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The Italian Job: How Borrowing And Printing Lead To An Economic Dead End

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The Italian Job: How Borrowing And Printing Lead To An Economic Dead End

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2014 12:33 -0400

Earlier this week Bloomberg published a devastating chart showing real hourly wage growth for the first 60 months of every cycle going back to 1949.  The 11 cycle average gain was 9% and the largest was 19% a half century back.

Fast forward to the 60 months of ZIRP and QE since the Great Recession officially ended in June 2009, however, and you get a drastically different picture: Real hourly wages have risen by just 0.5%, and in the great scheme of things that’s a rounding error.

Surely the above chart is also flat-out proof that massive money printing doesn’t work. After all, reflating wages, jobs and incomes is what the monetary politburo claims it’s all about. Indeed, the Fed has insouciantly cast a blind eye to the massive bubbles building everywhere in the financial system, and has kept money market rates relentlessly at zero for six years running on the grounds that it is not yet done “stimulating” the labor market.

So why does this abysmally failed and dangerous experiment continue unabated—as Yellen will undoubtedly confirm at Jackson Hole?  Self-evidently, it is irresistibly convenient to both Wall Street and Washington. The former gorges on a massive diet of carry trade gambling windfalls thanks to ZIRP and the Greenspan/Bernanke/Yellen “put”; and the latter gets a fiscal get-out-of-jail-free card owing to the Fed’s massive repression of interest rates. Indeed, with the public debt now topping $17.7 trillion, the implicit (and fraudulent) debt service relief from current ultra-low interest rates amounts to upwards of $500 billion per year.

Stated differently, where there should be extreme caution on Wall Street, there is actually irrational exuberance beyond Alan Greenspan’s wildest imagination back in December 1996. And where there should be fiscal panic in Washington owing to prospective red ink of another $15 trillion over the next decade (under “un-rosy scenario”), there is unmitigated and universal complacency.

The evil of monetary central planning, of course, is exactly what is unfolding: it drastically distorts pricing signals and thereby sows the seeds of eventual financial correction shocks and the consequent economic disorder. But there is something else, and its worse. Namely, the addiction to money printing and artificial debt fueled stimulus has become so deeply entrenched in the Wall Street-Washington corridor that the mainstream narrative has lost any semblance of historical perspective and realistic appreciation of the dead-end path on which the system is now embarked.

The monumental extent of monetary expansion and debt accretion since the turn of the 21st Century, for example, goes unrecognized, and is assumed to be merely a permanent and sustainable feature of the financial landscape. And that blindness might even be understandable had it been accompanied by an unusual surge of prosperity of the “party now, pay later” variety.  In fact, however, the core metrics of prosperity——real GDP growth, breadwinner employment, investment in productive assets and real household incomes—-have all gone in the opposite direction, having fallen drastically below all historical norms.

The contrasts below are dispositive. Real GDP growth during the last 14 years has averaged only 1.8%—-barely half the average rate during the prior 50 years. Likewise, breadwinner jobs are still 5% below their turn of the century level; real net investment in plant and equipment is 20% below its late 1990s levels; and real median household income is down by 5%.

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-08-21/italian-job-how-borrowing-and-printing-lead-economic-dead-end

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Nearly Every Mass Shooting Has This One Thing In Common, And It Isn’t Weapons

Tuscon shooting rampage suspect Jared Lee Loughner ruled not mentally competent to stand trial

Nearly Every Mass Shooting Has This One Thing In Common, And It Isn’t Weapons
Dom The Conservative06/10/2014

Evidence shows that the common factor in nearly every mass shooting is that all of the perpetrators were either actively taking powerful psychotropic drugs or had been taking them at one point before committing their crimes.

