AIG
If you are legally obligated to pay someone a bonus, even if the company basically goes bankrupt, is it really a bonus?
A blog about the city of Los Angeles, the Green Party, and green politics in L.A.
The Budget establishes a reserve fund of more than $630 billion over 10 years to finance fundamental reform of our health care system that will bring down costs and expand coverage. The reserve is funded half by new revenue and half by savings proposals that promote efficiency and accountability, align incentives toward quality, and encourage shared responsibility. In addition, the Budget calls for an effort beyond this down payment, to put the Nation on a path to health insurance coverage for all Americans. However, additional funding will be needed. This effort must be open, and must consider all kinds of approaches as part of this process. Some major strides have already been made in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 [AKA the stimulus bill], including $19 billion for health information technology, $1 billion for comparative effectiveness research, and subsidies for the newly unemployed to maintain their health insurance. These initiatives put the Nation on the path toward health reform.The key phrase is probably "a path to health insurance coverage for all Americans." That is a rather watered-down goal, in my opinion, leaving a lot of wiggle room.