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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Cash/gov't securities Bond fund S&P 500 index Small-cap fund (wishire 4500) International (EAFE) They're adding some lifecycle funds soon. But I believe those aren't true funds but rather preset ratios in the existing funds that change the ratios as you/they age. The pathetic thing about TSP is that something like 48% of assets are in cash. ETA: oops, not as pathetic as I thought. 39%, with 42% in the 500 fund. |
Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Cash is probably the default -- it frequently is. Some companies are trying to use other things, but it's problematic. I personally really like the lifestyle-type funds, or when they will rebalance for you. |
Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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If you mean the latter, how would the private provider accomplish it? If you mean the former, what exactly makes it better? |
Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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If you think private companies can do it cheaper, I have a Bay Bridge to sell you.
Club never bothered to answer my post observing that private companies generated the cost overruns on the Bay Bridge, which is too bad. Presumably he would say that the problem is that the state is the buyer, and lets the contractor get away with shit. To which I would point out that there was only one contractor with the capacity to make a bid, which probably explains why the market isn't quite working efficiently. No buyer, public or private, would have much leverage. And then there's the rise in the price of steel, which would have affected any project.
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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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If you think private companies can do it cheaper, I have a Bay Bridge to sell you.
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Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Nobody really has to bear any risk except the consumers who are uninsured or underinsured, and the health care industry dumps most heavily on them becasue they are the only ones without sufficient clout to bargain. In short, there is not a single patiicipant in the market for health care who actually deals at arm's length in a risk-reward setting. |
Gotta love the name
"The Support Antiterrorism by Fostering Effective Technologies (SAFETY) Act was intended to spur development by limiting companies' liability against lawsuits related to antiterrorism products' use."
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0505/050205gsn1.htm Anyway. No need to get into an extended discussion of "how can weapons be safe" blah blah blah. |
Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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The fact is, most of the in-house guys didn't see the deals that got Enron and Tyco and AIG in trouble (I'm not as familiar with the others). They were looked at wholly outside and at the highest levels in the company. Furthermore, the in-house lawyers are actually the least likely to spill. They can be fired and disbarred for revealing client confidences, and they can't sue their employers if they get fired for whistle-blowing. This was in the courts a few years back and the in-house lawyers lost. On the other hand, the public acounting firms doing the deals had a public duty, at least with respect to their audit clients, to the shareholders and the markets. Outside counsel had an ethical duty under the Model Rules to not assist their clients in perpetrating fraud. The guys in the most trouble are the ones that should be. |
Putting aside Judicial nominations and steroids
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Yes, the health care system is fucked up for a variety of reasons, but you can't claim it's market failure when the current structure is far from any kind of "market" as we usually understand the term. The moral question is the fundamental one--should health care be allocated in a way other than the market. If so, how do you design a regulatory regime to implement best whatever allocation you want, while also minimizing waste and unfairness. But the justification for doing that is not because the "market" failed--it's because you don't "like" the result the market would reach.* To the contrary, the US has the best health care because it has, to the greatest degree of any developed country, actually let a true market remain to a fair degree. *contrast, e.g., a market failure like pollution--there there is not a market in the cost of pollution, and there's a collective action problem in limiting it, so one can say it's market failure that we need to cure, not merely impose a moral view of how much pollution should be permitted. |
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