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by pjanoman
1908 days ago
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> There would almost surely be a censoring effect no matter what age cutoff you pick This seems to be an ethical argument to make the age cutoff 0: in other words, medicare for all. > surely at some level health econometricians are involved in this type of policy and are aware and facilitate whatever trade-offs are being sought. I feel like this article would not be massive news if this was true. The other case I recall that would be like this is when oil execs held back info that they were causing climate change. That seems to me to be completely different, however, because that was a private company and we're talking about government employees here. |
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Clearly the goal (no matter what anyone’s separate normative opinion is) is to balance some complex tradeoff between costs borne by tax payers, costs borne by corporations (through taxes and through employer based healthcare for working age adults and their dependents), and a high level of access for all people.
Nothing about this censored data effect can say anything about the morality of different regions of that trade off space.
As to your second comment, this article is not massive news and it seems laughable to say it is. It’s just a blip in the news cycle, using some data artifact to drum up attention to something that is already well-known for any econometrician or health policy analyst.
Full disclosure: I personally favor nationalized medicine and welcome higher taxes across the board. Nonetheless I don’t find your comment to be accurate or valuable.