2008 년 대학생 시절 오바마 캠패인이 시애틀을 투어한다는 소식을듣고 표를 구입해 Michell Obama, Jill Biden 의 luncheon 에 참석했었다. 

 

정치에 전혀 관심이 없지만 왜인지 끌려 참석하게된 luncheon 에서 들은 Michelle 의 이야기들은 지금도 기억이난다. 본인의 부모님 그리고 Barack Obama 의 부모님의 희생에 대한 이야기 .. 물론 대중의 관심을 사기위해 디자인된 이야기이겠지만 어딘가 분명히 일상 서민의 이야기였다, 나와 닮았다라는 느낌을 주는 서사 .. 

 

Obama 가 퇴임하고 나온 Michelle 의 책 또한 비슷한 느낌과 내용이다. 그녀와 그녀의 가족의 서민적인 삶. 미국의 대통령, 영부인이되고 느껴지는 새로운 생활에 대한 적응, 그 와중 아이를 키우는 모습. 나도 엘리를 키우다보니 가장 와닿던 부분들은 아이들을 대하는 자세. 아무리 중요한 업무여도 아이들을 우선시하고 아이들의 감정을 중요시하는 점이 .. 닮고싶다. 

 

 

나와는 너무나 다른 삶을 살고있겠지만 그 중에서도 공감 할 수 있는 부분들을 쉽게 읽히게 적어낸 글. 크게 대단하지도, 감동적이지도, 어렵지도 않은 잔잔했던, 오랜만에 편히 읽은 책.

 

2020 대선의 해이다, 이번 11 월에 어떤 새로운 세상이 열릴지 .. 무섭다.

 

 

 

자료 https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/06/books/review/michelle-obama-becoming-memoir.html

 

 

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근래 한국에서 책을 구입하는 것이 참으로 쉽다는 것을 알앗다! 인터파크 글로벌이란 너무나 좋은거. 넘나 신이나 읽고싶던 책을 열권가량 주문하였다. 모두 기대턴 책들이라 느끼는 감정들이 다양하다, 역시나 싶기도하고, 실망스럽기도하고. 그 중 단연 역시나와 기대 이상의 훌륭함을 안겨준 책은 바로 진중권 작가님.



Posted by water_
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괜찮다가 과하다가 무난하다가 좋다가 .. 지루하다가 흥미롭다가 이렇다가 저렇다가. 역시나 싶다가 어머나 싶기도하다가 .. 내가 어딘가 기대를 많이 했는지 느낌이 다양타, 작가의 능력이거나. 

가장 큰 파도는 책장을 무심히 넘기다 나의 친애하는 적의 챕터에 닿았을 때. 그 대상이 엄마임을 알았을 때 .. 그냥 그렇게 눈물이 뭉글뭉글, 어쩔 수가 없는거다, 엄마카드를 이렇게 사용타니, 박수를. 

유난히 코너를 많이 접은 챕터가 있다, 그럼에도 불구하고. 모든 페이지를 접었다. 그리고 그래서 사랑한다라는 나의 username 과 비슷한 맥락이 아닐까 싶은 마음이 들었다. 반대의 느낌이지만, 그리고 그래서 그렇기 때문에 하지만 그럼에도 불구하고 ..라는 의미를 나는 내재하고 싶었다. 아무도 이해치 못 할 말은 말이 아닌데 .. 내 마음이 그러했다. 

"생의 다음 페이지를 넘길 때 느껴지는 단 한 장의 촉감과, 그것의 어마어마한 무게감과, 그럼에도 불구하고 그럴 만하다는 것에 관한 영화다. 그럼에도 불구하고 말이다."

졸업을 봐야겠다.

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The Argonaut

문화생활 /책 2017. 1. 5. 06:37


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이따위는 누구나 하지만 아무나 할 수 없는 듯한 전형적인 종이의 묶음. 

나는 어려서 글이 참 좋았고 감정을 쏟아붓듯이 적은 기억이 제법 많은데 그 모든 것이 어디로 흘렀는지, 남겼음에도 불구하고 더 이상 어디에도 존재하지 않는 기록들이 되어버렸다. 

그럼에 비해 끄적임을 묶어 출판 할 수 있다는 것은 아름다운 추억 이로운 현상이다, 부러움. 나는, 나의 꿈들은 어쩌면 나라는 운없는 매개체를 만난 것인지도, 조금은 슬픈 시간들이 흐른다. 아직은, 이라는 따위의 위로를 해보며, 희망따위의 존재하지 않는 가치를 기억. 언젠가는, 나도 책이라는 것을 적을 수 있는 시간이 주어질까, 어쩌면 이미 흘려보냈을 시간이, 나를 용서하고 돌아와주면 좋겟다. 나쁘지만은 않은 기분이다, 희망이라는 것.



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Perisopholis

문화생활 /책 2017. 1. 5. 06:36


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“Working in the White House on a Saturday afternoon had become routine for Zeke Emanuel and Bob Kocher,” Steven Brill tells us at the beginning of Chapter 9 of his ambitious new history of the Affordable Care Act, “America’s Bitter Pill” (Random House):

But they were usually able to leave at a decent hour. However, at 5 p.m. on Saturday, April 25, 2009, they were thrown into a state of near-panic. Emanuel, Kocher, and the rest of the staff from the Office of Management and Budget and the National Economic Council had been blindsided by the domestic policy crew.

At issue was a briefing paper written by the head of the White House health-care-reform effort, Nancy-Ann DeParle. It was early in the planning stages for Obamacare, and DeParle’s memo was a three-thousand-word document, in which she made the political case for a broad expansion of coverage. Kocher and Emanuel were taken aback. They were worried about the cost of the bill. The memo was supposed to go to the President at eight o’clock that night, which gave them just three hours to respond. “Any hopes for an early departure that Saturday evening were gone,” Brill writes.

By this point in the narrative, the reader is well acquainted with the cast of characters. DeParle was “a Rhodes scholar and graduate of Harvard Law School . . . a seasoned manager and savvy infighter when she had to be,” with a background in private equity. Kocher, a “Harvard-trained internist,” late of McKinsey, was “a walking encyclopedia of healthcare markets data who had an uncanny ability to turn it all into eye-opening PowerPoint presentations illustrating the dysfunction of the American system.” Emanuel was the “brashest” and most “academically credentialed of the trio of brilliant Emanuel brothers,” took “edgy” positions, and had an “MD and a PhD (in political philosophy) from Harvard, a master’s from Oxford, and a position teaching oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.” He had “brains, cunning and [a] biting persona,” and was “ready, willing and able to layer it with the self-righteousness of a guy who treated cancer patients.” The two worked with Lawrence Summers—the “celebrated Harvard economics professor” and former Harvard president—and Peter Orszag, the whiz kid out of the Congressional Budget Office by way of Princeton and the London School of Economics. Brill, a graduate of Yale and Yale Law School, tends to specify the Ivy League credentials of his protagonists up front, with the result that his book sometimes reads like the class-notes section of an alumni bulletin. Barack Obama, we are reminded, is “the former Harvard Law Review president.” Jonathan Gruber, who was a Ph.D. student of Larry Summers at Harvard, was “an outgoing guy who had the intellectual chops of an Ivy League academic without the withdrawn personality.” And so on.

So there they were, Kocher of Harvard and Emanuel of Harvard blindsided by DeParle of Harvard. The evening became a blur. The two men tried desperately to alter the language of the briefing paper. But they were blocked by DeParle and her colleague Jeanne Lambrew—the “highly respected policy wonk,” who, at one of the first major congressional health-care summits, had “pushed back on the notion that the private sector could always be the answer.” The best they could do was alter a few words and phrases. Round One to DeParle.

For six pages, Brill painstakingly carries the story forward. Key phrases of the memo are parsed, their implications interrogated. “These options have been presented to your senior staff, and we have developed a package that could plausibly offset the cost of reform,” DeParle wrote. But the pronoun “we,” Brill argues, was ambiguous: it included her team but not the economic team. And could one side of the White House policy staff formulate a “package” without the other side? The directive from the Oval Office was clear. “Don’t bring us your problems,” Valerie Jarrett, the President’s gatekeeper, was known to say. “Bring us your solutions.” From that Saturday evening through the following Thursday, the two sides battled. Then came the showdown:

On April 30, 2009, a large group gathered with the president in the Roosevelt Room to review a PowerPoint about health-care reform. This was the meeting that DeParle’s April 25 memo had been meant to prepare the president for. But this time, the PowerPoint had been prepared jointly by the economic team and DeParle’s healthcare policy people. Peter Orszag and Larry Summers had insisted on that. In fact, Kocher, who prided himself on his McKinsey-bred PowerPoint skills, controlled the document.

Kocher controlled the document.

