Fix Who? COVID-19, universal healthcare, and the American savings rate

Instead of focusing on universal healthcare, should the United States be focused on increasing the savings rate?

CALIFORNIA—If Chris Martin and Guy Berryman could mass-produce more bone-igniting lights, that might be able to fix a lot of people.  As COVID-19 continues to terrorize and decimate the limbs and lifeblood of the economies and healthcare systems around the globe, much attention is being paid to the availability of hospital supplies and the loss in productivity stemming from a sudden massive attack to industries and sectors across the board.  Social media is awash in exhortations for individuals to donate personal protective equipment (PPE) to hospitals that are in short supply and follow instructions from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Being careful not to engage in the post-hoc-ergo-propter-hoc fallacy for leap projections, particularly when discussing political and cultural trends, it’s important to recognize how the government response to this virus could not only affect the election, but in a best-case scenario could be the catalyst for systemic cultural change of healthcare finance.  Systemic change might be necessary.  The current global death toll is over 50,000 people.  The United States provided 6,059 of those, and how many of them didn’t get enough care due to monetary reasons is unclear.

2020 is an American presidential election year, and a focal point for the Democratic party (the non-incumbent) is universal healthcare.  The recent legislation from the White House providing emergency financial relief for those suffering greatly has caused both rejoicing and concern for what the government will look like when the imminent dangers posed by the novel sickness have abated.  State power expands during crises.  It does not tend to shrink again afterwards.

Would that be a bad thing?  Providing universal healthcare would mean that government takes the authority to do that.  A talking point that comes up often in the pro-universal healthcare argument camp is that it is wrong for anyone to need to choose between basic sustenance and an unexpected medical expense.   Whether rectifying that wrong through extending or reducing government control is currently up for contention.  Less up for contention is why that choice would arise in the first place.  While the sudden need to spend a lump sum of several hundred dollars would put a strain on almost anyone, let alone the ill and pained, the fact that so many American people do not have enough savings for such an event warrants another look.

Two countries that have both been dramatically affected by the virus, have nationalized healthcare coverage, and have a healthy savings rate are China and Italy.  China has been working on its healthcare reforms with projects such as Healthy China 2020 and Healthy China 2030, but the giant failure of Mao’s “iron rice bowl” (state provision for employment, healthcare, housing, etc., etc.,) has led generations to value thrift.  China’s savings rate is reported to hover at 20%, and out-of-pocket spending for healthcare measured as a percentage is 36.1%.  Nationally subsidized healthcare leaves citizens with affordable care through underfunded public hospitals.  This breeds its own problems, but generally, people can pay for the care they need with the money they have.

Italy, the second epicenter of the disease, also has a high savings rate at 22.6%, which might play into why it is not listed on the “affected by catastrophic health spending” graph presented by the World Health Organization.  It is also not on the graph which maps incidences of unmet need due to cost, distance, or waiting time.  The out-of-pocket healthcare spending percentage hovers at 23.5%, and anything other than basic mandatory care will accrue some sort of fee.  In general, the healthcare system in Italy is esteemed to be affordable and in good functioning order.

The United States has a personal savings rate of 5.7%.  The healthcare out-of-pocket percentage is also already very low, at 11%.  Now confirmed with the most COVID-19 cases, the attitude of the current government toward managing this healthcare crisis has led more people to view the Democratic proposals of universal healthcare as favorable.  However, based on the enormous population size, geographic anomalies, and income disparity within the United States, trying to implement universal healthcare that would satisfy the needs of such a diverse population would be a Sisyphean task.  The examples of China and Italy show that nationalized healthcare is still not always completely free or adequate, and that the responsibility to shoulder additional healthcare expense to some extent still falls to the consumer.  As such, making universal personal financial prudence possible deserves policy-level attention as well.

If the future president attempts to put in place robust universal health care in the United States without critically thinking about how this kind of government spending might affect other aspects of the production economy, the United States might be in danger of getting what it wants and not what it needs.  If that happens, all the light we can see still won’t fix anyone.

Parent teacher conferences

This week we had our parent-teacher conferences, which, I have to admit, were a bit disappointing for me, because I thought I would get to know the parents a bit better.  I know that there are a few PhDs and MAs among our parent set, and this year, we have a lot of new families, many with international backgrounds.  I have so many questions to ask them, NOT ABOUT THEIR KIDS.  (I like kids, but sometimes I miss the life that didn’t include reminding other people to use the toilet.)

After these conferences, I am more firmly convinced than ever that I will not be registering on babylist.com.  After the fifth or sixth time hearing the same questions, I was completely fed up with talking about how it’s really important to develop the skills of order, concentration, coordination, and independence so that the academics could come with less struggle.  (And I wasn’t even the lead teacher running the conferences… I really don’t know how she was so nice for every person.)

