Tie Congress's Paychecks to Our Good Health - Nicholas Kristof
JUNE 29, 2017
Members of Congress are paid $174,000 a year, while members of Polands lower house of Parliament are paid $32,300 a year.
Hmm. It looks as if were getting ripped off. Members of Congress seem to underperform compared to members of Parliament in Poland and across the democratic world.
Conservatives are right to worry that feeding at the government trough breeds dependency and laziness. So I suggest we introduce pay for performance, using metrics like, say, health.
I cite Poland because so many Poles (including the Krzysztofowicz family, later renamed Kristof) came to America for a better life, yet today American babies are one-third more likely to die in their first year of life than Polish children are (and twice as likely as Italian, Portuguese and Czech babies!). Meanwhile, American women are four times as likely to die in pregnancy and childbirth as Polish women, according to the World Health Organization.
If we had Italys child mortality rate, we would save 12,000 American babies lives each year thats 33 childrens lives saved every day.
Meanwhile, the U.S. spends far more on health care an average of nearly $10,000 per person than other countries do. Poland spends just $1,680 per person.
This is a stain on America. Choose almost any modern country, and its people pay less for health care and its children are more likely to survive; the C.I.A.s World Factbook ranks the U.S. 42nd in longevity, and weve had a smaller increase in life expectancy over 25 years than other industrialized countries have.
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https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/06/29/opinion/congress-salary-health.html