Multiple credible scientific studies going back more then a decade, as well as internal documents from certain pharmaceutical companies that suppressed the information show that SSRI drugs ( Selective Serotonin Re-Uptake Inhibitors ) have well known, but unreported side effects, including but not limited to suicide and other violent behavior. One need only Google relevant key words or phrases to see for themselves.www.ssristories.com is one popular site that has documented over 4500 “ Mainstream Media “ reported cases from around the World of aberrant or violent behavior by those taking these powerful drugs, according to the Liberty Crier.

The extensive list shows how psychotropic drugs are linked in every case of murder and suicide:

https://universalfreepress.com/nearly-every-mass-shooting-has-this-one-thing-in-common-and-it-isnt-weapons/

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A Lesson in Economic Analysis from the Minimum Wage Debate

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A Lesson in Economic Analysis from the Minimum Wage Debate
Mises Daily: Tuesday, August 26, 2014 by Ken Zahringer

In the ebb and flow of interventionist politics, there are some issues that surface periodically regardless of how many times and how completely they are proven to be harmful to the very people they are purported to help. Currently the tide is once again carrying the minimum wage to the forefront of collective attention. Supporters of this and similar measures often use straw-man arguments, like the one in the picture below.

I discovered this ad through one of my friends who shared it on Facebook. It was originally posted on July 12, 2014 on the website of OurTime.org. I propose to deconstruct this pseudo-argument here, pointing out its major errors. I do this not to convince hard-core supporters of raising the minimum wage that it is a bad idea; I doubt that is possible by any means. Rather, this can be a short lesson for those interested in sound economic analysis in how to proceed when confronted by opposing arguments buttressed by seemingly sound statistics.

The Ceteris Paribus Principle

The statement in the box is worded rather ambiguously, which is typical for this type of argument. It can be interpreted two different ways. On the one hand, it could be claiming that the minimum wage hike caused the increase in employment. This is a clear violation of ceteris paribus (i.e., all other things being equal or held constant), which is at the core of any good analysis and cannot be stressed often enough. In order for that interpretation to be valid, we must assume that all states are identical in all other respects and that the increase in the minimum wage was the only economic condition that changed. This is clearly not the case. States use a variety of policy initiatives to encourage job growth; focusing on this one factor ignores significant heterogeneity among states.

In its weaker form, the statement could merely be claiming that jobs were created in spite of the increase. This is obvious and trivial. In order for this interpretation to be meaningful we must assume that the minimum wage is the biggest kid on the block, the overriding factor that swamps all others. It’s all or nothing; either it kills all job growth or it’s not a factor. This is what makes the argument a straw man. It is overly simplified and no one who opposes the minimum wage takes the position it attempts to refute. The minimum wage is simply one factor among many affecting the job market; real-world outcomes are a result of a constellation of factors, each playing its part. But this is not the only thing wrong with this version of the argument — it gets better (or worse).

https://mises.org/daily/6854/A-Lesson-in-Economic-Analysis-from-the-Minimum-Wage-Debate

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Why It Makes Sense for Burger King to Become a Canadian Company

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Why It Makes Sense for Burger King to Become a Canadian Company

Stephen Moore / @StephenMoore / August 25, 2014

How many iconic American companies have to leave or threaten to leave these shores for foreign lands before Washington acts to fix our anti-growth tax system and keep firms, profits, and jobs here in the U.S.?

Burger King became the latest Fortune 100 company to announce it is looking to leave. The company is considering a deal to merge with Canadian restaurant chain Tim Hortons and move its headquarters north across the border.  The multi-billion dollar deal would make the $11.4 billion hamburger company now based in Miami a Canadian firm valued at more than $21 billion. The technical term for this transaction is an “inversion.”

Why is it happening? The combined federal and state corporate income tax rate in Florida is 38.6 percent, near the highest in the world and more than a third higher than the combined national and provincial rate of 28.0 percent in Ontario, Canada.  This is costing American workers jobs and the U.S. capital investment.

