By Jon Hellevig
December 06, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - The United
States runs the by far biggest and most bloated
healthcare sector in the world when measured as a
share of the total economy. Its annual value was
$3.7 trillion, amounting to 17.9% of GDP (2018).
That is nearly double the average of developed
Western countries (as a share of GDP). The enormous
expense does not buy Americans any better health
than the Europeans get for half the price, in fact
the health outcomes are far inferior in the US. In
life expectancy, the US has fallen down to 33rd
place, even overtaken by Cuba.
Exorbitant prices on drugs, medical treatment and
health insurances are crushing consumers. Half of
working age American adults have either no insurance
at all or only an inadequate insurance and therefore
risk being financially ruined for any kind of
medical treatment – even just checking in at a
hospital and leaving the same day could land you
with a five-figure bill. Studies have shown that
two-thirds of Americans are not able to afford a
$500 unexpected cost for medical emergency, a sum
which will not get you even past reception at an
American hospital. According to the American Cancer
Society, 137 million Americans suffered medical
financial hardship in 2018. They then had to resort
to borrow a total of $88 billion only to cover their
necessary medical expenses. Medical bills are now
the primary factor in two-thirds of all personal
bankruptcies in the United States.
In a unique study covering the entire US
healthcare sector, Awara Accounting
https://www.awaragroup.com/ has dug into the
problems of the US pharma and healthcare industries,
and the findings are shocking. The Awara study shows
https://www.awaragroup.com/blog/us-healthcare-system-in-crisis/
that in addition to the original sin of corporate
greed, the exorbitant costs of the US healthcare
system stem from layers upon layers of distortions
with which the system is infested. Each part of the
healthcare industry contributes to what is a giant
monopoly scam: the pharmaceutical companies, medical
equipment manufacturers, drug wholesalers, drug
stores, group purchasing organizations, health
insurance companies, doctors, clinics and hospitals,
and even what should be impartial university
research. And on top of that, there’s the government
as a giant enabler of monopolized corporations
running roughshod over the American consumer and
patient.
But it is worse than that. All the monopolists
(in official parlance, oligopolies) are in turn
owned by the same set of investors in what is called
horizontal shareholding. The same some 15-20.
investors have the controlling stake in all the
leading companies of the entire pharma and
healthcare industry.
That’s not all. Two of the investors, BlackRock
and Vanguard, are the biggest owners in almost every
single one of the leading companies.
Furthermore, BlackRock is owned by Vanguard,
BlackRock’s biggest owner being a mystical PNC
Services, whose biggest owner in turn is Vanguard.
Vanguard itself is recorded directly as BlackRock’s
second biggest owner. Moreover, BlackRock and
Vanguard are the two biggest owners of almost all
the other 15-20 biggest investors, which most are
cross-owned and together own the entire US pharma
and healthcare sector. Ultimately, then we might
have the situation that the whole healthcare sector
and Big Pharma are controlled by one giant oligarch
clan (and the very real people who stand behind
them), one single interest group of oligarch
investors.
Besides, it’s the same for the entire US economy.
Those two investors control almost all major US
companies.
Incredible? Read on, the evidence with charts and
details is below in the text.
Now, this means that we are not exaggerating when
we talk about an oligarch takeover of the US pharma
and healthcare industries. It’s real. And very real
people suffer for real.
As far as we know, this is the first report to
reveal this mind-boggling extent of monopolization
and concentration of ownership in US pharma and
healthcare. This monopolization is fast approaching
Soviet levels, with the same lethal consequences.
Another particularly important thing in the Awara
report is that the US healthcare crisis and global
comparisons serve as a marvelous case study to show
what is wrong with neoliberalism and how the
so-called free-market is not necessarily better than
a mixed economy. At the very core of the US
healthcare crisis, is the American ideological
precept that healthcare must be a private corporate
for-profit business – never mind any level of
predatory monopolies. But compared with European
countries the US loses hands down on every
parameter. European life expectancy and health
outcomes are far better at half the cost. In a
European-style system all citizens have nearly equal
access to general health services without having to
incur financial hardship in a medical emergency. It
has then been clearly shown that, the European mixed
system of universal healthcare with public insurance
and public hospitals, coupled with government
regulation of drug prices and their availability,
works best. And there’s a lesson for the wider
economy, too.
