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Healthcare is the biggest segment of our economy. In the debate over who should
pay for what or, increasingly, for whom, most people don't stop to understand
just how large a portion of our society's money is dedicated to healthcare.
For some perspective, as a share of GDP, the U.S. spends about twice that
of other advanced nations. This is an important reason why the U.S. is increasingly
uncompetitive in global manufacturing. It is, for instance, the most important
factor (besides poor management) that General Motors and Chrysler are going
bankrupt.
Going forward, the situation is guaranteed to get worse. The Obama administration
is committed to major reform to cover the 40 million people not now covered
by insurance. Once everyone has insurance, with many paying nothing at all
for coverage, patients won't care what it costs, and the system will quickly
spin out of control.
And it's already out of control. I recently spent one day in the hospital
due to a broken arm, which cost on the order of $100,000. Remarkably, that
eye-opening amount still doesn't include the ambulance, the doctors, the x-rays,
the CT scans, or the anesthesiologist. I'm still getting bills. The system
is far more broken than is widely understood, unless you have had a recent
bad experience.

Projections for healthcare are particularly problematic because of the demographics
of so many people born just after World War II. Soon, there will be less than
three people in the workforce for each retired person. That will result in
huge taxes on the few workers to supply the expensive end-of-life medical care
for the retirees (and it is in the latter years where medical expenses really
begin to rack up).
This bubble was predicted and a government trust fund was set up. Unfortunately,
as is typically the case, the government couldn't keep its hands off the money,
and so it has already been spent. The outlook is not good. In fact, in just
over 10 years from now - by 2020 - the demands on the government for Social
Security and Medicare will get so high that they cannot be met. And it gets
worse from there.

It's a safe bet, based on history, that the government will once again try
to print its way out of the problem - but all that will do is further destroy
the dollar and drive interest rates up even more. Just to be clear, this is
not just about a government program gone awry, but as much or even more so
a demographic problem - which makes it all the more intractable.
Don't wait to be saved by the government; take your life - and your asset
protection - in your own hands. For example, by playing one of the most obvious
and inevitable trends and Bud Conrad's favorite investment for 2009. Click
here to read the full report.
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