Near-history, the journalistic reconstruction of contemporary events, has come to be dominated by two schools. The first is represented by Michael Lewis. Lewis wrote about the 1996 Presidential election through the story of a Republican candidate no one had ever heard of, the eccentric millionaire Morry Taylor. “The Big Short” was an account of the financial crisis told through the eyes of four obscure short-sellers. Lewis’s interest is psychological and moral. His books have won him many admirers (including me) because they offer deceptively simple narratives in the service of a grand canonical theme. “Liar’s Poker,” which recounts the young Lewis’s stint in the Wall Street of the nineteen-eighties, is Daniel in the lion’s den. “Money Ball,” about the strategies of small-market baseball teams, is David and Goliath. “The Blind Side” is the Good Samaritan. “The Big Short” is Noah’s Ark, and “Flash Boys” is Jesus casting the money changers out of the temple.

The second school is associated with the Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward. Woodwardian history is kaleidoscopic. The reporter makes many telephone calls and office visits, and reads many documents. All key players are represented and events detailed. The approach is sociological: the great theme of the Woodward school is the interaction of institutions and vested interests. In a Lewis, if you remove the titles of the characters and simply identify them by their first names, nothing is lost: an individual’s character, not his position, is what matters. In a Woodward, the opposite is often true. Names may be irrelevant; titles tell you what you need to know. That is what makes Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s “All the President’s Men” a masterpiece: its great achievement was to show how the institutional power of the White House led to the President’s personal corruption. The Lewis brings drama to what we thought was prosaic. But when the underlying subject is inherently dramatic, and when the heart of the story lies behind doors that only dogged reporting can unlock, the Woodward is what we need. You don’t want Michael Lewis on Watergate. He’d get distracted by Rose Mary Woods and would never make it into the Oval Office.

“America’s Bitter Pill” is Brill’s attempt at a Woodward. The book is wrapped in the presumption of controversy: reviewers who received early copies had to sign a nondisclosure agreement. The reporting is exhaustive. Brill tells us that he interviewed “243 people—many of them multiple times—over twenty-seven months.” When Brill informs us that Valerie Jarrett likes to use the common managerial adage “Don’t bring us your problems; bring us your solutions,” he states that his source for this fact is the testimony of “three senior members of Obama’s staff.” Next comes a footnote:

Although Jarrett declined comment, assistant press secretary Eric Schultz denied this account offered by these senior Obama advisers, saying, “Valerie doesn’t use this phrase and regularly reminds our staff that the president and our senior team don’t like surprises, to further encourage staff to bring to their attention both problems and solutions.”

Then, in an appendix, Brill presents the text of questions that he submitted to Obama, including:

I am told by five people who have served in senior capacities in the Administration that Ms. Jarrett often told them that “the President wants you to bring us your solutions, not your problems.” . . . I feel compelled to ask you to comment on that.

Note how the three sources he interviewed in the text have now grown to five. Between the writing of the main text and the completion of the appendix, apparently in the belief that he had not fully explored the issue of Jarrett’s directive, Brill kept on going, enlisting one senior Administration official after another—up to and including the President—in his quest to resolve the Solutions vs. Solutions and Problems conundrum. Brill wants to take us behind the locked door.

“America’s Bitter Pill” consists of a series of parallel stories. Brill gives us case studies of Americans whose lives have been devastated by outrageous medical bills. He describes the launch of Obamacare in Kentucky; the early days of Oscar, a health-insurance startup in New York City; and his own terrifying experience with a life-threatening aortic aneurysm. Each of these stories orbits his central narrative, “the roller-coaster story of how Obamacare happened, what it means, what it will fix, what it won’t fix, and what it means to people.”

Brill’s intention is to point out how and why Obamacare fell short of true reform. It did heroic work in broadening coverage and redistributing wealth from the haves to the have-nots. But, Brill says, it didn’t really restrain costs. It left incentives fundamentally misaligned. We needed major surgery. What we got was a Band-Aid.

One of Brill’s examples is drug prices. While he was working on his book, he writes, “a drug called Sovaldi burst onto the scene.” Sovaldi is used for hepatitis C, and its manufacturer, Gilead Sciences, has priced it at a thousand dollars per pill—which comes out to eighty-four thousand dollars for a course of treatment. Brill quotes Sarah Kliff, who writes on health-care policy, pointing out that California might well end up spending more on Sovaldi for its Medicaid patients than it does on all K-12 and higher education. “The exact price Gilead chose for Sovaldi said something in and of itself about the nonexistent regulatory environment drug companies knew they faced in the United States,” he writes. “Rather than set the price at, say, $989 or $1,021—at least to create the impression that it was based on some calculation other than ‘Let’s charge whatever we want’—the company had chosen a simple round number, $1,000.”

How can we have a solution to the health-care crisis without making any attempt to curb runaway drug prices? Medicare isn’t even allowed to negotiate directly with drug companies. “Should we be embarrassed and maybe even enraged that the only way our country’s leaders in Washington could reform healthcare was by making backroom deals with all the interests who wanted to make sure that reform didn’t interfere with their profiteering?” Brill writes, in a section structured around a series of italicized questions. “Of course. We’ll be paying the bill for that forever.”

Brill devotes fifty pages to another Obamacare shortcoming, the early malfunctioning of the Web site. He originally thought that the site would be a showcase for what government could do. But, on the train back from his initial round of interviews in Washington, he glanced at his notes and realized that he had been given seven different answers to the question of who was in charge of the launch of the federal exchange, including an “incomprehensible” organizational chart with four diagonal lines crossing one another and forming a “lopsided” triangle:

Should we be amazed, and disappointed, at how Obama treated the nitty-gritty details of implementing the law as if actually governing was below the pay grade of Ivy League visionaries?

Absolutely. This failure to govern will stand as one of the great unforced disappointments of the Obama years.

At the end of “America’s Bitter Pill,” Brill offers his own solution to the health-care crisis. He wants the big regional health-care systems that dominate many metropolitan areas to expand their reach and to assume the function of insuring patients as well. He talks to Jeffrey Romoff, the C.E.O. of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, who is about to try this idea in the Pittsburgh area, and becomes convinced that the same model would work throughout the country. “The [hospital’s] insurance company would not only have every incentive to control the doctors’ and hospitals’ costs, but also the means to do so,” he writes. “It would be under the same roof, controlled by Romoff. Conversely, the hospitals and doctors would have no incentive to inflate costs or over-treat, because their ultimate boss, Romoff, would be getting the bill when those extra costs hit his insurance company.”

Cartoon
“It’s mostly sweater weight.”

Brill talks through his idea with several other prominent health-care-system C.E.O.s (“doctor-leaders,” he calls them), whose résumés are helpfully elaborated: “Glenn Steele, Jr., a former cancer surgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School,” and Gary Gottlieb, the head of a Boston group “formed by the merger of the area’s two most highly reputed hospital brands, both of which were affiliated with Harvard Medical School.” A system like this, Brill estimates, based on a few back-of-the-envelope calculations, could slice twenty per cent off the private-sector health-care bill.

It’s at moments like this that Brill’s book becomes problematic. The idea he is describing is called integrated managed care. It has been around for more than half a century—most notably in the form of the Kaiser Permanente Group. Almost ten million Americans are insured through Kaiser, treated by Kaiser doctors, and admitted to Kaiser hospitals. Yet Brill has almost nothing to say about Kaiser, aside from a brief, dismissive mention. It’s as if someone were to write a book about how America really needs a high-end electric-car company that sells its products online without being the least curious about Tesla Motors.

In a Lewis, this wouldn’t matter so much. “Flash Boys” was criticized by some on Wall Street for mischaracterizing the world of high-frequency trading. But “Flash Boys” explicitly set out to tell its story through the eyes of a renegade trader named Bradley Katsuyama, and the test of the book’s success was whether it captured Katsuyama’s view of high-frequency trading. In a Woodward, the goal is different. A book like Mark Bowden’s “Black Hawk Down”—a Woodward that outdoes even Woodward—sets out to describe things as they actually happened, not things as filtered through one person’s idiosyncratic perspective. The currency of the Lewis is empathy. The currency of the Woodward is mastery—and nothing is more corrosive to the form than the suspicion that the author doesn’t grasp the full picture.

Does the botched launch of the Web site deserve fifty pages? Maybe so. This certainly was something that felt significant at the time. But what we want to know is how much it ultimately mattered, and there is little in Brill’s reporting that sheds light on that question. The Administration built a Web site in order to give Americans access to one of the most complex pieces of legislation in history. The site had lots of bugs, in the beginning, as complicated pieces of software often do. Then the Administration fixed the bugs quickly, and the response was such that the Affordable Care Act reached its enrollment targets. “I was, like, never worried,” Brill quotes Mickey Dickerson, an expert from Google whom the Administration brought in to get the Web site on track, as saying. “It’s just a website. We’re not going to the moon.” Brill wants the Web-site saga to stand for something larger, but in the end what it seems to stand for is the fact that Web sites, in the beginning, sometimes crash a lot.

The Sovaldi example is equally puzzling. A thousand dollars for a pill sounds like a lot of money. But hepatitis C is a costly disease. It’s the leading reason for liver transplants, which are among the most expensive of all medical procedures. A 2013 study published in the journal Hepatology estimated the lifetime health-care costs of the average hepatitis-C patient (when medical inflation was factored in) at more than two hundred thousand dollars. The drug regimens that came before Sovaldi didn’t work very well and had terrible side effects. Brill quotes Sarah Kliff on how much the drug will cost the state of California, but what he doesn’t mention is that Kliff followed up on her initial analysis with another that was headlined, above a picture of Sovaldi capsules, “EACH OF THESE HEPATITIS C PILLS COSTS $1,000. THAT’S ACTUALLY A GREAT DEAL.