Yet when you mention government regulation, price
controls and universal healthcare, US politicians
from both parties and most analysts (of the type
that make it into mainstream media) pull out the
socialism card. But this is not a question of the
free-market vs. socialism. There can be no such
question because, first, a mixed economy is not
socialism. And, second, there is no free market in
the United States any longer. What used to be a free
market aka Capitalism, is nothing but a crony
capitalist monopoly ridden system almost exclusively
controlled by an ever more consolidating group of
oligarchs. The choice is not between socialism and
capitalism, but between a real market economy and
the present oligarchy.
[Note. Wherever the original
Awara Accounting study on US healthcare
https://www.awaragroup.com/blog/us-healthcare-system-in-crisis/
contain the source references and links, they have
as a rule not been duplicated here.]
A Healthcare System Run Amok
Drug prices in the United States
are the highest in the world, American prices for
prescription drugs being
two to six times higher than those of the rest
of the world. Prescription drug prices in the US
increased nearly 100% in only the past six years.
Before that, between 1997 and 2007, drug prices had
already tripled.
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Notorious cases abound, like Mylan
Pharmaceuticals raising the price of its
Epipen by 450% since 2004 by exploiting its
90% monopoly market share. It could cost
$600 to buy that pen for treating acute
allergic emergency although the
manufacturing cost would be as low as $1.
The extent of price gouging really hit home when
it became known that the drug maker Gilead sold its
Sovaldi (a medication used for the treatment of
hepatitis C) on foreign markets for a fraction of
the cost it charged domestically in America. The
drug was sold in the US for $1,000 per pill,
amounting to $84,000 for a full 12-week regime,
while in India it sold for only $4 per pill when
produced there by a Gilead licensed.
But being hospitalized in the US is the
real killer. There are horror stories
galore of astronomical charges for medical care: A
patient bitten by snake being charged $68,000 for
lifesaving antivenom, $160,000 for a hip joint
replacement, or a million or two for cancer
treatment. As if drug prices were not high enough,
hospitals profiteer from applying enormous markups
on medicine dispersed to patients in care – as well
as on medical devices and all the common items used
– that’s on top of the in itself outrageous costs
for the hospitalization. Like a hospital charging
$13,702 for one injection of 660 mg of Rituxan, the
cancer drug, which the hospital acquired for $3,000.
Or getting a cut of $30,000 by charging $49,237 for
a Medtronic neurostimulator for which the hospital’s
outlay was $19,000. Even the smallest items can be
blown up to cosmic proportions by the hospital money
scam, when patients are charged $134 for a saline
solution which can be bought online for $5, or $7
per every square cotton pad used to sterilize the
skin prior to an injection.
Hospitalized 32 days for pneumonia one patient
got a medical bill of $474,064, including $132,000,
or more than $4,000 a day, for routine blood, urine
and other laboratory tests, on top of being charged
$2,293 a day just for the room-and-board, in total
$73,376. Notwithstanding the already exorbitant room
charge, the patient was charged colossal amounts for
care which should normally be included in the
hospital room charge, like $94,799 for the routine
supplying of the patient with oxygen and testing the
breathing. Included were also multiple charges of
$134 per day for supervising oxygen inhalation.
Oh, you would think that is not a big problem,
because Americans have insurances.
Think again. About 10 % of Americans – 27
million people – have no health insurance at all.
Worse yet, among those formally insured, it is
estimated that 45% of all adults are
inadequately insured. Another study puts
the number of Americans without adequate health
insurance at 52 million.
There is also an increasing age gap in insured
employees. Recent college graduates have been less
and less able to find jobs that provide health
insurance. The share of young college
graduates who have employer-sponsored health
insurance coverage fell from 61% in 1989 to 31% by
2012.
The healthcare death spiral is complete when you
consider that on top of monopoly prices on
drugs, and monopoly prices for hospital treatment,
the insurance companies take their monopoly cut as
well. They have raised health insurance
premiums by 242% from 1999 to 2016, whereas nominal
wages over the same period increased only by 60%.
This chart shows how much faster health insurance
premiums have risen than inflation and in the past
two decades:
Failing health insurance
Insurances are no longer adequate
as their quality has in the last two decades been
steadily deteriorating with rising deductibles,
copays, coinsurances, and annual or even life-time
limits on coverage. Pre-existing conditions could
deny insurance altogether, or it could seem that the
person has a health insurance, while the person is
denied treatment for that essential disease.
