• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 3 comments on How to Fix Health Care: the Sequel

  1. Professor Davidson should have titled his book “Still Broken: Let’s Break it Even More”. It is telling that his proposed solution is to put us all on Medicare – a program that is already irretreivably insolvent. Of course, if you buy into Davidson’s fantasy that there are enough undertaxed rich people to pay for everyone else’s health care, his plan should work out just fine. In the real world, the ink isn’t even dry on the Obamacare Law, and we are already discovering that it will cost far more and deliver far less than advertised. No one who lives in Massachusetts should be surprised.

    Davidson also claims that competition from a “public option” is necessary and sufficient to keep private insurers in line. This is at best a pseudo-competition, as a government-run insurer is not constrained or incentivized by market forces. If Davidson took his own rhetoric seriously, he would champion genuine competition between private insurers, with open access to interstate markets and flexible levels of coverage to meet the varying needs of the young, middle-aged, and elderly. But if he is simply going to dismiss such competition as “gaming the system”, it is hard to take his advice seriously.

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