Health Care Expenditure Growth Eats Away At Economic Growth

 | Oct 09, 2016 07:00AM ET

Every economic decision made has a good side and a bad side. Government deficit spending has both good sides and bad sides. Interest rate changes have good and bad sides also. Added to this dilemma is that each decision affects the dynamics of the other decisions made - making the outcome of the sum of the decisions unpredictable.

Follow up:

I see the economic world (actually might better be called the political economic world) in shades of gray. The road to failure is paved with litmus test opinion - austerity, deficit spending, exceptionalism, credit, consumerism, socialism, trickle up, trickle down .... Every week I try to focus on an economic subject where I know some readers have strong beliefs - and shoot some holes in it. Admittedly, I sometimes have penned posts which I believe the opposite of what I wrote. My objective is to try to explore the opposite side - and challenge the logic of conventional wisdom.

Could it be that the most likely cause of the slowing USA growth is health care?

This could be true if you consider that GDP measures money movements for essentials of life.

And the more you spend to survive, the more GDP grows. The average human spends survival money for:

  • food,
  • the place where you sleep at night,
  • clothes you wear,
  • the cost to get to work,
  • education,
  • and health care costs.

It can be argued that it is a big difference between eating hot dogs vs. steak, or a 500 square foot tiny home and a mansion on a 20 acre estate. With few exceptions, a consumer does not spend money on health care unless that consumer believes it is necessary. Of course, if one can afford it, more money is paid for the best possible health solution - but for the vast majority, expenditures are limited to the least cost possible.

Health Care consumes more of GDP than other countries.