I read one time that a tour guide or a park ranger got tired of hearing the same questions and got a bit snarky with his guests, and that he was reminded by a senior colleague that each guest is asking the questions for the first time.

Well, that’s nice.

The end.

 

 

What came before the Unicorns?

From this day forward, unicorns are officially not the first, second, or third thing I want to think about on any day of the week.

uhhhh…okay…. 

Well, for starters, now I am working in a preschool.  It’s quite interesting, and I’ve definitely learned a lot.  For instance, when we cut paper for art, we use a legal size sheet and cut it in quarters.  And that kids need to do jobs that are developmentally appropriate as well as intellectually challenging. (How those metrics are applied is a different story.)

In my place of work, there are several young children who are still learning the social grace of not rudely interrupting each other in their eagerness to tell me important things.

Things like “I love unicorns! UNICORNS!  RAINBOW DASH!!”

(apparently, Rainbow dash is a name of a UNICORN.)

And other things like “ON MY BIRTHDAY, I’M HAVING A PINK SPARKLY CAKE!! WITH UNICORNS!!”

And more things like “I HAVE PINK UNICORNS ON MY SHIRT!! ON MY PANTS!! ON MY SHOES!!”

As mentioned before.  They are still learning how to not interrupt others, so I AM NORMALLY INFORMED ABOUT ALL THESE UNICORNS AT THE SAME TIME.

I think UNICORNS got tattooed in the grey matter somewhere sometime last week when I heard about UNICORNS for the hundredth time.

….

I really wonder what life was like before the UNICORNS….

Well, I guess it could be worse…

They could be crazy about slugs or cockroaches.

Old post!

These photos are in my first photo video, but in case you haven’t seen it, enjoy.

Feeling a little bit of the hiraeth setting in, so wanted to revisit these memories. 😀

 

By the way, I did notice that I’m wearing the same shirt in three pictures. Yes, it was laundered in between.

Hero!

Hello everyone.

Guess what!

I MET JOHN POMFRET ALIVE AND IN PERSON.

It was so cool.

I was first introduced to him when I read Chinese Lessons: Five classmates and the Story of the New China.

And then I got connected because one of my profs at the last uni I attended had been his colleague and work senior.

So anyway, here are some

Things I have learned recently:

  1. Anecdotal leads are good. Declarative leads are also good.
  2. Baby reporters normally start out in crime.
  3. If you finish your work early under a Fulbright, you might be able to go and travel somewhere else. You should probably consider the state of the world economy when planning that trip. Also visa regulations.
  4. It was possible at one time to obtain an MA degree at Stanford in four years.
  5. Objectivity and fairness are two different things.
  6. The press badge doesn’t go as far as you think it will.
  7. Journalistic research and academic research both follow the same pattern.
  8. Homeschooling is good prep work for being a foreign correspondent.

A bit of a bizarre list there, but journalism is one of the most bizarre fields.  If you’re going in, you might as well go all the way.

I like interviewing people.  Always have, ever since I was a kid.  Ambulance drivers, bank tellers, garbage truck drivers, the mailman…these are the ones I remember from elementary school. I’ve gotten even more into it recently, and about three weeks ago, I got to interview a journalist that I’ve admired for a long time.  He was in China for Tiananmen ’89, and the way he writes about it in his memoir is so gripping, I wish I could have been there myself.

He was an efficient student and writer. He was at Stanford originally for one of the STEM fields, but then got hooked on Chinese history and politics, so changed his major to that. He finished his undergraduate degree in three years, went to Nanjing Uni, then went back to Stanford for a fourth year, in which time he completed his M.A.

He got some experience reporting crime in Riverside, which was a big eye-opener for him, then he got a Fulbright scholarship to go to Singapore.  So he went to Singapore, wrote the required treatise in six months instead of one year, then went to travel in Japan.  “It was the first time I had ever been hungry,” he noted.  At that time, Japan was at the height of its economic powerhouse status, and the US dollar didn’t go that far.

I asked him for some pointers in journalism, and learned some new vocabulary.  An anecdotal lead is when we are following the story of a person, and a declarative lead is what it sounds like. The top thing to think about when choosing an anecdotal lead is whether or not it is illustrative of a larger trend.  Caveat to the writer though, don’t overuse the anecdotal lead.  “I had an editor who told me, ‘I don’t want to read anything that starts with Mohammed scratched his eyes,’” Pomfret recalled.  As a foreign correspondent, most of his article topics were self-assigned, “because we know what’s on the ground better than the editor behind the desk back home.” Finally, on the topic of reporting objectively in a war zone, he said that objectivity as a concept is subjective, and he tries to report fairly, as opposed to objectively. “It just means allowing the other side to have an appearance, and say anything they wish regarding the topic,” he said.

