02
May 14

Body Economic part 3

Once again, Stuckler and Basu provide us with three new examples of how providing government funds is best for the country and its citizens while cutting funds may cause and increase in death rates. The NHS in the UK is losing popularity for reasons that are unexplainable since the country did well with the NHS. An effort made by the Swedish government to prevent suicide drastically paid off. The graphs given simply depict how while unemployment rates led to higher suicide rates in Italy and the US, Sweden saw a decrease in suicide rates despite higher rates of unemployment. The reason for it was the Sweden provided the ALMP which attempted to help people that were unemployed find jobs once again instead of simply handing them money. It seems then that motivating people to be productive counteracts the unemployed men wanting to commit suicide. 

It is quite random that house foreclosures resulted in leaving pools as breeding grounds for mosquitoes in California. However, the rest of the statistics that resulted from homelessness  occurred consistently.


02
May 14

Body Economic Part III

The question I find most intriguing- and most practical- is what, exactly, is America thinking? James suggested that conservatives egos are too big to allow them to be impartial- maybe. However, I think there really gotta be more to elected officials making choices that harm their country.

The body economic was an intriguing book that makes its point well; however, we all know that realistically, one book doesn’t change much. What we can get from the book- and I think many of us did- is an appreciation of the subject, a new way of thinking about health and public policy, and ideas on what we should do moving forward. I know that I’m interested in hearing more of the debate on these issues and seeing how things develop- hopefully for the better.


02
May 14

The Body Economic Part 3: Why Ideology Kills

I found Part 3 of Stuckler and Basu’s The Body Economic illuminating in light of the conversations and discussions we had in last week’s class. One of the ideas we had discussed was the ideology behind austerity, why people would believe in this system that so clearly has painful health as well as economic ramifications. We spoke about the perception of America as a society in which every man is for himself, the great American dream of a man pulling himself up by his bootstraps and attaining economic success. In thinking about austerity, this idea is a very important one because it can explain why people would be opposed to austerity in theory. The great American man doesn’t need Big Government to get involved in his health affairs, which is his personal business. The great American man can, and should, take care of himself. Part 3 of The Body Economic echoed this sentiment, that this great-American-man ideal was a key factor that contributed to austerity’s success- but, interestingly enough, Part 3 related this idea to austerity’s success in the U.K. “…The previous Tory government of John Major called the NHS a ‘bureaucratic monster that cannot be tamed’… Ultimately, the Tories’ position was not based on evidence but ideology- the idea that markets, competition, and profits would always be better than government ideology.'” (page 105). Could it be that the media in America, to whom we attributed in large part the circulation of the great-American-man ideal, was so successful that its ideas permeated the culture of the U.K. as well? Or was this ideal never exclusively American to begin with?

In the next chapter, Stuckler and Basu provide more examples of the less-government-is-better-government idea championed by U.K. politicians: “In 2010, Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osbourne announced an austerity package… This plan was what the Tories called Big Society, which shrank the role of the state in the hope that local communities would fill the gap. As their pamphlet explained, the plan was ‘underpinned by radical reform of public services to build the Big Society where everyone plays their part, shifting power away from central government to the local level…'” (page 132). Here, the idea we discussed takes on a more frightening yet familiar form: the most vulnerable in society, people who need help (sometimes in large part because of the failures and irresponsibilities of the more well-to-do) are lazy, freeloading off of the economically stable. It is interesting to think further about where this idea came from- is it an offshoot of the great-American-man? Regardless, it is a very dangerous way to think if the end goal is producing a healthy, stable and thriving society.