The problem with the pharmaceutical industry is not that it makes too many drugs like Sovaldi. It’s that it makes too many drugs that aren’t like Sovaldi, drugs whose costs vastly outstrip their benefits: cancer treatments that cost tens of thousands of dollars and extend life only minimally, or expensive me-too drugs that perform no better than cheap generics. We certainly need to be smarter about the drugs we use, and Medicare should be relieved of the congressionally mandated restrictions that make it impossible to bargain directly with drug companies. But Sovaldi targets a painful and costly disease with a substantially cheaper, safer, and more effective one-time cure. This is what we want drug companies to do. Of all the examples that Brill could have used to bolster his argument, why did he pick that one?

On May 2, 2009, Brill writes, the domestic-policy group at the White House blindsided the economic team with a second memo. It concerned something called the medical loss ratio, or M.L.R. The medical loss ratio compares what an insurer earns in premiums with what it pays out in benefits. An insurer who takes in a dollar and gives back eighty-five cents has a loss ratio of eighty-five per cent. Jeanne Lambrew wanted to place a floor on every insurer’s loss ratio: if a company kept too much of that dollar—if its M.L.R. fell below eighty-five or eighty per cent, say—it should have to refund the difference to its customers.

“Lambrew was certainly on firm political ground,” Brill writes. One senior White House aide called the proposal a “winner.” The rule would make it impossible for one of the economy’s least liked sectors to make excess profits. The feeling was, Brill says, that “it might end up being the single most politically appealing piece of healthcare reform.”

The economic team, however, wasn’t so sure:

Summers called it a “stupid idea,” and told his people to try to kill it. It was “dumb for us to cap anyone’s profits,” he said, dismissing the idea much the way the legendarily blunt Summers might have taken down a freshman economics student at Harvard who said something in class that he thought was “dumb.”

Summers’s point was that an M.L.R. floor distorted the insurer’s incentives. The argument goes like this: Suppose your doctor sends you to an imaging center to get a thousand-dollar MRI. But then your insurance company calls you and says that it’s found an equivalent provider just down the street that charges two hundred dollars. This, presumably, is what we want insurers to do. The market for medical procedures lacks price transparency and competition, and it’s scandalous that insurers routinely pay thousands of dollars for an MRI scan when the true cost of the procedure, by any metric, is a fraction of that. By taking steps like this, Summers thought, insurers could finally rein in, or even reduce, health-care premiums, which had been rising faster than inflation for years. But it is also highly likely that the insurer will keep a chunk of that eight-hundred-dollar savings for itself, in the form of higher profits. The prospect of higher profits is an insurer’s incentive for going to the trouble of looking for a cheaper MRI. In other words, if insurers do what we want them to do—cut costs and rein in premiums—it is likely that their loss ratios will fall. Why, Summers wondered, would you want to penalize them for doing that?

The economic team felt that health care could use a good dose of market incentives. The Lambrew-DeParle view, on the other hand, was that health care is different: the complex nature of the relationship between patients and their health-care provider is so unlike ordinary economic transactions that it can be governed only through cost controls and complicated regulatory mechanisms. When the two sides argued, they weren’t just reflecting a difference in tactics or emphasis. Their disagreement was philosophical: each held a distinct view about the nature of the transactions that take place around medical care.

Brill sides with the DeParle camp. His solution for the health-care problem is to treat the industry like a regulated oligopoly: he believes in price controls and profit limits and strict regulations for those who work within the health-care world, restrictions that he almost certainly thinks would be inappropriate for other sectors of the economy. A patient, he explains at the beginning of his book, is a not a rational consumer. That was the lesson he took from his own heart surgery. “In that moment of terror,” he writes, of blacking out after his surgery, “I was anything but the well-informed, tough customer with lots of options that a robust free market counts on. I was a puddle.”

But Brill spends very little time examining why he thinks this means that the market can’t have a big role in medicine, where most care is routine, not catastrophic. He just takes it for granted. And because he is not much engaged by the philosophical argument at the heart of the health-care debate, he can never really explain why someone involved in health-care reform might be unhappy with the direction that the Affordable Care Act ended up taking. He tells us who controlled the PowerPoint. But he can’t tell us why it mattered.

It is useful to read “America’s Bitter Pill” alongside David Goldhill’s “Catastrophic Care.” Goldhill covers much of the same ground. But for him the philosophical question—is health care different, or is it ultimately like any other resource?—is central. The Medicare program, for example, has a spectacularly high loss ratio: it pays out something like ninety-seven cents in benefits for every dollar it takes in. For Brill, that’s evidence of how well it works. He thinks Medicare is the most functional part of the health-care system. Goldhill is more skeptical. Perhaps the reason Medicare’s loss ratio is so high, he says, is that Medicare never says no to anything. The program’s annual spending has risen, in the past forty years, from eight billion to five hundred and eighty-five billion dollars. Maybe it ought to spend more money on administration so that it can promote competition among its suppliers and make disciplined decisions about what is and isn’t worth covering. Goldhill writes:

Medicare is cheaper to run than private insurance. So what? Cheaper doesn’t mean more efficient. It may be cheaper to run banks without security guards, hotels without housekeepers, and manufacturers without accountants, but that wouldn’t make those businesses more efficient.

Many state Medicaid programs have, similarly, a rule that says health-care providers cannot charge Medicaid more than the lowest price they give to anyone else. If you run an MRI machine and allow a privately insured patient to get a scan for two hundred dollars instead of a thousand dollars, you have to give all your Medicaid patients MRI scans for two hundred dollars. That’s a classic “health care is different” solution to the problem of excess health-care costs: pass a law guaranteeing the “sale price” to publicly funded patients. So what’s the result? Goldhill asks. Health-care providers behave the way any market participant would under the circumstances. They don’t have sales. What incentive would the Gap have for holding a Boxing Day blowout if, by law, it would have to offer those same low prices every other day of the year?

Goldhill takes a far more radical position than the economic team at the White House does. He believes that most of our interactions concerning health care are actually no different from our transactions concerning anything else: if we trust people to buy cars and houses and food and clothing on their own, he doesn’t see why they can’t be trusted to do the same with checkups, tonsillectomies, deliveries, flu shots, and the management of their diabetes. He thinks that the insurance function—inserting a third party between patients and providers—distorts incentives and raises prices, and has such an adverse impact on quality that health insurance should be limited to unexpected, high-cost occurrences the way auto insurance and home insurance are. These ideas are unlikely to make their way into policy anytime soon. But, in elaborating the market critique of the health-care status quo, Goldhill helps us understand what the argument we’re having right now is about. It is not just a political battle over Obama. It’s a battle over whether health care deserves its privileged status within American economic life.

The frustrating thing about “America’s Bitter Pill” is that Brill could have taken us one step further. He has introduced us to the policymakers, to Summers and DeParle, Kocher and Lambrew. He has taken us to the Roosevelt Room, where the two sides battle for the President’s attention. But, just at the point where “America’s Bitter Pill” could have become illuminating, exploring the conceptual gulf behind all the wrangling, Brill gets restless. He wants to get on to the next page in his notebook—to the next meeting that Obama had in the Roosevelt Room, to the briefing paper about such-and-such that was sent to So-and-So, and then, of course, to the debacle of the Web site, which had bugs until those bugs were fixed.

“Do you recall a memo that Peter Orszag wrote to you just after the law was passed urging you to put in charge someone with experience launching and running ventures as complicated as healthcare.gov?” Brill asks the President. He’s trying to be Woodward. It’s not as easy as it looks. “What were your reasons for not doing so? If you do not recall the memo, do you recall Peter and Larry Summers advising you to do this? . . .” 


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“Working in the White House on a Saturday afternoon had become routine for Zeke Emanuel and Bob Kocher,” Steven Brill tells us at the beginning of Chapter 9 of his ambitious new history of the Affordable Care Act, “America’s Bitter Pill” (Random House):

But they were usually able to leave at a decent hour. However, at 5 p.m. on Saturday, April 25, 2009, they were thrown into a state of near-panic. Emanuel, Kocher, and the rest of the staff from the Office of Management and Budget and the National Economic Council had been blindsided by the domestic policy crew.

At issue was a briefing paper written by the head of the White House health-care-reform effort, Nancy-Ann DeParle. It was early in the planning stages for Obamacare, and DeParle’s memo was a three-thousand-word document, in which she made the political case for a broad expansion of coverage. Kocher and Emanuel were taken aback. They were worried about the cost of the bill. The memo was supposed to go to the President at eight o’clock that night, which gave them just three hours to respond. “Any hopes for an early departure that Saturday evening were gone,” Brill writes.