No surprise that tax shares for both Tim Hortons and Burger King soared nearly 20 percent at the prospect of less of the company’s profits being taken in taxes—a boon to investors of more than $3 billion in one day.  So far this year companies like Pfizer, Walgreens, AbbVie, and others have investigated similar moves to lower their tax bills.

Expect a blizzard more of these tax moves if the U.S. corporate tax isn’t reduced quickly to at most the average in the industrialized world of 25 percent. Better yet would be to abolish the corporate tax altogether and tax the shareholders on these profits. This would cause a flood of companies to come to the U.S. rather than leave.

The hamburger is a quintessential American food.  What could be more unpatriotic than giving firms like Burger King a financial incentive to leave the U.S. because of the high tax rate here? Thanks, Congress!

https://dailysignal.com/2014/08/25/makes-sense-burger-king-become-canadian-company/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social

Warren Buffett to Invest in Burger King’s Planned Deal for Tim Hortons

Berkshire Hathaway Expected to Provide About 25% of Financing, Thrusting Billionaire Into U.S. Tax Debate

https://online.wsj.com/articles/warren-buffett-to-help-finance-burger-kings-takeover-of-tim-hortons-1409012196?mod=WSJ_hp_LEFTTopStories

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Judicial Watch: Lerner emails aren’t missing

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Judicial Watch: Lerner emails aren’t missing
By Bernie Becker – 08/25/14 08:32 PM EDT

A conservative group suing the IRS said Monday that the Obama administration has acknowledged that former agency official Lois Lerner’s emails are recoverable.

Judicial Watch, which says it was among the groups that the IRS improperly scrutinized, said that Justice Department attorneys told the group late last week that the government backed up all emails in case of catastrophe.

The government lawyers added that the problem was not that the emails couldn’t be found, but that the back-up system was too onerous to search, Tom Fitton, Judicial Watch’s president, said Monday.

“This is a jaw-dropping revelation. The Obama administration had been lying to the American people about Lois Lerner’s missing emails,” Fitton said in a statement, adding that the group would bring the government’s statements up with Judge Emmet Sullivan, who is presiding over the group’s lawsuit.

But an administration official with knowledge of Friday’s conversation said Judicial Watch’s statement, which runs counter to months of statements from a variety of administration and IRS higher-ups, was off-base.

The administration official said Justice Department lawyers had dropped no bombshells last week, and that Judicial Watch was mischaracterizing what the government had said.

The official said that Justice lawyers were only referring to tapes backing up IRS emails that were routinely recycled twice a year before 2013, when the investigation into the Tea Party controversy began.

The IRS has acknowledged those procedures were in place since it told lawmakers in June that Lerner’s computer crashed in 2011, leaving the agency unable to recover many of her emails over a two-year span.

John Koskinen, the IRS commissioner, has testified before Congress several times over the last two months that the tapes backing up Lerner’s emails were recycled.

“There is no newly divulged back-up system that was not previously known about,” the official said. “Government lawyers were simply referring to the back-up system at the IRS that Commissioner Koskinen had already disclosed.”

Lerner has been a central figure in the IRS investigation since May 2013, when she became the first agency official to acknowledge and apologize for the improper scrutiny of Tea Party groups.

She has since retired from the IRS, been found in contempt of Congress by the House and been referred to the Justice Department for potential criminal charges.

Judicial Watch’s Monday statement noted that Treasury’s inspector general for tax administration, which outlined the IRS’s improper scrutiny of Tea Party groups, is investigating the back-up system for e-mails.

The administration official said that the inspector general is examining whether any data can be recovered from the previously recycled back-up tapes and suggested that could be the cause of the confusion between the government and Judicial Watch.

Read more: https://thehill.com/policy/finance/215940-conservative-group-lerner-emails-arent-missing#ixzz3BUyOnWql
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Reader says its time for strict enforcement of the Village maintenance code

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Reader says its time for strict enforcement of the Village maintenance code

I’m glad to see that this has come to the attention of our council.
If the owners do not respond, paper them with daily fines, and if appropriate, force a tax sale/auction if the property is in arrears.


