Price Waterhouse and Big Tobacco
There’s a big scary new study out today from the health insurance lobby and PricewaterhouseCoopers purporting to show that the Senate Finance Committee’s reform bill — funded by new excise taxes on “Cadillac” health plans — would cause future health insurance premiums to spiral out of control.
Before this genie gets too far out of the bottle, just consider the track record of such industry-funded excise tax “research” by Price Waterhouse.
In the early 1990s, Price Waterhouse did similar handiwork on behalf of Big Tobacco, serving up allegedly hard data to bolster arguments that a new excise tax on tobacco (a proposed mechanism to fund Clintoncare) would destroy hundreds of thousands of good American jobs.
Dire predictions. But a subsequent review of Price Waterhouse’s methods by an independent team at Arthur Andersen, revealed that Price Waterhouse’s “grossly exaggerated” and “one-sided analyses” were so “flawed” as to produce “patently unreliable results.”
To wit:
“The PW Report relied on methods and assumptions that create false and misleading results.”
AND:
“There are serious methodological problems and errors of omission (one-sided analyses likely to lead to misinterpretation) in … the PW Report”
MY FAVORITE PART:
“The PW Report… attributes 161,601 mining and construction jobs to the tobacco industry. This is approximately equal to the entire employment of the coal mining industry.”
IN SUM:
“These and other serious flaws in the Price Waterhouse Report and the Tobacco Institute Estimates build upon one-another in a cumulative fashion to present grossly exaggerated and misleading estimates.”
“The cumulative effect of PW’s methods… is to produce patently unreliable results.”