell of burning flesh out of your nose entirely. No matter how long you live." - Slate Mag



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