I’d also like to see strict enforcement of the maintenance code that includes:
Bushes blocking the view at many corners in town.


Non-political signs on properties (from the dummies who live on the ‘cut through streets’= your lawn signs that are actually on Village property make this place look like shit. “Drive like your kids live here’ signs look like Hopper ave in waldwick’. Go ask the signal bureau to make a ‘slow children’ permanent sign. (your signs are illegal as they are not political)


Lots of sidewalks that need to be replaced.
Peeling paint on many homes.


The lazy residents that put their recyclables and yard waste cans out 4 days before pickup, and leave the stuff out there 3 days after.


And since the RPD does NOTHING about the cars parked on the street all night , the street sweepers cannot do their job in the morning and there is always crap on the streets blowing around.-hence the reason for this ordinance.


Do something about the barking dogs.( too many of you newbies think its ‘fashionable’ to ‘rescue’ a pitbull or junkyard dog mutt. I hope your homeowner’s insurance company is aware of it because sooner than later you will have a claim.
Every one of the lazy residents that gets a dog and puts up an invisible fence creates a territorial animal that barks and growls. Learn how to take care of an animal that needs social interaction. Its not a plant.

Microsoft Store

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Reader says the Village needs to seize the agenda from the developers

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Reader says the Village needs to seize the agenda from the developers

Answer – we need parking AND common sense. Unfortunately with the team we have running the show, we’re unlikely to get either.

Until the Village seizes the agenda from the developers, we will be in a state of continuous reaction. Developers want to build huge buildings because they make more money that way. Certain citizens are not in favor of huge buildings. Developers then say that if they can’t build a huge building then they won’t build anything. Then other citizens say that the town is is disrepair and we need to do something so let’s just build the huge buildings because what other choice do we have?

Come to think of it, I’d settle for some common sense and will drive around the block looking for a spot in the meantime.

Microsoft Store

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Over $400k in missing quarters, but collection process still the same

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Photo credit:Boyd A. Loving
Over $400k in missing quarters, but collection process still the same
August 25,2014
Boyd A. Loving
12:32 PM

Ridgewood NJ, Despite having lost over $400k in quarters to “shrinkage,” the Village continues to collect quarters from parking meters by emptying open meter containers into empty pickle buckets.  These photos were taken on Monday, 08/25/2014 in the Central Business District.

And the band played on . . .

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Photo credit:Boyd A. Lovin

Esurance

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Tax Foundation: An Update on Marijuana Taxes

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Tax Foundation: An Update on Marijuana Taxes

New report offers overview of Colorado and Washington’s experiences with taxing marijuana

Washington, DC (Aug 25, 2014)—The debate over marijuana legalization is not going away. DC, Alaska, and Oregon will vote on legalization measures in November and 13 other states will likely push for similar ballot initiatives and legislative efforts in the near future. As this progress unfolds, it is important to keep track of the new approaches and proposals to taxing marijuana. Currently, two states have legalized marijuana sales and have put new tax structures into place: Washington and Colorado. A new report from the nonpartisan Tax Foundation examines each state’s experience thus far.

Each state utilizes a different set of tools for collecting revenue from marijuana sales.

Colorado collects tax revenue from a 15 percent excise based tax on the average wholesale market rate; a 10 percent state tax on retail marijuana sales; a state sales tax of 2.9 percent; varied local sales taxes; and local marijuana taxes such as a 3.5 percent tax in Denver.

On the other hand, Washington State collects tax revenue from a 25 percent tax on producer sales to processors; a 25 percent tax on processor sales to retailers; a 25 percent tax on retailer sales to customers; a state Business & Occupation (B&O) gross receipts tax; a state sales tax of 6.5 percent; and varied local sales taxes. The total effective tax rate to be about 44 percent.

