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American Enterprise Institute (AEI) resident fellow J.D. Kleinke, an expert on health care business strategy and entrepreneurship, explains that contrary to the popular misconception, the growth rate of national health spending has been dropping for a decade.
New data show that health spending over the past several years has been normalizing toward the rate of general inflation, rather than growing higher and higher, as had been the case almost continuously since the 1970s.
A long-awaited world crisis of overpopulation is not developing. Indeed, declining population looms as a problem for many countries.
Contrary to the popular misconception, the growth rate of national health spending has been dropping for a decade.
Know-nothingism and doomsaying about the poor state of the environment is more profitable, and it gets better headlines.
The latest budget deficit numbers from the Congressional Budget Office have set off a flurry of self-righteous condemnation and doomsaying.
A people that respond with such intensity to Susan Boyle's story must still possess the sentiments that have been the source of American greatness.
Despite terrorism, war, and a devastating high-tech bubble, the U.S. economy has performed exceptionally well so far in this century.