By this point in the narrative, the reader is well acquainted with the cast of characters. DeParle was “a Rhodes scholar and graduate of Harvard Law School . . . a seasoned manager and savvy infighter when she had to be,” with a background in private equity. Kocher, a “Harvard-trained internist,” late of McKinsey, was “a walking encyclopedia of healthcare markets data who had an uncanny ability to turn it all into eye-opening PowerPoint presentations illustrating the dysfunction of the American system.” Emanuel was the “brashest” and most “academically credentialed of the trio of brilliant Emanuel brothers,” took “edgy” positions, and had an “MD and a PhD (in political philosophy) from Harvard, a master’s from Oxford, and a position teaching oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.” He had “brains, cunning and [a] biting persona,” and was “ready, willing and able to layer it with the self-righteousness of a guy who treated cancer patients.” The two worked with Lawrence Summers—the “celebrated Harvard economics professor” and former Harvard president—and Peter Orszag, the whiz kid out of the Congressional Budget Office by way of Princeton and the London School of Economics. Brill, a graduate of Yale and Yale Law School, tends to specify the Ivy League credentials of his protagonists up front, with the result that his book sometimes reads like the class-notes section of an alumni bulletin. Barack Obama, we are reminded, is “the former Harvard Law Review president.” Jonathan Gruber, who was a Ph.D. student of Larry Summers at Harvard, was “an outgoing guy who had the intellectual chops of an Ivy League academic without the withdrawn personality.” And so on.

So there they were, Kocher of Harvard and Emanuel of Harvard blindsided by DeParle of Harvard. The evening became a blur. The two men tried desperately to alter the language of the briefing paper. But they were blocked by DeParle and her colleague Jeanne Lambrew—the “highly respected policy wonk,” who, at one of the first major congressional health-care summits, had “pushed back on the notion that the private sector could always be the answer.” The best they could do was alter a few words and phrases. Round One to DeParle.

For six pages, Brill painstakingly carries the story forward. Key phrases of the memo are parsed, their implications interrogated. “These options have been presented to your senior staff, and we have developed a package that could plausibly offset the cost of reform,” DeParle wrote. But the pronoun “we,” Brill argues, was ambiguous: it included her team but not the economic team. And could one side of the White House policy staff formulate a “package” without the other side? The directive from the Oval Office was clear. “Don’t bring us your problems,” Valerie Jarrett, the President’s gatekeeper, was known to say. “Bring us your solutions.” From that Saturday evening through the following Thursday, the two sides battled. Then came the showdown:

On April 30, 2009, a large group gathered with the president in the Roosevelt Room to review a PowerPoint about health-care reform. This was the meeting that DeParle’s April 25 memo had been meant to prepare the president for. But this time, the PowerPoint had been prepared jointly by the economic team and DeParle’s healthcare policy people. Peter Orszag and Larry Summers had insisted on that. In fact, Kocher, who prided himself on his McKinsey-bred PowerPoint skills, controlled the document.

Kocher controlled the document.

Near-history, the journalistic reconstruction of contemporary events, has come to be dominated by two schools. The first is represented by Michael Lewis. Lewis wrote about the 1996 Presidential election through the story of a Republican candidate no one had ever heard of, the eccentric millionaire Morry Taylor. “The Big Short” was an account of the financial crisis told through the eyes of four obscure short-sellers. Lewis’s interest is psychological and moral. His books have won him many admirers (including me) because they offer deceptively simple narratives in the service of a grand canonical theme. “Liar’s Poker,” which recounts the young Lewis’s stint in the Wall Street of the nineteen-eighties, is Daniel in the lion’s den. “Money Ball,” about the strategies of small-market baseball teams, is David and Goliath. “The Blind Side” is the Good Samaritan. “The Big Short” is Noah’s Ark, and “Flash Boys” is Jesus casting the money changers out of the temple.

The second school is associated with the Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward. Woodwardian history is kaleidoscopic. The reporter makes many telephone calls and office visits, and reads many documents. All key players are represented and events detailed. The approach is sociological: the great theme of the Woodward school is the interaction of institutions and vested interests. In a Lewis, if you remove the titles of the characters and simply identify them by their first names, nothing is lost: an individual’s character, not his position, is what matters. In a Woodward, the opposite is often true. Names may be irrelevant; titles tell you what you need to know. That is what makes Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s “All the President’s Men” a masterpiece: its great achievement was to show how the institutional power of the White House led to the President’s personal corruption. The Lewis brings drama to what we thought was prosaic. But when the underlying subject is inherently dramatic, and when the heart of the story lies behind doors that only dogged reporting can unlock, the Woodward is what we need. You don’t want Michael Lewis on Watergate. He’d get distracted by Rose Mary Woods and would never make it into the Oval Office.

“America’s Bitter Pill” is Brill’s attempt at a Woodward. The book is wrapped in the presumption of controversy: reviewers who received early copies had to sign a nondisclosure agreement. The reporting is exhaustive. Brill tells us that he interviewed “243 people—many of them multiple times—over twenty-seven months.” When Brill informs us that Valerie Jarrett likes to use the common managerial adage “Don’t bring us your problems; bring us your solutions,” he states that his source for this fact is the testimony of “three senior members of Obama’s staff.” Next comes a footnote:

Although Jarrett declined comment, assistant press secretary Eric Schultz denied this account offered by these senior Obama advisers, saying, “Valerie doesn’t use this phrase and regularly reminds our staff that the president and our senior team don’t like surprises, to further encourage staff to bring to their attention both problems and solutions.”

Then, in an appendix, Brill presents the text of questions that he submitted to Obama, including:

I am told by five people who have served in senior capacities in the Administration that Ms. Jarrett often told them that “the President wants you to bring us your solutions, not your problems.” . . . I feel compelled to ask you to comment on that.

Note how the three sources he interviewed in the text have now grown to five. Between the writing of the main text and the completion of the appendix, apparently in the belief that he had not fully explored the issue of Jarrett’s directive, Brill kept on going, enlisting one senior Administration official after another—up to and including the President—in his quest to resolve the Solutions vs. Solutions and Problems conundrum. Brill wants to take us behind the locked door.

“America’s Bitter Pill” consists of a series of parallel stories. Brill gives us case studies of Americans whose lives have been devastated by outrageous medical bills. He describes the launch of Obamacare in Kentucky; the early days of Oscar, a health-insurance startup in New York City; and his own terrifying experience with a life-threatening aortic aneurysm. Each of these stories orbits his central narrative, “the roller-coaster story of how Obamacare happened, what it means, what it will fix, what it won’t fix, and what it means to people.”

Brill’s intention is to point out how and why Obamacare fell short of true reform. It did heroic work in broadening coverage and redistributing wealth from the haves to the have-nots. But, Brill says, it didn’t really restrain costs. It left incentives fundamentally misaligned. We needed major surgery. What we got was a Band-Aid.

One of Brill’s examples is drug prices. While he was working on his book, he writes, “a drug called Sovaldi burst onto the scene.” Sovaldi is used for hepatitis C, and its manufacturer, Gilead Sciences, has priced it at a thousand dollars per pill—which comes out to eighty-four thousand dollars for a course of treatment. Brill quotes Sarah Kliff, who writes on health-care policy, pointing out that California might well end up spending more on Sovaldi for its Medicaid patients than it does on all K-12 and higher education. “The exact price Gilead chose for Sovaldi said something in and of itself about the nonexistent regulatory environment drug companies knew they faced in the United States,” he writes. “Rather than set the price at, say, $989 or $1,021—at least to create the impression that it was based on some calculation other than ‘Let’s charge whatever we want’—the company had chosen a simple round number, $1,000.”

How can we have a solution to the health-care crisis without making any attempt to curb runaway drug prices? Medicare isn’t even allowed to negotiate directly with drug companies. “Should we be embarrassed and maybe even enraged that the only way our country’s leaders in Washington could reform healthcare was by making backroom deals with all the interests who wanted to make sure that reform didn’t interfere with their profiteering?” Brill writes, in a section structured around a series of italicized questions. “Of course. We’ll be paying the bill for that forever.”

Brill devotes fifty pages to another Obamacare shortcoming, the early malfunctioning of the Web site. He originally thought that the site would be a showcase for what government could do. But, on the train back from his initial round of interviews in Washington, he glanced at his notes and realized that he had been given seven different answers to the question of who was in charge of the launch of the federal exchange, including an “incomprehensible” organizational chart with four diagonal lines crossing one another and forming a “lopsided” triangle:

Should we be amazed, and disappointed, at how Obama treated the nitty-gritty details of implementing the law as if actually governing was below the pay grade of Ivy League visionaries?

Absolutely. This failure to govern will stand as one of the great unforced disappointments of the Obama years.

At the end of “America’s Bitter Pill,” Brill offers his own solution to the health-care crisis. He wants the big regional health-care systems that dominate many metropolitan areas to expand their reach and to assume the function of insuring patients as well. He talks to Jeffrey Romoff, the C.E.O. of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, who is about to try this idea in the Pittsburgh area, and becomes convinced that the same model would work throughout the country. “The [hospital’s] insurance company would not only have every incentive to control the doctors’ and hospitals’ costs, but also the means to do so,” he writes. “It would be under the same roof, controlled by Romoff. Conversely, the hospitals and doctors would have no incentive to inflate costs or over-treat, because their ultimate boss, Romoff, would be getting the bill when those extra costs hit his insurance company.”