Despite the elaborate network of revenue sources, tax collections in Colorado have fallen short of projected revenue estimates because of incorrect projections about the switch from lower-taxed medical marijuana to higher-taxed retail marijuana by consumers. Collections in Washington, however, have fallen within the wide range of projected revenue estimates.

As the issue continues to expand, it is important that states with possible upcoming ballot initiatives take note of effective and ineffective methods of taxing marijuana, lest they succumb to the latter.

Full report: Taxing Marijuana: The Washington and Colorado Experience

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4 Charts Every Mom With Kids Going Back to School Should See

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4 Charts Every Mom With Kids Going Back to School Should See

Kelsey Harris / @KelsRenHar / August 25, 2014

Many kids are heading back to public school this week, and so begins fall and spring semesters. You have entrusted the government to give your child a good curriculum and a teaching staff you can count on. But what happens when the school staff is equipped with a big list of employees, but not necessarily a big crop of teachers focused on your child?

Tax dollars in places you don’t know about.

Even though the Obama Administration proposes spending $25 billion specifically to “provide support for hundreds of thousands of education jobs” in order to “keep teachers in the classroom,” research by both Heritage and The Fordham Institute reveal alarming numbers: only half of education jobs belong to teachers.

Heritage’s education policy expert Lindsey Burke says “school districts should trim bureaucracy and work on long-term reform options for better targeting taxpayer resources,” instead of putting taxpayers on the hook for more federal spending.

Check out the numbers in the four charts below.

1. The charts proving only half of education jobs are teachers:
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https://dailysignal.com/2014/08/25/4-charts-every-mom-kids-going-back-school-see/?utm_source=heritagefoundation&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=morningbell&mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRonvqvIZKXonjHpfsX56eUoX6C0lMI%2F0E

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Hunter Mahan wins The Barclays, gets surprise visit from wife & daughter

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PARAMUS, NJ – AUGUST 24: Hunter Mahan celebrates with his wife Kandi, daughter Zoe and the tournament trophy after winning of The Barclays at The Ridgewood Country Club on August 24, 2014 in Paramus, New Jersey. (Photo by Darren Carroll/Getty Images)

Hunter Mahan wins The Barclays, gets surprise visit from wife & daughter

PARAMUS, N.J. — Hunter Mahan pulled away with three straight birdies late in the final round Sunday to win The Barclays, ending more than two years without a title on the PGA Tour.

The victory was the sixth of his career, and one of the most important.

Mahan had gone 48 tournaments worldwide without winning and began the FedEx Cup Playoffs at No. 62, guaranteed to play only two events. By closing with a 6-under 65 for a two-shot victory, he is assured of making the Tour Championship every year since the FedEx Cup began in 2007.

And by beating one of the strongest fields of the year, Mahan was sure to make a lasting impression on Tom Watson for when he makes his three captain’s picks for the Ryder Cup on Sept. 2.

“To get a win in an event like this and the timing, it feels unbelievable,” Mahan said. “So I’m extremely proud of myself. I felt great the last few weeks. My game was starting to come around. I knew this was around the corner, but to do it — and to do it today with a 65 — feels great.”

On a day when six players had at least a share of the lead, Mahan found a way to make it look like a comfortable win.

He rolled in a 10-foot birdie putt to take the outright lead on the par-3 15th, hit wedge to 3 feet for a birdie on the 16th and then rolled in a 20-foot birdie on the par-5 17th. That stretched his lead to three shots going to the final hole when Cameron Tringale bogeyed the 18th, and Mahan tried to inject a little drama.

Mahan drove into the trees, pitched out and then missed the green. But he holed an 8-foot putt for bogey.

Jason Day, who shared the 54-hole lead with Jim Furyk, would have needed to hole out from the rough on the 18th to force a playoff and he missed the green. Day closed with a 68 and shared second place with Stuart Appleby (65) and Tringale, who celebrated his 27th birthday with a 66.

