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World Taking Free Ride On America's Healthcare Innovations

November 19th, 2009 @ 7:48 pm

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Categories: BNET, Leadership, Management, Workplace, economy

If you’ve been following the healthcare debate, then you’ve probably heard of this WHO finding, which forms the basis of so many arguments for reform: “The U.S. health system spends a higher portion of its gross domestic product than any other country but ranks 37 out of 191 countries according to its performance.”

But scholars at the CATO Institute counter that those stats do not provide an accurate diagnosis of the health of America’s healthcare system.  When one factors in innovation (basic science, diagnostics and therapeutics), they argue, then the American system does not look so bad.  America has fewer people than the EU but we’ve recently won more Nobel Prizes in medicine and physiology and produced more pharmaceutical wonder drugs over the last few decades.

If an ambitious doctor is looking for fertile ground to find a better cure, America looks like it’s the best place to set up shop.  It follows then, that attempts to exert government control over the healthcare system could thwart innovation and also weaken one of the American economy’s strongest sectors.

However, the report’s authors mention an odd side effect of our system which I think weakens, rather than helps, their case:

Consider, for example, the frequent claim that European health systems achieve similar health outcomes to those of the United States at a much lower cost. That claim fails to consider that higher U.S. spending levels could be generating innovations that improve health outcomes in Europe and around the world.

As the CATO scholars go on to point out, the rest of the world is essentially getting a free ride off of our investments in medical innovations.  When these innovations can be controlled and patented, as is often the case with new drugs, then American companies and our broader economy both benefit overall.  But many investments in innovation, such as long-term health studies, end up as global public goods.  We pay the price to figure out a new procedure and everyone else gets to adopt it, free of charge.

Perhaps there is a better way for the world to share the costs of all these healthcare advances since the benefits don’t necessarily trickle down to Americans who can’t afford insurance.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

Big Food's Hunger Myth

November 17th, 2009 @ 1:43 pm

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Categories: BNET, International Business, Leadership, Management, Public policy, Research, Supply Chain, Sustainability, economy

According to a new report by the US Department of Agriculture, more than one in seven American families suffered from “food insecurity” sometime in 2008 and we should all be concerned that that figure is rising.  Many media outlets have eaten this report up at face value, blasting similar headlines about how more Americans are “going hungry.”

This hunger awareness drive is not new, though.  Feeding America, a nonprofit funded in large part by the food industry, and its partner, the Ad Council, have been running an Ogilvy-powered ad campaign for a year now which claims one in eight Americans “live with hunger.”  Feeding America even connected with Matt Damon to pitch its hunger talking points on the season finale of HBO’s Entourage.

Obviously, everyone is against hunger.  And whenever someone in a country as rich as America can’t afford food, it’s a disgrace. We clearly have the resources to keep everyone well-fed.

So here’s my problem: these hunger numbers just don’t seem to add up when you realize how many people in America are over-fed.

Just look at Feeding America’s own website.  Do their “faces of hunger” from across America look like they’re starving to you?

We don’t have a serious hunger problem in the land of the absurdly cheap one dollar double cheeseburger. We have an obesity epidemic.

Let’s check the government’s own data.  In 2008, only one state (Colorado) had an obesity rate that was less than 20 percent.  According to the latest CDC stats, 32.7 percent of American adults are now overweight, 34.3 percent are obese and 5.9 percent are are extremely obese.  I’m supposed to believe that roughly 14 percent of American families are “food insecure” when only 27 percent of American adults are not overweight or obese?

Many will counter that it must be poor people and the nation’s children who are “going hungry.”  But again, according to the government’s own data, around 17 percent of children are now obese. And paradoxically, many studies have confirmed a correlation between poverty and obesity. While the USDA claims that one in seven American families are “food insecure,” the CDC’s data shows that one of seven low-income, preschool-aged children is obese.