The below chart shows how the annual deductibles
across all health insurance plans have tripled since
2006. (Secondary source Zerohedge
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/us-healthcare-costs-are-exploding-heres-why
)
What happens is that you could have an insurance
on which you pay regular premiums, but which then is
refused by the hospital when you need it for an
emergency. Consider the case of Sean and Stephanie
Recchi. They had been paying $469 a month (20% of
their income) for a policy that would cover $2,000
per day of hospital costs. Probably in every country
in the world except in the United States, the $2,000
per day coverage would have been more than enough
for even the most serious condition, but the
administrator at the hospital Sean Recchi turned to
informed point-blank: “We don’t take that
kind of discount insurance.” Being denied
the coverage the Recchis had already paid for they
had to cough up $83,900 upfront for the entire
treatment.
The case of Rebecca and Scott S. gives another
sad example of how defunct some health insurance
coverage has become. They had an annual payout limit
of $200,000 – not a small sum anywhere in the normal
world – but still they were told they owed $402,955
for Scott’s treatment after the payment from their
insurance policy was deducted. (Scott had been in
the hospital for 32 days pneumonia). – Sovereign
Valentine, 50, a personal trainer in Plains, Montana
was billed $540,841. for 14 weeks of dialysis care
at a Fresenius clinic. Valentine’s insurer covered
$16,241 out of that, but the clinic billed Valentine
for the unpaid balance of $524,600.
Already as such healthcare costs make a
big dent in the family budget, but as soon as there
is an emergency it can entail financial ruin.
In fact, two-thirds of Americans are not
able to afford a $500 unexpected cost for medical
emergency or for anything else. A recent
study found that only 29% of workers earning up to
$40,000 annually could pay right away a surprise
medical invoice of $500 for acute treatment. Still
with an income between $40,000 and $75,000 only 49%
could cope with it. Even with an income in excess of
$75,000, 30% could not handle it. A shocking 2019
study by researchers from the American Cancer
Society discovered that 137.1 million Americans
suffered “medical financial hardship in the past
year.”
To get treatment, Americans therefore have to
resort to loans and in 2018 alone a total of $88
billion was borrowed by households to cover medical
costs. And when credit runs dry, the next stage is
bankruptcy as medical bills are now the primary
factor in two-thirds of all personal bankruptcies in
the United States.
Overall, the increase in household healthcare
spending has in the last decade far outstripped the
increase in the general inflation, and wages
out-of-pocket expenses leading the pack:
Global comparison of life expectancy and
healthcare expenditure
Anybody but the most diehard free
marketer or pharma lobbyist would admit that the US
pharma and healthcare markets are in deep trouble.
Yet with global comparisons, there is no
hiding that the US healthcare system is in crisis.
The United
States runs the by far biggest and most bloated
healthcare sector in the world when measured as a
share of the total economy. Its annual value was
$3.7 trillion, amounting to 17.9% of GDP (2018).
That is nearly double the average of developed
Western countries (as a share of GDP). But
this does not buy the Americans any better health,
far from it. While spending superbly more than any
other country, the United States ranked only 27th
in the world for its levels of health care
according to a University of Washington study. A
common measure for a global ranking of healthcare
systems is the country’s life expectancy. On this
parameter, the United States ranks only 33rd
in the world – just behind Cuba. And worse
yet, while the trend is globally improving, US life
expectancy has been falling for the past three
years.
The below table ranks countries by life
expectancy with indication of their respective total
healthcare expenditure as a share of GDP,
private and public spending in total.
The higher life expectancy among the top ranking
countries – achieved at much lower cost than in the
US – testifies to the success of their
mainly public universal healthcare systems.
The total healthcare spending (as referenced above)
of the top countries was at the level of 9-10% of
GDP, compared with 17.9% for the US. This while
countries like South Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore
achieved yet much better results for a third of the
total expenditure.
Looking at these figures, one observer summed it
up like this: “Remember there used to be
all those articles about how people in Europe live
longer than Americans because they drink red wine
and eat more olive oil and bull like that? Turns out
it was universal healthcare all along.”
There is no end in sight for the ordeal, as
healthcare costs are predicted to continue their
precipitous rise, as shown in below table.
(Secondary source Zerohedge
https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/us-healthcare-costs-are-exploding-heres-why
)
The neoliberal free-market captured by
the oligarchs killed it
What’s particularly important in the Awara report
is that the US healthcare crisis and global
comparisons serve as a marvelous case study to show
how the so-called free-market is not necessarily
better than a mixed economy. At the very core of the
US healthcare crisis, is the American ideological
precept that healthcare must be a private corporate
for-profit business – never mind any level of
predatory monopolies. But compared with European
countries the US loses hands down on every
parameter. European life expectancy and health
outcomes are far better at half the cost. In a
European-style system all citizens have nearly equal
access to general health services without having to
incur financial hardship in a medical emergency.