Cartoon
“It’s mostly sweater weight.”

Brill talks through his idea with several other prominent health-care-system C.E.O.s (“doctor-leaders,” he calls them), whose résumés are helpfully elaborated: “Glenn Steele, Jr., a former cancer surgeon and professor at Harvard Medical School,” and Gary Gottlieb, the head of a Boston group “formed by the merger of the area’s two most highly reputed hospital brands, both of which were affiliated with Harvard Medical School.” A system like this, Brill estimates, based on a few back-of-the-envelope calculations, could slice twenty per cent off the private-sector health-care bill.

It’s at moments like this that Brill’s book becomes problematic. The idea he is describing is called integrated managed care. It has been around for more than half a century—most notably in the form of the Kaiser Permanente Group. Almost ten million Americans are insured through Kaiser, treated by Kaiser doctors, and admitted to Kaiser hospitals. Yet Brill has almost nothing to say about Kaiser, aside from a brief, dismissive mention. It’s as if someone were to write a book about how America really needs a high-end electric-car company that sells its products online without being the least curious about Tesla Motors.

In a Lewis, this wouldn’t matter so much. “Flash Boys” was criticized by some on Wall Street for mischaracterizing the world of high-frequency trading. But “Flash Boys” explicitly set out to tell its story through the eyes of a renegade trader named Bradley Katsuyama, and the test of the book’s success was whether it captured Katsuyama’s view of high-frequency trading. In a Woodward, the goal is different. A book like Mark Bowden’s “Black Hawk Down”—a Woodward that outdoes even Woodward—sets out to describe things as they actually happened, not things as filtered through one person’s idiosyncratic perspective. The currency of the Lewis is empathy. The currency of the Woodward is mastery—and nothing is more corrosive to the form than the suspicion that the author doesn’t grasp the full picture.

Does the botched launch of the Web site deserve fifty pages? Maybe so. This certainly was something that felt significant at the time. But what we want to know is how much it ultimately mattered, and there is little in Brill’s reporting that sheds light on that question. The Administration built a Web site in order to give Americans access to one of the most complex pieces of legislation in history. The site had lots of bugs, in the beginning, as complicated pieces of software often do. Then the Administration fixed the bugs quickly, and the response was such that the Affordable Care Act reached its enrollment targets. “I was, like, never worried,” Brill quotes Mickey Dickerson, an expert from Google whom the Administration brought in to get the Web site on track, as saying. “It’s just a website. We’re not going to the moon.” Brill wants the Web-site saga to stand for something larger, but in the end what it seems to stand for is the fact that Web sites, in the beginning, sometimes crash a lot.

The Sovaldi example is equally puzzling. A thousand dollars for a pill sounds like a lot of money. But hepatitis C is a costly disease. It’s the leading reason for liver transplants, which are among the most expensive of all medical procedures. A 2013 study published in the journal Hepatology estimated the lifetime health-care costs of the average hepatitis-C patient (when medical inflation was factored in) at more than two hundred thousand dollars. The drug regimens that came before Sovaldi didn’t work very well and had terrible side effects. Brill quotes Sarah Kliff on how much the drug will cost the state of California, but what he doesn’t mention is that Kliff followed up on her initial analysis with another that was headlined, above a picture of Sovaldi capsules, “EACH OF THESE HEPATITIS C PILLS COSTS $1,000. THAT’S ACTUALLY A GREAT DEAL.

The problem with the pharmaceutical industry is not that it makes too many drugs like Sovaldi. It’s that it makes too many drugs that aren’t like Sovaldi, drugs whose costs vastly outstrip their benefits: cancer treatments that cost tens of thousands of dollars and extend life only minimally, or expensive me-too drugs that perform no better than cheap generics. We certainly need to be smarter about the drugs we use, and Medicare should be relieved of the congressionally mandated restrictions that make it impossible to bargain directly with drug companies. But Sovaldi targets a painful and costly disease with a substantially cheaper, safer, and more effective one-time cure. This is what we want drug companies to do. Of all the examples that Brill could have used to bolster his argument, why did he pick that one?

On May 2, 2009, Brill writes, the domestic-policy group at the White House blindsided the economic team with a second memo. It concerned something called the medical loss ratio, or M.L.R. The medical loss ratio compares what an insurer earns in premiums with what it pays out in benefits. An insurer who takes in a dollar and gives back eighty-five cents has a loss ratio of eighty-five per cent. Jeanne Lambrew wanted to place a floor on every insurer’s loss ratio: if a company kept too much of that dollar—if its M.L.R. fell below eighty-five or eighty per cent, say—it should have to refund the difference to its customers.

“Lambrew was certainly on firm political ground,” Brill writes. One senior White House aide called the proposal a “winner.” The rule would make it impossible for one of the economy’s least liked sectors to make excess profits. The feeling was, Brill says, that “it might end up being the single most politically appealing piece of healthcare reform.”

The economic team, however, wasn’t so sure:

Summers called it a “stupid idea,” and told his people to try to kill it. It was “dumb for us to cap anyone’s profits,” he said, dismissing the idea much the way the legendarily blunt Summers might have taken down a freshman economics student at Harvard who said something in class that he thought was “dumb.”

Summers’s point was that an M.L.R. floor distorted the insurer’s incentives. The argument goes like this: Suppose your doctor sends you to an imaging center to get a thousand-dollar MRI. But then your insurance company calls you and says that it’s found an equivalent provider just down the street that charges two hundred dollars. This, presumably, is what we want insurers to do. The market for medical procedures lacks price transparency and competition, and it’s scandalous that insurers routinely pay thousands of dollars for an MRI scan when the true cost of the procedure, by any metric, is a fraction of that. By taking steps like this, Summers thought, insurers could finally rein in, or even reduce, health-care premiums, which had been rising faster than inflation for years. But it is also highly likely that the insurer will keep a chunk of that eight-hundred-dollar savings for itself, in the form of higher profits. The prospect of higher profits is an insurer’s incentive for going to the trouble of looking for a cheaper MRI. In other words, if insurers do what we want them to do—cut costs and rein in premiums—it is likely that their loss ratios will fall. Why, Summers wondered, would you want to penalize them for doing that?

The economic team felt that health care could use a good dose of market incentives. The Lambrew-DeParle view, on the other hand, was that health care is different: the complex nature of the relationship between patients and their health-care provider is so unlike ordinary economic transactions that it can be governed only through cost controls and complicated regulatory mechanisms. When the two sides argued, they weren’t just reflecting a difference in tactics or emphasis. Their disagreement was philosophical: each held a distinct view about the nature of the transactions that take place around medical care.

Brill sides with the DeParle camp. His solution for the health-care problem is to treat the industry like a regulated oligopoly: he believes in price controls and profit limits and strict regulations for those who work within the health-care world, restrictions that he almost certainly thinks would be inappropriate for other sectors of the economy. A patient, he explains at the beginning of his book, is a not a rational consumer. That was the lesson he took from his own heart surgery. “In that moment of terror,” he writes, of blacking out after his surgery, “I was anything but the well-informed, tough customer with lots of options that a robust free market counts on. I was a puddle.”

But Brill spends very little time examining why he thinks this means that the market can’t have a big role in medicine, where most care is routine, not catastrophic. He just takes it for granted. And because he is not much engaged by the philosophical argument at the heart of the health-care debate, he can never really explain why someone involved in health-care reform might be unhappy with the direction that the Affordable Care Act ended up taking. He tells us who controlled the PowerPoint. But he can’t tell us why it mattered.

It is useful to read “America’s Bitter Pill” alongside David Goldhill’s “Catastrophic Care.” Goldhill covers much of the same ground. But for him the philosophical question—is health care different, or is it ultimately like any other resource?—is central. The Medicare program, for example, has a spectacularly high loss ratio: it pays out something like ninety-seven cents in benefits for every dollar it takes in. For Brill, that’s evidence of how well it works. He thinks Medicare is the most functional part of the health-care system. Goldhill is more skeptical. Perhaps the reason Medicare’s loss ratio is so high, he says, is that Medicare never says no to anything. The program’s annual spending has risen, in the past forty years, from eight billion to five hundred and eighty-five billion dollars. Maybe it ought to spend more money on administration so that it can promote competition among its suppliers and make disciplined decisions about what is and isn’t worth covering. Goldhill writes:

Medicare is cheaper to run than private insurance. So what? Cheaper doesn’t mean more efficient. It may be cheaper to run banks without security guards, hotels without housekeepers, and manufacturers without accountants, but that wouldn’t make those businesses more efficient.

Many state Medicaid programs have, similarly, a rule that says health-care providers cannot charge Medicaid more than the lowest price they give to anyone else. If you run an MRI machine and allow a privately insured patient to get a scan for two hundred dollars instead of a thousand dollars, you have to give all your Medicaid patients MRI scans for two hundred dollars. That’s a classic “health care is different” solution to the problem of excess health-care costs: pass a law guaranteeing the “sale price” to publicly funded patients. So what’s the result? Goldhill asks. Health-care providers behave the way any market participant would under the circumstances. They don’t have sales. What incentive would the Gap have for holding a Boxing Day blowout if, by law, it would have to offer those same low prices every other day of the year?