So why is Big Food trying to convince us that there is a huge hunger problem?  My theory is that Feeding America and its backers, which include Kraft, the Campbell Soup Company, Wal-Mart and ConAgra Foods, want to hype hunger so that no new regulations try to tackle obesity.  What politician would dare propose a new tax on fatty or empty calorie foods when the public thinks one in seven families can’t put enough food on the table?  And who is now going to try and stop the redistribution of tens of billions of our tax dollars to King Corn and his Frankenfood court each year?

One thing is certain.  President Obama’s controversial pick to lead the USDA, Iowa’s former Governor Tom Vilsack, and his friends at Monsanto, won’t be going hungry any time soon.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

When Nonprofits Compete with Businesses

November 16th, 2009 @ 2:42 pm

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Categories: BNET, Green Business, Leadership, Management, Public policy, economy

Two Seattle-based organizations illustrate how the distinction is blurring between charities and businesses.  Grist is a popular news blog and Groundwire is a consulting shop that helps organizations build up their online capabilities. Grist competes with every other new media site for eyeballs and advertising dollars while Groundwire has to battle with every other ad agency for new website contracts.

But both have an inherent advantage over other service providers in the field.*  Because they have an environmental component to their missions, they are both classified as nonprofits.  That means they avoid paying many federal income taxes and can supplement their operating budgets with tax-exempt donations.

First off, it is worth noting that there are disadvantages with establishing an organization as a nonprofit.  The group’s founders cannot sell or cash out, for example.  And it’s not necessarily easier to rely on donors rather than just customers.

And finally, I am not accusing either of these groups of doing anything illegal or unethical.  Both have to make their cases to the IRS that they should qualify as tax-exempt charities working solely in the public’s interest and they’ve both been approved.

However, I’m not convinced that nonprofits with this level of commercial activity deserve the exact same tax breaks as pure charities.  Perhaps it’s time for Congress to clarify the rules.

*Disclosures: I’ve helped an environmental group with a media buy on Grist before.  I also own a for-profit online news site as well as a consulting practice that helps environmental groups, among others, develop websites.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

Creepy: Justice Department Went After News Sites' Visitor List

November 10th, 2009 @ 2:23 pm

1 Comment

Categories: BNET, Leadership, Marketing, Public policy, Web 2.0, economy

Unless your a lefty activist, you’ve probably never heard of the online news site IndyMedia. But regardless of where you stand on the political spectrum, the First Amendment rights of the site’s citizen-journalist operators must be protected from federal interference.

Recently, US Attorney Tim Morrison sent a subpoena demanding “all IP traffic to and from www.indymedia.us” on June 25, 2008. The request also asked for IP addresses, times, and any other identifying information of the site’s visitors such as email addresses, physical addresses, registered accounts, Social Security numbers, bank account numbers and credit card numbers. And most troubling of all, the subpoena even instructed the site’s host “not to disclose the existence of this request,” even though it’s probably illegal to send such a gag order to a journalist.

As Declan McCullagh reports on CBSNews.com, the Justice Department has somewhat limited powers when dealing with the press. Its guidelines dictate that “no subpoena may be issued to any member of the news media” without “the express authorization of the attorney general.”

Morrison has since withdrawn his subpoena and there has been no official comment on why there was an investigation in the first place.  Perhaps Morrison disregarded protocol, since a Justice Department official claims the attorney general’s office in Washington never saw the subpoena.

In my opinion, President Obama’s Attorney General Eric Holder cannot stay mum on this issue.  There needs to be a clear reprimand from the top, not a string of “no comments.”  Otherwise, the Justice Department leaves the impression, even if it’s unintended, that they can continue to snoop on online news operations.

Related posts on BNET:

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

Capitalism Also Falling on Berlin Wall Anniversary

November 9th, 2009 @ 1:10 pm

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Categories: BNET, International Business, Leadership, Management, Strategy, Sustainability, economy

20 years ago today, the Berlin Wall came crashing down, taking with it the communist regimes that haunted Eastern Europe during the 20th century. World leaders are gathering in Germany’s capital to commemorate the reunification of Germany and the end of the Cold War.

Of course, the fall of the Wall has come to symbolize more than a political and military win for the West.  It also represents the idea that free markets work better than planned socialist economies.