But the question I most wanted to ask was “how do you avoid information overload?” Unfortunately, I added some extra words in there, so I ended up hearing about how he researched his new book—it took him six years, two of which were wasted on research that never saw the light of day. “But I know it now,” he said proudly.

He tended a bar in Paris, which was apparently less cool than it sounded, and reported in Bosnia. He’s also been to Africa.

I was so excited to meet him but after we finished, I still felt like something was lacking, like I should have asked something else.  I’m not quite sure what it was.

Anyway, he’s still one of the journalists I admire a lot.

 

 

 

Book Review: Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China

Hello everyone, long time no see.

My time in China as an undergrad student ended in July, so I’ve been back for exactly one month and two days.   It’s been a smooth transition back~well, pretty much except for the continuing job hunting melodrama~(let’s leave that alone for now) and the occasional severe craving for GOOD CHINESE FOOD.

Anyway, I wanted to share a really good book about China–coz that’s my thing now, reading books about China and Chinese culture in English. (I do find this just slightly ironically entertaining.)

This book is divided into three parts according to the title.  The first section on fortune focuses on the post-revolution strivings of people for a higher quality of life.  We get to follow a few characters, Ai Weiwei, Han Han, and Michael all the way through the book, and recognize their strivings for an undefined “more”. Osnos does a really good job at summarizing the immediate aftermath of Tiananmen, a story so complex that despite reading about it and then discussing it with others multiple times, I STILL DON’T HAVE THE DETAILS QUITE EXACTLY RIGHT, and I can’t remember for the life of me the timeline and job descriptions of all the important people.  It was a little more exciting to read about China’s internet expansion, especially because I was drinking the kool-aide in Silicon Valley Beijing.  I specifically remember the example of China’s first online dating service, which came about when the internet was still nascent in China, and through the lens of the entrepreneur working with a certain demographic–(single, hoping to meet a partner) we watch the bewilderingly fast economic development in terms of what people were looking for in their future partner by the shift into higher demand for the availability of a luxurious lifestyle.

But I found the second two chapters even more captivating.  Part Two, Truth, is about the flow of information.  Osnos is an American journalist, and his perspective on the Communist Party’s increasingly desperate control of information while not new, carried new weight due to his research and interviews with like-minded individuals.  I found his research and interview series with Tang Jie the most fascinating. I like how he raises the issue of a national identity crisis in direct conjunction with the fear of power loss by the CP. It’s really easy to villanize the CP, but I think Osnos brings up a lot of good points about it. (Particularly the comparisons between China and Russia, as well as China and the Arab Spring.)

Finally, the discussion of faith was captivating because it continued the discussion of the one-party state and its relationship to people. The CP is not doing a great job at filling the spiritual void in its people (is that surprising?) but that being said, it has been trying to reform its image as a power worthy of being trusted. The most apparent step in that direction is the visible campaign for cutting inter-governmental corruption. Christianity has spread, as well as Buddhism, but the main thing still seems to be nothing.  (My own anecdotal evidence supports this hypothesis.)

I particularly like the question he poses on page 227:

“..If the average news consumer in the West read, watched, or heard no more than one China story per week, should it be about people with dramatic lives or typical lives?”

I think this is a good question. I have to admit I didn’t have a whole lot of “Chinese” friends, but the couple I do seem to be more bothered about university course registration and credit transfers than their supposedly repressed life under a non-democratic government. 

In conclusion, this is one of the most exciting pieces of non-fiction that I remember reading, and if you read it, I guarantee you’ll be more confused and intrigued than ever by the country that Jack Ma calls home.

(ISBN: 978-0-374-28074-1)

 

 

Fangirling

I’ve fallen out of the habit of writing my thoughts, so in an effort to get back into it, I’ve been reading blogs by other people in a similar life stage.  Here are the ones I really like.

Not Another Foreigner: Notes from a 20’s and sexy expat in Asia.

We were in the same Chinese class in MCU.  We were never super close friends, but we ate together a couple times and exchanged Christmas presents.  So when she started a blog, I started reading.  I REALLY LOVE IT! IT’S SO INSPIRING, and I’m so thankful I’ve gotten to meet her in person.  https://notanotherforeigner.wordpress.com/2015/06/26/have-you-ever-heard-god-never-says-no/ This is my FAVORITE post of hers.  I’ve read it four or five times and I almost cry EVERY TIME.

Justinnonng: I like to run.

(And read. And write.)

I feel like I’m reading the to-be Ishiguro when I read his shorts.  I want to be THE FIRST PERSON IN LINE TO PURCHASE when he comes out with a memoir.  His pieces on running have inspired me to run more. I LOVE THIS GUY! He’s eloquent and sharp and reflective and expressive. I told my friend in Singapore that she can meet him in person and fangirl for me.  Check it out here: https://justinnonng.com/2016/06/25/reservist-diaries-18/ (This is just one post, I like everything.)