Furyk now has failed to win the last eight times he has held at least a share of the lead going into the final round. He was in the mix until missing the fairway on the 14th and taking bogey, and he wound up with a 70 to finish in eighth place, four shots behind.

Tringale began the week with questions about disqualifying himself from the PGA Championship several days after the final major ended. He said he had doubts about whether he whiffed a tap-in for bogey and thus signed for a wrong score. He said he wanted a clear conscience.

“Didn’t expect it to be this clear,” Tringale said with a smile.

https://www.dallasnews.com/sports/golf/headlines/20140824-colleyville-s-hunter-mahan-wins-the-barclays-gets-surprise-visit-from-wife-daughter.ece

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New Jersey Choral Society Auditions

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New Jersey Choral Society Auditions
July 31st 2014
New Jersey Choral Society

RIDGEWOOD, N.J. — Bergen County – The New Jersey Choral Society (NJCS), known for presenting outstanding and unique programs, is seeking experienced singers to audition for the 2014-2015 season. Auditions are scheduled for Tuesday, August 26 from 7:00-9:00 pm at St. Elizabeth’s Episcopal Church, 169 Fairmount Road, Ridgewood. Audition requirements include performing one classical solo (oratorio aria or art-song preferred), pitch memory drills, scales, intervals, and sight-reading. To schedule an audition, please call 201-379-7719 and leave a message for the audition coordinator.

NJCS is an ensemble of singers who are joined by their commitment to performing choral music of the highest artistic quality and to foster greater appreciation and enjoyment of choral music. All singers volunteer their services and are selected by audition. Requisites for auditioning include previous choral experience, music reading ability, and availability to meet the NJCS rehearsal and performance schedule. NJCS is a community of musicians who constantly strive for excellence. Rehearsals are held on Tuesday evenings from 7:30 -10:00 pm at the Temple Israel, 475 Grove St., Ridgewood with additional rehearsals during performance weeks.

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Midland Park driver injured after slamming into parked car

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Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving
Midland Park driver injured after slamming into parked car
August 25,2014
Boyd A. Loving
3:03 PM

Ridgewood NJ, An elderly Midland Park resident was transported to The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood after driving her vehicle directly into a parked Ford Escape on West Ridgewood Avenue in Ridgewood on Monday afternoon, 08/25.

The crash impact resulted in the Ford Escape mounting an adjacent sidewalk.  Ridgewood PD, EMS, and FD all responded to the scene.  The woman’s injuries appeared to be non-life threatening.

The crash occurred near the intersection of West Ridgewood and Maltbie Avenues.  The driver was heading eastbound on West Ridgewood Avenue at the time of the accident. Both vehicles were removed from the scene by a flatbed tow truck.

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Photo credit: Boyd A. Loving

Esurance

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A new playbook for hospitals: How investors pursue a financial turnaround

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A new playbook for hospitals: How investors pursue a financial turnaround

AUGUST 24, 2014, 10:34 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, AUGUST 24, 2014, 11:21 PM
BY LINDY WASHBURN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

A century ago, a nun often stood outside a factory in the city of Passaic on paydays, holding a tin cup as she begged for donations to care for the poor at St. Mary’s Hospital. It was an era before health insurance, before Medicare and Medicaid, and before health care became the fastest growing sector of the American economy.

Sister Agnes believed in St. Mary’s mission, just as the two nuns still serving at the hospital do today. But to save their hospital, the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth just sold it to a company for which medicine is a business, not a ministry.

As California-based Prime Healthcare Services takes over St. Mary’s and awaits approval to buy three other New Jersey hospitals, it is joining a fast-changing industry that now pumps more than $20 billion a year into the state economy. Prime and other companies look at hospitals like St. Mary’s — hospitals in such grave financial condition that their survival is in doubt — and see the potential for very healthy profits.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/a-new-playbook-for-hospitals-how-investors-pursue-a-financial-turnaround-1.1072991#sthash.yfZn5r0m.dpuf