However, a new global poll has found that today’s recession has many doubting pure capitalism.

According to pollster Doug Miller, “It appears that the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 may not have been the crushing victory for free-market capitalism that it seemed at the time — particularly after the events of the last 12 months.”

Here are the poll’s key findings:

Only 11 percent of people surveyed across 27 countries thought free market capitalism is working well, while 51 percent believed its problems can be solved with more regulation and reform, the poll said.

In only the United States (25 percent) and Pakistan (21 percent), did more than one in five people agree that capitalism works well in its current form, the poll conducted for the BBC World Service said.

A majority now believe free-market capitalism doesn’t really work.  Were the eulogies over socialism’s demise premature?  Share your predictions below.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

Is Industry Corrupting Academic Research?

November 4th, 2009 @ 11:25 am

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Categories: BNET, Job Search, Leadership, Management, Public policy, Research, Workplace, economy

Over half of academic life science researchers maintained financial ties with industry, according to survey results published in Health Affairs.

Here are the key details about the relationship between universities and corporate America, according to the Wall Street Journal:

About a third of the respondents said they had served as consultants, nearly a quarter said they had been paid speakers and 20% said they had received research funding from industry. That last figure is down from 28% of researchers who said they received research funding from industry in a similar survey conducted in 1995.

The authors suggest a number of possible causes of the drop in researchers who said they got industry funding for research, including a big increase in NIH research funding since 1995 and more scrutiny of academic-industry ties.

Interestingly, it was also found that faculty with industry support “were more productive than faculty without such support on virtually every measure.” However, we cannot conclude that corporate support caused the productivity surge, since it’s possible that the most productive researchers tend to attract the most money.

Is Industry Corrupting Academic Research?

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Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

FBI Wants Businesses to Rat on Their Customers

November 3rd, 2009 @ 3:47 pm

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Categories: BNET, Leadership, Management, Public policy, Workplace, economy

If you demand identity privacy or insist on paying with cash when patronizing a local business, then you could be a suspected terrorist.  That’s according to FBI flyers which have been sent to tattoo shops as part of its “Communities Against Terrorism” drive.

The government now wants local businesses to keep an eye on their customers and report any suspicious activity. Apparently, getting a group tattoo or radically changing your hairstyle is a cause for concern.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but aren’t most potential terrorists religious fanatics from the Islamic world who sneak into America hellbent on wreaking havoc?  Kind of like those 9/11 highjackers?  So why target tattoo shops, then, FBI?  Muslims can’t get tattoos per their religious traditions.  And who would bother getting a tattoo if they were about to blow themselves up?

I have to doubt whether this initiative is really about the terrorist bogeyman.  What’s more likely: Selling a million dollar lottery ticket or selling to a terrorist?  It seems just as, if not more, plausible that this is about quashing political dissent.

Getting neighbors to rat on their neighbors is a page straight out of the Soviet Union playbook.  When there is that kind of distrust at the local level, it’s a lot more difficult to rally around a petition against the government.

If business owners care more about the principles for which this government stands than for whatever officials happen to have the power that day, then they have a responsibility to reject these types of FBI-community “partnerships.”

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

Are Dirty Office Jokes Illegal Now That the Hate Crime Law Passed?

October 29th, 2009 @ 5:26 pm

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Categories: BNET, Leadership, Management, Public policy, Workplace

We all know a coworker that slips inappropriate jokes into the conversation here and there. So now that President Obama has signed an updated hate crime bill (ironically stuffed into a defense measure) into law, does that mean the “thought police” are going to send everyone who gets a cheap laugh from that fellow to jail?

First of all, keep in mind that the bill expands federal hate crime legislation that’s been on the books since 1968. Along with race, religion and national origin, it now covers “actual or perceived” sexual orientation and gender identity as well. If local authorities don’t have the will or resources to investigate violent crimes motivated by this type of hate (yes, critics, all crimes are indeed motivated by hate), then the Attorney General has the right to swoop in and finish off the case.