Goldhill takes a far more radical position than the economic team at the White House does. He believes that most of our interactions concerning health care are actually no different from our transactions concerning anything else: if we trust people to buy cars and houses and food and clothing on their own, he doesn’t see why they can’t be trusted to do the same with checkups, tonsillectomies, deliveries, flu shots, and the management of their diabetes. He thinks that the insurance function—inserting a third party between patients and providers—distorts incentives and raises prices, and has such an adverse impact on quality that health insurance should be limited to unexpected, high-cost occurrences the way auto insurance and home insurance are. These ideas are unlikely to make their way into policy anytime soon. But, in elaborating the market critique of the health-care status quo, Goldhill helps us understand what the argument we’re having right now is about. It is not just a political battle over Obama. It’s a battle over whether health care deserves its privileged status within American economic life.

The frustrating thing about “America’s Bitter Pill” is that Brill could have taken us one step further. He has introduced us to the policymakers, to Summers and DeParle, Kocher and Lambrew. He has taken us to the Roosevelt Room, where the two sides battle for the President’s attention. But, just at the point where “America’s Bitter Pill” could have become illuminating, exploring the conceptual gulf behind all the wrangling, Brill gets restless. He wants to get on to the next page in his notebook—to the next meeting that Obama had in the Roosevelt Room, to the briefing paper about such-and-such that was sent to So-and-So, and then, of course, to the debacle of the Web site, which had bugs until those bugs were fixed.

“Do you recall a memo that Peter Orszag wrote to you just after the law was passed urging you to put in charge someone with experience launching and running ventures as complicated as healthcare.gov?” Brill asks the President. He’s trying to be Woodward. It’s not as easy as it looks. “What were your reasons for not doing so? If you do not recall the memo, do you recall Peter and Larry Summers advising you to do this? . . .” 


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Photo
CreditMichael Bierut

Steven Brill is not easily intimidated. The founder of Court TV and Brill’s Content, among many other ventures, Brill likes to dive deeply and quickly into complicated national policy issues — public education, health care — that he, by his own admission, knows relatively little about when he begins. This is his great appeal and can be a great frustration. It makes him vulnerable to the charisma of his sources, as was apparent in his 2011 book, “Class Warfare,” in which he seemed dazzled by individuals involved in privatizing public education, while he largely ignored the existing research.

But in Brill’s new book, “America’s Bitter Pill,” his fresh, outsider curiosity makes him a superb guide to the maze of issues in American health care and health care reform. He breaks down insider language, asks fundamental and surprising questions, and leaves the reader — at least this one — full of more questions yet with a much clearer map of the lines of debate. You may not be persuaded by his conclusions, but you’ll emerge with a broader understanding of the characters and questions shaping our health care system.

“America’s Bitter Pill” is an energetic, picaresque, narrative explanation of much of what has happened in the last seven years of health policy. It is full of insights, contradictions, apologias, flashes of anger, tidbits of history, extended stories of awe, compassion, some glibness and moments of brilliance. Above all, it includes fascinating reporting on how crucial decisions were made involving the drafting and implementation of the Affordable Care Act.

What is this book about? Well, every­thing. It reminded me of a Bruegel painting, so full of minor characters that I made a chart to keep track. It is about the conflicts between President Obama’s economic policy team and his health care policy team. It is about the initial white paper from Senator Max Baucus that didn’t even include the “public option” of a ­government-run insurance plan.It is about the “chargemaster” system of American health care, whereby hospital administrators easily drive up costs because of their relative bargaining power over insurers and patients. It is about a woman openly talking about how she and her husband — insured, but underinsured — had to create their own family “death panel” to weigh the cost of medical treatments that might keep him alive for another month. It is about Brill’s own open-heart surgery and how it affects his understanding of costs, and repeated visits to a group of well-­funded entrepreneurs trying to create a “cool” new insurance company. Following his 2013 Time magazine cover story that inspired the book, Brill introduces us to Americans with no coverage, as well as those with inadequate coverage, like the 61-year-old bus driver whose slip in her yard and busted nose led to six hours in the hospital, six stitches and six years of medical bills.

It is also about a Washington fight for power among five key forces: insurers, hospitals, patients, pharmaceutical companies and medical equipment suppliers, and the general public, including those who are supposed to represent them. In Brill’s account of the Affordable Care Act, the insurers got a fair shake, uninsured and underinsured patients truly benefited, hospitals and pharmaceutical companies and medical equipment companies were left free to charge exorbitant prices, while the general public was left with no real strategy for cost containment.

In other words, Brill is impressed with the expanded coverage provided by Obama­care, and depressed about the cost of care.

Despite the cynical title, this is a surprisingly triumphant book. A significant number of pages are dedicated to something extremely rare: three gripping stories of great government success.

First, there is the improbable story of passing any health care reform in the first place. Max Baucus, the Montana Democrat and chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, spends untold hours trying to court the Republican senators Charles Grassley and Olympia Snowe; Baucus’s initial bipartisan dream appears close enough to touch, and then it falls away. Edward Kennedy, an engine behind Obama’s focus on health care and a critical 60th vote, dies. Scott Brown, a Republican, wins Kennedy’s seat. Brown’s victory doesn’t end health care reform but severely circumscribes it, because House Democrats lose their negotiating power: They are forced to accept the Senate bill or face the prospect of no bill at all.

Photo
CreditMichael Bierut

Then there is the inspiring story of Steve Beshear, Democratic governor of Kentucky, and Carrie Banahan, the civil servant who manages a near-flawless rollout of Kynect, Kentucky’s implementation of the Affordable Care Act that included a properly functioning website. (This led Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, to campaign comically both for and against the same thing, saying he was opposed to Obamacare but in favor of Kynect — which was, of course, Obamacare.)

Finally, there is the long story of the botched website debut. As Brill tells it, the website was almost overdetermined to fail. There was no one in charge — or too many people in charge — and the people who built it had never been involved in a project of this magnitude. At the same time, the White House wanted to stall on the regulations necessary to set up the insurance exchanges because, as Brill notes, “they did not want to make any waves before the election.” But after the embarrassing beginning, the White House quickly addressed problems of structure and personnel, and 7.1 million people signed up within six months, 100,000 more than the initial goal.

Brill finds Obama’s early failure to be more involved in the “nitty-gritty details” a “great unforced disappointment,” but he looks with enormous admiration at what the president was able to accomplish, calling it “a milestone toward erasing a national disgrace.”

“America’s Bitter Pill” presents a personality-­driven view of historical change, including the temperaments and accidental moments that affect history, like the ill-timed December vacation of Martha Coakley, who was running against Scott Brown for Kennedy’s Senate seat. But two of the book’s more powerful insights have to do with matters of industrial or bureaucratic structure. The first involves the health delivery system. Many people tend to look with alarm at consolidation in the insurance industry, and they focus on insurance company lobbying power as the essential cause of rising ­prices. One of Brill’s critical insights is how consolidation in the hospital industry has actually decreased insurer power relative to provider power: Much of the rising cost of health care comes from overcharging by hospitals, not insurers.

Take the example of NewYork-­Presbyterian Hospital. Because of its size and array of serv­ices, no insurance company in the New York City area can sell policies if it doesn’t include NewYork-Presbyterian — therefore none of them are able to bargain aggressively for lower prices. This is not unique to NewYork-Presbyterian, nor is it even the most extreme example: Consolidation is the norm in many markets around the country. The hospital sets the price, and the insurer jumps to it.

The second insight has to do with the structure of management within the government. Brill argues that the initial website rollout failed in significant part because the “Office” in charge was demoted to a “Center,” in order to protect it from Republican funding cuts. In a wonderful passage, he recalls taking the train to Washington and reviewing his notes, noticing that when he asked different people who was in charge of establishing the federal exchange, he got seven different answers.

The subtitle — money, politics, back-room deals — refers primarily to the role the pharmaceutical industry plays in gutting any chance for cost effectiveness or price controls. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) has spent a quarter of a billion dollars since 1998 on lobbying. Brill shows what that means in day-to-day negotiations. Billy Tauzin, a former congressman and, until 2010, the trade group’s president, is the voice of Big Pharma in the book.

Tauzin is everywhere in the negotiations. He does not so much haggle as dictate policy, identifying the precise amount the industry would be willing to give up and still support the bill. Tauzin successfully guts comparative effectiveness research under Obamacare — Big Pharma’s profits are threatened by studies comparing which drugs work effectively at lower costs. With projections showing that the pharmaceutical industry will make at least $200 billion more with expanded coverage, Tauzin and his group “kick in” what amounts to $80 billion in givebacks, in exchange for killing any chance of containing the costs of drugs. He agrees to spend $70 million in political action funds supporting reform, and when pressured to raise his industry’s contribution to $120 billion, he sits tight, confident that he can kill the bill. Describing Tauzin’s position, Brill is matter-of-fact: “He knew they could never get 60 votes in the Senate if the drug makers switched sides and began financing a different set of ads, and he said so.”