It has then been clearly shown that, the
European mixed system of universal healthcare with
public insurance and public hospitals, coupled with
government regulation of drug prices and their
availability, works best. And there’s a
lesson for the wider economy, too.
Yet when you mention government regulation, price
controls and universal healthcare, US politicians
from both parties and most analysts (of the type
that make it into mainstream media) pull out the
socialism card. But this is not a question of the
free-market vs. socialism. There can be no such
question because, first, a mixed economy is not
socialism. And, second, there is no free market in
the United States any longer. What used to be a free
market aka Capitalism, is nothing but a crony
capitalist monopoly ridden system almost exclusively
controlled by an ever more consolidating group of
oligarchs. The choice is not between
socialism and capitalism, but between a real market
economy and the present oligarchy.The data
in this article and its references clearly show to
what extent the oligarchy controls the US markets.
In addition to the already mentioned system
constraints, a functioning healthcare system
requires tight government control on the
pharmaceutical industry with regulations of drug
prices and their availability. When these are not in
place, we get the insanely outrageous situation with
drug prices in the United States. In European
countries, the governments tightly control the drug
markets. Most governments cap prices with maximum
permissible prices that companies can charge for
prescription drugs. The European governments also
wield market power in their capacity of the biggest
medicine buyers by negotiating prices. While
price caps are not even considered on the US market,
the Congress has in a further effort to protect the
oligarchy outright prohibited the government from
negotiating prices even in the one field where there
would be plenty of reason to do it, in its capacity
of administering the federal government run Medicare
prescription drug plans, which accounts for
29 % of all spending on prescription medicines.
The self-imposed ban on negotiating drug
prices was codified in connection with the
Congress approving and President George W. Bush
signing into law in 2003 an otherwise crucially
important reform program – known as Medicare Part D
– to help seniors get access to prescription drug.
By denying the possibility of negotiated
rebates this legislation amounts to nothing else
than a flagrant subsidization by the government of
Big Pharma on the cost of the consumer.
When President Barack Obama pushed through the
healthcare reform known as Affordable Care Act (aka
Obamacare), he – toadying to the Big Pharma lobby –
effectively confirmed the government’s self-imposed
ban to negotiate drug prices.
The Awara Accounting report shows how Medicare
regularly manages to dramatically cut hospital bills
– even by magnitudes of 8 to 12 times – applying its
cost-plus principles.
We can therefore
see why Big Pharma was horrified about government
interfering with their robber markups in drug
prices, too.
The oligarchy controls the government’s pharma
policies in many other ways, too. For example, by
way of their regulatory capture, by
essentially owning the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA), which was original established to control the
industry. They have now set up a revolving door
between industry and FDA, people constantly
alternating between roles of company executive and
FDA director. By this regulatory capture the
pharmaceutical industry is well placed to
rig the system in its favor and to
continually grant itself special privileges while
harassing would-be competition. This happens – among
other things – by extending exclusivity rights on
phony justifications, harassing would-be competitors
and blocking market entry of generics.
The ultimate way by which the health racket has
solidified its hold is by capturing Congress by
multimillion lobbying activities and campaign
contributions. Pharmaceutical companies are
among the biggest spenders on political corruption,
having poured close to $2.5bn into these activities
over the past decade. It has been reported
that, nine out of 10 members of the House of
Representatives, from both parties, and all but
three of the 100 senators have taken campaign
contributions from pharmaceutical and other health
industry companies seeking to affect legislation on
everything from the cost of drugs to how new
medicines are approved.
A giant monopoly scam
How is it that America manages to get the worst
of all worlds when it comes to healthcare. The Awara
study shows that in addition to the original sin of
corporate greed, the exorbitant costs of the US
healthcare system stem from layers upon layers of
distortions with which the system is afflicted.
Each part of the healthcare industry
contributes to what is a giant monopoly scam:
the pharmaceutical companies, medical equipment
manufacturers, drug wholesalers, drug stores, group
purchasing organizations, health insurance
companies, doctors, clinics and hospitals, and what
should be impartial university research.
The monopolization of the pharma and
healthcare industries, and the entire US economy
– essentially an oligarch takeover of the
economy – has not happened by chance,
rather it comes as a direct consequence of
deliberate ideological and political manipulation.