In other words, your crass coworker still has the legal right to spew his opinions on race, religion and sexual orientation. But if that coworker is notorious for making jokes about gays all day at work and then one night he goes out and commits a violent crime against someone, the federal government could investigate the entire office, turning the “criminal prosecution into a political correctness prosecution.”

Therefore, if the joke wouldn’t get cracked in front of the cameras, it shouldn’t be said in the office either. Simply put, unless those soundbites are relevant to your job, keep your mouth shut.

And one last thing: I’m not a lawyer and obviously cannot offer legal advice. But I have read the whole bill and gather that this the extent of what could happen. If you have a different interpretation of this new law, feel free to share it below.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

New Public Option Could Lead to Ultimate Red State/Blue State Showdown

October 27th, 2009 @ 2:18 pm

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Categories: BNET, Leadership, Public policy, Research, Workplace, economy

Does your state bleed Barack blue or Republican red?  America seems more divided than ever between liberal and conservative regions and at this point, our public discourse has become so hyper-partisan that one starts to wonder whether half the country lives in France while the other half lives in a John Wayne movie.

If you are convinced that the dominant political philosophy in your state leads to the best economic outcomes, the new public option proposal may put your assumptions to the test.

Under Senator Harry Reid’s proposal for healthcare reform, states will have the option to opt out of the federal public option. Many are assuming that red states will stick to the status quo by opting out while blue states will put their fate in the hands of the feds.

If this proposal passes, it could set up the ultimate red state/blue state showdown, as Peter Brown suggests in a Wall Street Journal op-ed today:

Will some people migrate to states that offer it, perhaps because they are more trusting of government than insurance companies, while others head the other way for the opposite reason?

Then there is the matter of whether people attracted to states with the public option will be more or less likely to be a net plus to the accepting state’s economy, both in terms of their productivity and their need for government services.

Do you think the red state or blue state way will be better for business?  Please share your predictions below.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.

Hook an Online Audience the John McCain Way

October 22nd, 2009 @ 1:12 pm

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Categories: BNET, Career, Leadership, Social Media, Web 2.0

John McCain uses Twitter

Barack Obama might have not beaten John McCain on Election Day if he hadn’t bested the GOP contender throughout the year online, by raising millions more through microdonations and regularly activating partisans through email messaging.

Yet at this point, the McCain clan also has a decent track record using online tools for career purposes.  McCain’s daughter Meghan, for example, has turned her high-profile campaign blog into a gig at the Daily Beast and a place on the pundit circuit.  The septuagenarian Senator is staying hip with the new media crowd too. McCain’s Twitter feed now has over 1.5 million followers.  That’s ten times more than his former running mate, popular political personality Sarah Palin.

So how has McCain been hooking his audience?

Most of his strategy is Social Media 101 (participate regularly, engage other users, share personal anecdotes and interesting links, etc.).  But there’s a new tactic he’s been using recently that can be adapted by anyone who’s looking to establish thought leadership online.

It’s not really a secret that we all are suckers for lists and rankings.  McCain (or perhaps his “ghost tweeter”) recognizes this trick.  Recently, he has started to send out his top ten pork barrel projects via Twitter each day.  And he breaks them down and ranks them before shooting them out one by one until he reaches his most outrageous spending project of the day.  This keeps the McCain brand in the conversation throughout the day and maximizes his feed’s viral appeal.

And now for your enjoyment, here is a short sample of McCain’s most outrageous pork barrel picks:

  • $165,000 for maple syrup research in Vermont
  • $325,000 to study seismic activity in Memphis, TN
  • $195,000 to research how to increase the lifespan of peach trees in South Carolina
  • $130,000 to relocate the residents of 130 homes in DeKalb, IL
  • $900,000 for the City of Whitefish Emergency Operations Center in Whitefish, MT (Population: 6700)

Photo credit: Flickr user “World Economic Forum,” CC 2.0.

Stefan Deeran consults environmental advocacy groups and businesses on their sustainability strategies and communications plans. He also publishes the online newsmagazine the Exception.
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