Depending on one’s view,” Brill writes, “this secret deal between Obama political operatives, PhRMA, staffers from the Senate Finance Committee who had just brokered a multibillion-dollar deal with ­PhRMA, major unions and other liberal groups was proof that Washington was finally buckling down, coming together and getting the people’s business done; or it was Washington at its worst: liberal groups selling out to big business to accommodate all the groups’ special interests.”

Brill tells us what he thinks (the deals with Big Pharma were tragic but politically necessary); he becomes partisan when he wants to defend a subject he believes has been unfairly attacked; he fills a chapter with direct statements of conclusion. He brushes over some contentious issues, making a casual assumption that tort reform would keep medical costs down. (Texas has tort reform, but there is no evidence to show it has kept costs from escalating.) His glibness in these areas, along with a charming tendency to find some persuasive argument in almost everyone he interviews, led me to trust his reporting but to be more skeptical of his policy prescriptions.

Ultimately, Brill comes across as a fallible human trying to understand the politics and implications of health care on our behalf, and he has pulled off something extraordinary — a thriller about market structure, government organization and billing practices, by turns optimistic and pessimistic, by turns superficial and insightful, but always interesting, and deadly important.

 


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살인자의 기억법

저자
김영하 지음
출판사
문학동네 | 2013-07-25 출간
카테고리
소설
책소개
첫 문장의 강렬함이 채 사라지기 전에 마지막 문장의 마침표까지,...
가격비교 글쓴이 평점  




읽으며 단상 : 


옆으로 누워 소설을 읽는다. 하품을하니 눈물이 흐른다. 촉이 좋아 괜히 하품으로 눈물을 흘린다. 터인 수로로 물이 계속 흐른다, 빠르게.


감정 감정 감정 치매를 겪으며 기억을 잃고 현실을 잃은 이도 감정은 남는다고 한다. 나는 지금까지 많은 이들에게 무려 가깝다는 이들에게도 감정을 아꼈지 싶은 생각이 들며 미안해야하나 싶다가도 되려 그렇지만도 않았는데 - 싶다. 상대적이며 아무도 모를 것이 감정의 정도이다. 오히려 불필요 할 지도.


비밀 하나 안지 않고 살아간다는 것이 얼마나 복인지는, 잊지 말아야한다. 감사한 삶.


그만 두고 싶어 그만 둔 일이 있었다. 일 처리는 빨랐다. 스스로에게 선물한 빠른 해방. 나는 책임감이 낮은 것일까 싶다가 남이나 시스템을 위해 나를 희생치 않는 자기애가 많은 것이라 싶다. 둘의 그리고 여럿의 조합이겠지.





막장을 덮고 : 


오랜만의 소설. 거침없이 읽히는 여름의 추리. 이 정도 페이스는 반전을 향함이라는 당연함이 느껴질 정도로 휙휙 넘겨지는 단락들. 특정히 문체가 아름답다거나 반전이 환상이라거나 싶은 굉장함은 없지만 정성이과 본능이 읽히는 글. 재미 .. 는 없음. 통찰은 나의 부족함이지 싶어 판단 불가능.


알츠하이머 치매라는 질병에 대해 오히려 관심을 갖게되는 바가 중심으로 남는다. 기억은 사라져도 감정은 남는다는 문구. 기억 할 수 없을 사람을 대하는 진심이야말로 아름답다싶다. 알아주지 않는 기록되지 않는, 선행. 반면 나는 상대가 갈구하는, 무려 또렷히 기억 할 감정 조차 나누지 않은 기억이 든다. 단연코 필요한 minimum 이상에 대해서 나는 제법 차가웠지 싶다. 하물며, appreciate 되지 않을 사랑에 대해 나는 얼만큼 베풀 수 있을까. 인색한가.

















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Dreams from My Father

저자
Obama, Barack 지음
출판사
Ballantine | 2008-04-29 출간
카테고리
문학/만화
책소개
In this lyrical, unsentimental, and...
가격비교


일반적으로 자서전은 사회적으로 보여지는 professional 한 모습의 이면적인 모습을 보여주는 경우가 다수. 반면 읽으며 오바마의 경우 personable 한 모습을 강점으로 사용 한 만큼 가족사 등의 개인사가 익숙. 오히려 캠패인을 준비하고싶다는 막연한 꿈으로 커리어를 시작하는 모습이 신선.



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프롤로그죽음을 앞에 두고 
첫 번째 후회, 사랑하는 사람에게 고맙다는 말을 많이 했더라면 
두 번째 후회, 진짜 하고 싶은 일을 했더라면 
세 번째 후회, 조금만 더 겸손했더라면 
네 번째 후회, 친절을 베풀었더라면 
다섯 번째 후회, 나쁜 짓을 하지 않았더라면 
여섯 번째 후회, 꿈을 꾸고 그 꿈을 이루려고 노력했더라면 
일곱 번째 후회, 감정에 휘둘리지 않았더라면 
여덟 번째 후회, 만나고 싶은 사람을 만났더라면 
아홉 번째 후회, 기억에 남는 연애를 했더라면 
열 번째 후회, 죽도록 일만 하지 않았더라면 
열한 번째 후회, 가고 싶은 곳으로 여행을 떠났더라면 
열두 번째 후회, 고향을 찾아가보았더라면
열세 번째 후회, 맛있는 음식을 많이 맛보았더라면 
열네 번째 후회, 결혼했더라면 
열다섯 번째 후회, 자식이 있었더라면 
열여섯 번째 후회, 자식을 혼인시켰더라면 
열일곱 번째 후회, 유산을 미리 염두에 두었더라면 
열여덟 번째 후회, 내 장례식을 생각했더라면 
열아홉 번째 후회, 내가 살아온 증거를 남겨두었더라면 
스무 번째 후회, 삶과 죽음의 의미를 진지하게 생각했더라면 
스물두 번째 후회, 건강을 소중히 여겼더라면 
스물세 번째 후회, 좀 더 일찍 담배를 끊었더라면 
스물네 번째 후회, 건강할 때 마지막 의사를 밝혔더라면 
스물다섯 번째 후회, 치료의 의미를 진지하게 생각했더라면 
에필로그죽음을 넘어 삶을 향해 
역자의 말정말 고맙습니다



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3차 산업혁명

저자
제레미 리프킨 지음
출판사
민음사 | 2012-05-04 출간
카테고리
정치/사회
책소개
세계 경제의 새로운 패러다임을 제시하다!수평적 권력은 에너지, ...
가격비교





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지와 사랑

저자
헤르만 헤세 지음
출판사
홍신문화사 | 1992-07-01 출간
카테고리
소설
책소개
독일의 서정시인이자 소설가인 헤르만 헤세의 대표작. 골드문트와 ...
가격비교 글쓴이 평점  



 상상은 매 번 영상보다 아름답다 .. 감동의 감동, 감탄 존경 부러움.



... 왜 조각을 배우려 하는지 그 이유는 말씀들리 수 있습니다. 저는 여러 가지로 많이 생각해보았습니다. 저는 여러 가지의 얼굴과 형태를 보고 그것에 대해 사색을 많이 해보았는데, 그 가운데서 특별히 저를 괴롭히는 생각도 많았습니다. 어느 형태에든 일정한 형식, 일정한 선이 되풀이 된다는 사실을 알게 되었습니다. 이마와 무릎, 어깨와 허리가 서로 대응이 됩니다. 그리고 이런 무릎에 이런 어깨며 이마를 갖고 있는 사람은 그 본질과 정신적인 기조에 있어서 서로 같다는 사실도 알았습니다. 또한 어느 날 밤 해산을 하는 여인 곁에서 본 일이지만, 최대의 고통은 최대의 쾌락과 같은 표정이라는 것도 알았습니다. 

이 작품은 경건함과 밝음으로 가득 차 있고 엄숙하면서도 행복함과 평온함으로도 가득 차 있어. 그래서 사람들은 그 마음이 무척 밝고 명랑한 사람이 이 작품을 만들었을 거라고 생각할거야.

...

하지만 이 작품이 어떻게 이루어졌는지는 비밀로 해두세. 겸손해서 하는 말이 아니라 나는 이렇게 말하하지 않을 수가 없네. 기교와 정성에 있어서는 결코 뒤떨어지지 ㅇ낳으나 그 진실성에 있어서는 자네에게 미치지 못하는 작품을 나는 많이 만들어 왔다고 말일세. 이런 작품은 두 번 다시 만들 수 없으리라는 것을 자네도 알걸세. 그리고 이건 비밀이야.

그렇습니다. 저도 작품이 완성되어 그것을 보면서 이런 작품을 두 번 다시는 만들 수 없으리라는 생각을 했습니다. 그래서 저는 이제 다시 방랑길에 오르려고 합니다.