The pharmaceutical industry was the first
love child of the Chicago School economists
with their neoliberal snake oil ideology. which the
financial oligarchy was fast to exploit. Starting
with Ronald Reagan, every president has served these
interests, willingly ignoring the antitrust laws so
as to give corporations free rein to consolidate
market shares by mergers and acquisitions. With each
president – from both parties – the monopolistic
concentration of business and shareholding in
America has grown precipitously eventually to reach
the monstrous levels of the present day.
Just how bad it is has been demonstrated by
Jonathan Tepper in his bestselling
The Myth of Capitalism: Monopolies and the
Death of Competition. Following three mega
waves of mergers and acquisitions in the past three
decades, competition is virtually dead as most
industries are now left with only one player with
absolute domination or up to four players with a
combined total market domination. From business
consolidation, there has naturally followed
concentration of ownership of the companies.
We were able to corroborate the findings of
Tepper in our report which examined the extreme
concentration of corporate ownership in the United
States.
http://blogengine.hellevig.net/post/2019/05/13/Extreme-concentration-of-ownership-in-the-United-States-.aspx
That report demonstrated how ownership of
all major corporations in America has been
concentrated in incredibly few hands. Most
of America’s industries are now oligopolies and the
cancerous condition of horizontal
shareholding – the condition that the same
shareholders own companies which are supposed to be
competitors – has spread across the entire US
economy with the same handful of investors owning
controlling stakes in the overwhelming majority of
the largest US corporations. We established that,
institutional investors like BlackRock, Vanguard,
State Street, Fidelity, and JP Morgan, now (2016)
own 80% of all stock in S&P 500 listed companies.
The Big Three investors – BlackRock, Vanguard and
State Street – alone constitute the largest
shareholder in 88% of S&P 500 firms, which roughly
correspond to America’s 500 largest corporations.
Both BlackRock and Vanguard are among the top five
shareholders of almost 70% of America’s largest
2,000 publicly traded corporations. From an expanded
sample that includes the 3,000 largest publicly
listed corporations (Russell 3000 index), the same
few institutions owned (2016) about 78% of the
equity.
The same conclusions can be drawn from reports,
which show that America’s richest 1% now own
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/americas-richest-1-now-own-much-wealth-middle-and-lower-classes-combined
as much wealth as the middle and lower classes
combined.
There is yet one more ugly and mind-boggling
twist to the concentration of ownership saga, namely
that the handful of investors (Vanguard,
Blackrock and their vassals) who have concentrated
the ownership of all business corporations
– pharma, healthcare, and everything else – in their
hands, the oligopolies owning oligopolies
are themselves further cross-owned, so that
ultimately, we might have the situation that the
whole healthcare sector and Big Pharma – as well as
the whole US economy – is controlled by one giant
oligarch clan (and the very real people who
stand behind them), one interest group of oligarch
investors. (Further evidence below).
To give an idea of just how bad the
monopolization and ownership concentration has got,
we have prepared below tables for the main pharma
and healthcare sectors depicting the biggest
companies by market share and their shareholders.
Pharma manufacturers:
Northern Trust is closely associated with the Big
Three investors having Vanguard as its biggest
shareholder, BlackRock as second, Wellington,
fourth, and State Street as fifth. Wellington, in
turn, is an investment vehicle which seems to be
closely related to Vanguard. Bank of America is
basically also a conduit of the Big Three investors,
having BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street as
second, third, and fourth largest owners,
respectively, after Berkshire Hathaway. Among the
top ten owners also some of the other useful
suspects from above, namely, Wellington, Geode,
Northern Trust. and Dodge & Cox. We have not managed
to find out from open sources any information about
who is actually behind Geode Capital, except for it
being a spin-off from Fidelity.
Pharmacies:
Notice, that the owners of the pharmacies are
largely the same merry group of oligarch firms.
Health Insurers:
In addition to the usual oligarch suspects, among
the investors there is a company called T. Rowe
Price Associates. It is a publicly listed global
asset management firm, and one more tool of the
monopoly investors. Its three biggest owners are the
very same Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street.
Other top ten owners include – as usual – Capital
Group, Geode, Bank of America, and Northern Trust.
Drug Wholesalers:
A further layer of monopolization of the American
drug market is formed by the three companies that
handle more than 90% of the drug wholesale market.
AmerisourceBergen, McKesson, and Central Health. The
total revenue of these the drug distribution
divisions of these three giant was estimate as
$425.1 billion (2017).