Thoughts on why these particular blogs:

I love the way these people think.  I love their honesty, I love the metaphors, I love that they end each post with room to imagine what’s next in their lives.  In E.M. Forester’s A Passage to India, he puts forth that ordinary life is extremely boring, and anyone who attempts to portray it as less than such is a liar.  Maybe it is, but Gabriela and Justin do a really good job of pointing out all that is beautiful within that existence.

Also, I like them because I feel like it’s kind of a roadmap/comparable experience to share.  I feel like they understand a unique set of problems really well, and their thoughts on life are more useful/encouraging than others.  Especially in this stage of “pre-postgrad”, these guys don’t take this uncertainty for granted, and that is very re-assuring.

 

 

 

Hilarious

So there was that one time….

a professor tried to insult me but since I didn’t understand the cultural context, I took it as a compliment. (My friend thought it was very funny.)

…An American research professor was visiting on our last day of class, and he was…very boring, let’s say that.  And the reg. professor is desperately trying to get us to “look alive” so he asks me “Why do you laugh so often in my class?”

Me: Well, firstly, sometimes the way you say things is a bit not right, and it sounds funny.

(I really should not have said that out loud. Really.  In China, you’re never supposed to criticize a professor.  Ever.)

But the prof was just standing there, smiling, so I continued.

And secondly, you often stop your sentences in the middle and then start new ones without finishing, and its hilarious.  I have never had a professor do this before.

According to my friend, you could have cut the tension with a knife—apparently everyone was staring at me.  How I didn’t pick up on that AT ALL is amazing.

And the prof says, “Well, you’re a typical American, aren’t you?”

(This is intended as an insult.  My Singaporean friend says, “What does that mean?”  My other French friend says, “No, not really.”)

Prof: “Very outspoken and honest.”

Me: (nodding and smiling) “Thanks.”

The end.

New gig–part II

Or maybe it won’t?

Well, here we are on day 4 of this conference, and I AM GOING INSANE.

Firstly, it’s in the middle of nowhere.

Secondly, there are some nice nature sights around to see and I can’t see them because I’m working in the daytime.

Thirdly, this work is not turning out to be that interesting.  When I write this on my Linkedin, it will say “Professional Notetaker for Visiting Canadian Professor” but in reality, I just wrote a few lecture notes on the board in English while he waved his arms around and went on a million tangents.  I’m also in charge of translating some small group notes from Chinese to English, and with every sentence I appreciate the art of Chinese calligraphy less and less. (Scribbling=universal language, therefore, the professor can interpret these notes without me.)

Fourth, (and this is just due to the timing), there are two new films out that are supposed to be pretty cutting-edge in terms of storyline and cinematography and I really want to see them, and NEITHER ONE is being played around here.  So for that reason (as well as the gym and the university internet that has magically been allowing me to check facebook without a VPN) I can’t wait to get back to Beijing.

*******************************************************************************

But!

The air here is SUPER CLEAN.  This is a blessing not to take for granted.  I’m soaking up every molecule possible.

The hotel came with lotion.  I’ve been too cheap to buy lotion for myself, so I’ve been enjoying this luxury.

The weather here is really good.  Perfect autumn weather. Even for a wimpy Californian. Beijing is too dry and too dirty.

It’s not too crowded. This event is at a college campus twice the size of Peking U with about a third of the students. (Just guessing from the daily observations.)

The food in these cafeterias is VERY BOMB.  My dad would be so jealous of all the things I’m eating here.  My dad needs to learn how to cook like this.  I mentioned before it’s also included.  😉

Well, we can’t have everything can we….ahahahaha

But seriously, if anyone wants to do a short video chat with me, I’d be so happy to hear from someone not related to the world of clinical psychology.

New gig

So, in China right now it is a holiday.  I’m pretty sure it’s supposed to be the Mid-Autumn Festival, but it’s also overlapping with Independence day, so the point is, I’ve got ten days off school.  And during this period of time, my program coordinator was looking for a native English speaker to fill some assistant role in a conference on psychotherapy.  Experience to add on LinkedIn? Yeah, I’ll take it.  

I was really very happy to find out that transportation, accommodation, and food were included, as well as a small daily stipend.  Whoo hoo. So the infrastructure for completing the work was set in place AND there’s money involved AT THE SAME TIME.

Truly impressive and amazing.

So, here I am, in a hotel room at a university 90 minutes away from Beijing, after my first day of taking notes for a Canadian professor.  It’s not difficult, in fact, the most difficult thing is to stay awake while he’s simultaneously going on three tangents (or more.)  He has an interpreter, I met him and asked him some questions.  But interpreting isn’t his main job, so I didn’t find his answers very satisfying.

I was so surprised to see that this Canadian professor shows up to this 10 day conference on day one wearing sweatpants, sandals, and a t-shirt that has seen better days.

It’s gonna be a fun week…