... 왜 인간들은 그다지 바보스럽고 거칠며 생각이 모자라고 멍청할까? 왜 그들 모두는 아무것도 보지 못하는 것일까? 생선 장수도 아낙네들도, 또 값을 깎는 손님들도 생선의 아가리가, 죽음의 공포에 떠는 눈깔과 버둥거리는 꼬리가 소름끼치는 단말마ㅡ이 절망적인 싸움을 하고 있다는 것을 왜 모르는가? 그리고 신비롭고 말할 수 없이 아름다운 고기의 참을 수 없는 변신이, 죽어가는 피부 위에 번지는 마지막 떨림이. 그러고는 숨이 끊겨 포만한 미식가의 식탁을 위해 비참한 토막 신세가 된다는 것을 왜 모르는 것일까? 인간은 그 모든 것을 눈치채지도 못한단 말인가? 그들은 아무것도 보지도, 눈치채지도 못하고 또 아무도 그들에게 그것을 말해주지도 않는구나! 불쌍하고 어리석은 고기가 그들의 눈앞에서 죽어가건나 스승의 성자의 얼굴에다 온갖 희망과 고귀함과 괴로움과 인생에서 겪는 음울한 공포를 놀랄 정도로 뚜렷이 나타내던 그런 것이 그들에게는 아무런 상관이 없듯, 그들은 아무것도 못보고 알아차리지도 못하는구나! 사람들은 모두가 자족하거나 쓸데없이 바쁘며 서두르고, 소리 지르고, 시시덕거리고, 트림을 하고, 소란을 피우고, 익살을 떨고, 한두 푼의 돈 때문에 다툰다. 그들은 모두가 흡족해서 자기 자신과 세상에 대해 만족하며 살아간다. 그들은 돼지다. 아니, 돼지모다 더한 바보들이 아니고 무엇인가! 그런데 그 자신도 그들과 섞여 있었으며 그들처럼 만족을 느꼈고 아가씨들을 따라다녔으며 아무런 두려움도 없이 태연스럽게 접시에서 구운 고기를 집어먹었었다. 그러나 언제나 신들린 사람처럼 즐거움과 침착성을 잃었으며 자기 만족과 정신적인 나태를 떠나 고독의 한가운데로, 명상의 한가운데로 뛰어들어 고통과 죽음과 영위하는 일에 대한 미혹과 심연을 관찰했었다. 

아아, 인생은 그 두 가지가 다같이 얻어지고 그런 멋없는 양자택일에 의해 분열되지 않을 경우에만 의미가 있는 것이 아닌가! 생활이란 것을 희생시키지 않는 창조, 창조의 고귀함을 포기하지 않아도 되는 생활, 그것은 도저히 불가능하다는 말인가!

그것이 가능했던 사람도 있었는지 모른다. 하지만 성실을 지키면서도 관능의 쾌락을 잃어버리지 않은 남편이나 가장이 있었으며, 자유와 위험을 잃을까 염려해서 가슴을 시들도록 내버려둔 안주자가 있었을까? 아마 그럴 수 있는지도 모르지만, 그는 아직 그런 사람을 보지는 못했다. 

이 지상에 현존하는 모든 것은 그렇나 이원적인 것과 대립에 근원을 두고 있다. 여자가 아니면 남자이고, 더돌이가 아니면 안주자이며, 이성적이 아니면 감정적이다. 숨을 들이마시면서도 내뱉고, 남자이면서도 여자가 되고, 자유를 원하면서도 질서를 바라고, 충동적이면서도 정신적이 되는 그런 양면을 동시에 체험 할 수는 없는 노릇이었다. 한 가지를 위해서는 다른 것을 잃는다는 값을 치러야 했으며, 그 한 가지는 다른 것만큼 중요하고도 열망할 가치가 있지 않는가! 그 점에 있어서 여자는 남자보다 훨씬 쉽기는 하다. 여자의 경우에는 스스로 그 쾌락으로 하여금 열매를 맺도록 하여 사랑의 행복으로부터 아이가 태어나도록 자연이 창조해주었다. 하지만 남성의 경우에는 그런 것 대신에 영원한 동경만을 주었을 뿐이다. 그 모든 것을 그렇게 되도록 만든 장본인이 신이라고 한다면, 신은 짓궂거나 적의에 차서 자신의 창조에 대해 심술궂게 웃고 있을까? ... 신이 인간의 결함과 동경에 대해 특별한 관심을 갖고 있든 갖고 있지 ㅇ낳든, 그것이 악마의 씨앗인 원죄이든, 신의 창조에는 결함이 존재했다. 그렇다고 이런 동경과 불만이 원죄라고 해야 한단 말인가? 그리고 인간이 창조해서 신에게 제물로 되돌려준 모든 아름다운 것과 성스러운 것이 모두 그 원죄에서 나오는 것은 아니었던가?


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나의 라임 오렌지나무

저자
J. M. 바스콘셀로스 지음
출판사
동녘 | 2010-04-15 출간
카테고리
소설
책소개
너무나 일찍 슬픔을 발견한 다섯 살 꼬마 제제의 아름답고도 가슴...
가격비교

My Sweet Orange Tree

이 책을 이제야, 그 마저도 휘릭.

process and pains and gains of growing, 성장의 과정과 아픔과 행복. 장난치고 솔직하고, 망설이고 부딫히고, 혼나고 구두 닦고, 사랑하고 선물하고, 실망하고 아끼고, 공존 함께하는 .. 사랑하고 새로움을 거침없이 받아들이고, 표현하고 아파하고. 사랑을 받고 보내고, 그로 성장하고 배우고. 누군가 혹은 무엇인가 공유 할 수 있단느 것은 행복 축복, 어쩌면 기필코 필수.

이 아이는 다섯 살. 나는 다섯 살에 무엇을 했지 ..

브라질은 어떤 모습이지 ..


네 아저씨. 난 아저씨처럼 그렇게 아름답게 노래 부르는 사람을 본 적이 없어요.

그는 내가 아첨부리고 있다는 걸 눈치채고는 기분 나쁜 표정을 지었다

나는 그 순간을 놓치지 않았다

...

전 다만 아저씨가 빈센떼 셀레스띠노나 쉬꼬 비올라보다 훨씬 더 멋지게 노래부르는 걸 보고 싶을 뿐이에요.

이제 그는 함빡 웃고 있었다.



지금 무슨 노래를 불렀지?

다시 한 번 불러 드렸다.

나는 발가벗은 여자가 좋아.

누가 그따위 노래를 가르쳐 주었지?

그의 두 눈은 노여움으로 번뜩이고 있었고, 마치 미치기 직전의 모습 같아 보였다.

아리오발도 씨에요!

내가 그 따위 인간을 따라다니지 말라고 말했지?

그는 그런 말을 결코 해 준 적이 없었다. 길거리 가수의 조수로서 내가 일했다는 것을 전혀 모르고 있다고 생각했는데...?

다시 한 번 그 노래를 불러 봐.

이 노랜 보통 탱고 곡인걸요. 난 발가벗은 여자가 좋아 ...

그 순간 철썩하며 손바닥이 내 얼굴을 뒤흔들었다.

또 불러 봐.

난 발가벗은 여자가 좋아 ...



아빠 그 오랜지 나무는 벌써 베어 버렸어요. 나의 라임오렌지 나무를 ... 일주일 전에 베어 버렸어요.







왜 아이들은 철이 들어야만 하나요? 

진심으로 사무치도록 그리운 뽀르뚜가 아저씨! 당신은 너무도 많은 온정과 꿈과 사랑을 제게 가르쳐 주셨습니다.

뽀르뚜가 아저씨!

내 마음 속에서 영원히 ...

안녕히!












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아프니까 청춘이다

저자
김난도 지음
출판사
쌤앤파커스 | 2010-12-24 출간
카테고리
시/에세이
책소개
인생의 홀로서기를 시작하는 청춘을 위한 김난도 교수의 따뜻한 멘...
가격비교 글쓴이 평점  


사실 흔한 이야기, 특별히 읽고 싶다기보다 오히려 차라리 다른 책을 읽을래 싶은 마음이었지만 굳이 선물을 주셨으니 휙휙. 물론 좋은 이야기, 누구나 할 수 있는 이야기. 특별히 특별하다기보다 시대의 감성에 잘 맞았다.

월등히 훌륭하다기보다 적정 시기에 필요한 적절한 관점. 타이밍은 중요, 그러한 면에서 제법 점수를 줄 만. 더불어 대중의 관심을 산다는 자체 역시 재능. 쉽고 적절한, 잊히기 쉽지만 기억하면 좋은 상황 예들도 괜찮.

거꾸로 굳이 이러한 감성위로가 이 시대 이 사회에 필요하다는 현실은 아쉬움, 지금 여기의 한계.

 그냥냥 그래래 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Black Swan

저자
Taleb, Nassim Nicholas 지음
출판사
Yale | 2007-04-17 출간
카테고리
인문/사회
책소개
A black swan is a highly improbable...
가격비교 글쓴이 평점  


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,



향수

저자
파트리크 쥐스킨트 지음
출판사
열린책들 | 2009-11-30 출간
카테고리
소설
책소개
『향수』. 고전들을 젊고 새로운 얼굴로 재구성한 전집「열린책들 ...
가격비교 글쓴이 평점  


만점. 가산 될 점수가 없다. 이야기, 창의성, 깊이, 농도, 길이, 서술, 인물 묘사, 표현력 .. 한글 번역으로 읽었음에도 완벽하다 느껴지는 건 원문을 너무 궁금케. 

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