And again do note, that the same major oligarch
investors who own the drug makers and the pharmacies
also own these wholesale distributors.
Pharma Benefit Managers
Note that all the three monopolists are owned by
the biggest pharmacies, which in turn are owned by
the Big Three oligarch investors.
Who owns the oligarch owners of the
everything oligopoly
As I already disclosed above, the handful of
investors who own all these pharma and healthcare
oligopolies are themselves cross-owned by each
other. Let’s now look at the details.
These are the biggest owners of
BlackRock:
,
And these are the owners of the mystery
PNC Financial Services, BlackRock’s No. 1 owner:
Vanguard is the second biggest
owner of BlackRock and the biggest owner of PNC. I
remind, that above it was showed that BlackRock and
Vanguard are the two biggest owners – and otherwise
among the top owners – of all of those pharma and
healthcare companies. Vanguard in turn – according
to its own disclosure – is not owned by anybody. I
am not kidding. Vanguard is ghost-owned insofar as
it does not have any owners at all in the
traditional sense of the concept. The company claims
that it is owned by the multiple funds that it has
itself set up and which it manages. This is how the
company puts it on
their home page
https://about.vanguard.com/what-sets-vanguard-apart/why-ownership-matters/
: “At Vanguard, there are no outside owners,
and therefore, no conflicting loyalties.
The company is owned by its funds, which in turn are
owned by their shareholders—including you, if you’re
a Vanguard fund investor.” At the end of the
analysis, it would then seem that Vanguard is owned
by Vanguard itself, certainly nobody should swallow
the charade that those funds stuffed with passive
investor money would exercise any ownership control
over the superstructure Vanguard. We therefore
assume that there is some group of people (other
than the company directors) that have retained the
actual control of Vanguard behind the scenes
(perhaps through one or a few of the funds). In
fact, we believe that all three (BlackRock, State
Street and Vanguard) are tightly controlled
by a group of US oligarchs (or more widely
transatlantic oligarchs), who prefer not to brandish
their power. It is beyond the scope of this
study and our means to investigate this hypothesis,
but whatever, it is bad enough that as a proven fact
these three investor corporations wield this control
over most of the American economy. We also know that
the three act in concert wherever they hold shares.
http://blogengine.hellevig.net/post/2019/05/13/Extreme-concentration-of-ownership-in-the-United-States-.aspx
Further among BlackRock’s owners are…BlackRock,
the fourth biggest owner of itself.
Then there is State Street, the third of the Big
Three investors. Take a deep look at that
BlackRock ownership chart, and you will find there
most of the other top owners which I already listed
as the owners of the pharma and healthcare
oligopolies: Capital (Group), Wellington, Bank of
America, Northern Trust, Geode…When you move to the
next generation owners PNC Financial Services, you
will find all the same and more of the usual
suspects, like, T. Rowe Price Associates and
Berkshire Hathaway. In both lists of owners there
are also such luminaries of Wall Street like, J.P.
Morgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Wells
Fargo & Company, Bank of New York Mellon, and Royal
Bank of Canada.
To give one more example of how all these are
connected, please, take a look at below ownership
chart of Bank of America:
Same oligarch owners again owning another
oligarch owner.
A last one, Northern Trust Corporation:
Concluding remarks
The end result is that today a close-knit
oligarchy controls all major corporations and most
of the US economy. Nowhere is this ownership
concentration and its pernicious effects so visible
as in the pharma and healthcare industries.
The definitive takeaway from all this is that the
myth of the superiority of private over public
ownership is wrong. It would absolutely not make any
sense to privatize healthcare and public utilities
according to the tenets of the free-market religion.
It is perfectly well and beneficial to leave the
backbones of the economy in public ownership as long
as there is a mixed economy with private competition
challenging government ownership and as long as the
government does not mess with areas of the economy
which are not crucial for the national well-being.
The most important lesson for the rest of the
world from this case study of the US healthcare
sector is that the US ideology of neoliberalism and
the crony capitalism that it breeds does not bring
real life value for an economy, on the contrary, we
have seen that privatization is detrimental over
state ownership and public services in the
healthcare sector, and therefore it must be the case
in many other core sectors of the economy as well.
Unfortunately, I think the US healthcare system
is unreformable – as is the economy at large. One
day the whole economy will just implode and reform
itself through a cataclysm of epic proportions, as
was the case with Soviet Russia.
This article was originally published by "The
Saker" - -
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