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The Goodman Institute Health Blog

Wednesday Links

Posted on August 27, 2025August 26, 2025 by John C. Goodman

“Nearly every part of modern dentistry and orthodontics involves—and is enhanced by— plastics.”

AI psychosis is an apparent phenomenon where people go crazy after talking to chatbots too much.

Balkir, Saez, Yagan, and Zucman (BSYZ): the total effective tax rate for the top 400 averaged 24% in 2018–2020 compared with 30% for the full population and 45% for top labor income earners.

Response to BSYZ: long-run top 400 effective tax-and-giving rates could exceed 75%.

Matthew Holt discovers the unpleasantness of bureaucracy.

2 thoughts on “Wednesday Links”

  1. Devon Herrick says:
    August 27, 2025 at 10:39 am

    The Forbes 400 represents the top 0.002% of the world’s wealthiest people. BSYZ estimate tax rates at 25% compared to the Joint Committee on Taxation which previously estimated rates at 34%. I’m willing to give the top 400 the benefit of a volume discount. The top 1% pay nearly half of all federal income taxes paid. So why to Progressives say the rich need to pay their fair share and every billionaire is a policy failure? One of those policy failures sends delivery vans to my door on a daily basis, while I’m browsing using another billionaire’s free web browser.

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  2. Bart Ingles says:
    August 27, 2025 at 10:05 pm

    Funny thing is that this type of analysis is usually used to justify raising taxes on the upper middle class rather than the ultra-wealthy. Witness ACA subsidy phase-outs, Social Security benefit taxation brackets, IRMAA, NIIT, and most any income tax deduction phase-out.

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For many years, our health care blog was the only free enterprise health policy blog on the internet. Then, when the NCPA closed its doors, the health blog stopped as well.

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