ACA Fail Fractal
You Say You Have Insurance? That’s Nice

Surprise, surprise: now that Affordable Care Act insurance has gone into effect, people are having trouble using it at hospitals.Even if these problems are solved, the almost unending streams of obstacles, challenges, and screw-ups associated with the law’s launch will leave a lingering bad taste in people’s mouths into the foreseeable future. The longer the ACA continues to provide access in name only, the more likely people are to form a settled negative opinion about it that will be difficult to overturn.

What We're Reading
Around the Web in 6 Clicks

Happy Saturday AI staff! Here’s what we’ve been reading this week:

1. Pillbilly wampum

2. Quick-refreshing underwear.

3. The rumors of Al Qaeda’s death are greatly exaggerated.

4. Then the burnings started.

5. “I don’t know what perversity impelled me to raise my hand.”

6. A solar quirk.

As always, use the comments to share your own links!

A Green Dream
UK Town Deploys Electric Buses

Residents of a northwestern suburb of London will be riding electric buses about town for the next few years—vehicles that will use the same technology used in electronic toothbrushes to recharge wirelessly. The experiment in Milton Keynes is expected to help prove the viability—or folly—of electric buses as a form of public transportation.

The New Privatization
Fast Money for Cash-Strapped Nations

If you’re a nation tightly squeezed by deficits and spending commitments, The Economist has a smart solution: sell your property. In a pair of pieces, The Economist’s latest lays out the extent of national land and building holdings and argues forcefully for a new wave of privatization. If there were any time when a one-time revenue generating policy like this might make sense it is now. As the Boomers age while birth rates decline in many Western nations, governments are going to be faced with large bills and not a big enough tax base to pay for them.

Winter for Higher-Ed
Financial Aid Puts a Squeeze on the Middle Class

Defenders of the higher-ed status quo are fond of defending sky high tuition by noting that “almost nobody pays full price for college.” This may have been true, but at many public schools “almost nobody” is beginning to cover an an increasingly large group of people. Although the concept of “set-asides,” where tuition rises on wealthier students to subsidize financial aid programs for poorer ones, is nothing new, cutbacks in state aid have decreased the money available to schools to the point where the students of increasingly modest means are being asked to pay for these subsides.

don't count him out
India’s Common Man Shoots for the Stars

The most popular man in India right now is the 45-year-old former tax administrator and now Chief Minister of Delhi, Arvind Kejriwal. Kejriwal is two weeks into his service as the head of the Delhi assembly and is already making headlines as he struggles against the political corruption that is so widespread in India. Meanwhile, officials and volunteers from his Aam Aadmi (“Common Man”) party tour the country, gathering thousands of new members and drumming up an impressive showing of support. Not many people would have put money on any of this 15 months ago when the AAP was founded.

Winter for Higher-Ed
Is the College of the Future in New Hampshire?

Changes in the higher-ed marketplace are forcing colleges to radically rethink their approach to education, and those struggling with the challenge may find inspiration in Southern New Hampshire University, a small private school that has turned itself into an online-ed giant.

Reforming Delivery
Health Care Whack-a-Mole in Maryland

The Federal government has just approved Maryland’s new attempt to bring down health care prices with a cap on hospital spending. Since the 1970s, Maryland has been setting prices for procedures (it is the only state to do so), but controlling costs through bureaucratic fiat isn’t as simple as it might seem. The first system produced perverse incentives, and undoubtedly this system will produce all sorts of unexpected costs as well—perhaps, for example, doctors leaving the state to practice where they can make more money.

Knife to a Baguette Fight
Ukraine Gets Its Gas Deal, Strings Attached

Ukraine will enjoy discount Russian natural gas for the first quarter of 2014. Kiev relies heavily on Moscow to keep the lights on, but until now was saddled with some of the highest prices in Europe for the privilege. Ukraine, teetering on the edge of a financial crisis, has been chafing at those prices, and the long-term, take-or-pay contracts they’re tied to, for some time. That dissatisfaction was one of the main drivers of its courtship of the European Union—a saga that came to an abrupt end back in November—and the cheap gas is Ukrainian President Yanukovych’s reward for choosing Russia over its Western suitors.

Blue For Who?
Will De Blasio Sacrifice Pensioners, Taxpayers to Protect Union Chiefs?

Cutting the fat in New York City’s chaotic pension system would increase efficiency, cut costs, and save the city billions. But smaller management boards would mean fewer sweet positions for union leaders, something Mayor Bill De Blasio likely isn’t prepared to sacrifice.

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