Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as the Food Stamp Program, has evolved from a 1939 pilot effort into the nation’s largest anti-hunger initiative. Administered by the USDA, SNAP provides income-based food benefits via Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards, ensuring access to nutritious food for over 40 million Americans. Rooted in the legacies of the Great Depression and mid-century welfare reform, the program reflects both the persistence of economic inequality and the adaptability of U.S. social policy. Recent technological upgrades, such as chip-enabled EBT cards and cost-of-living adjustments, continue to modernize this essential safety net for vulnerable households.
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) A Comprehensive Analysis of History, Mechanism, Eligibility, and Integrity I. Executive Summary: The Structural Pillars of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Food and Nutrition Service (FNS), serves as the cornerstone of federal anti-hunger efforts in…
THe High Cost of Health Care
The high cost of healthcare in America is due to a structural pathology rooted in a dual for-profit system that is unique among industrialized nations. The three key sectors—insurance, pharmaceuticals, and providers—prioritize investor profit over patient affordability, which leads to inflated prices and reduced access.
This collective pursuit of profit makes the U.S. an extreme outlier, with costs nearly double those of comparable nations, driven overwhelmingly by inflated prices for services and excessive administrative overhead
Insurance
For-Profit Health Insurance (The Payer): Companies are legally mandated to prioritize shareholder returns. This fiduciary conflict leads them to divert nearly all net income (95%) to investors , increase costs through consolidation , and minimize benefit payouts through complex administrative friction and claim denials.
For-Profit Insurance: Profit Over Affordability
The Structural Inevitability of Unaffordability The For-Profit Health Insurance Industry's Impact on the American Payer System Executive Summary The analysis confirms a structural incompatibility between the core operational mandate of the commercial health insurance industry and the provision of affordable, universally accessible healthcare in the United States. The for-profit model, driven by the legal principle…
Perscription Drugs
The Pharmaceutical Industry (Drug Pricing): While drug safety is highly regulated, pricing has historically been unregulated in the U.S. market, allowing manufacturers to set prices significantly higher than global peers. This is compounded by the lack of transparency and high costs associated with the consolidated Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) system.
The Pharmaceutical Industry
THE Pharmaceutical INDUSTRY Analysis of the Payer and Pharmaceutical Industries Executive Summary: The Structural Drivers of American Healthcare Unaffordability 1.0 Introduction: The Financialization of Health and its Affordability Crisis The persistent crisis of unaffordability in the American healthcare system is a direct consequence of institutional structures designed to maximize profit extraction and shareholder return within…
HOSPITALS, DOCTORS and NURSES
For-Profit Healthcare Delivery (Hospitals & Providers): Privatization and consolidation in hospitals and physician groups drive up prices. For-profit hospitals generate 19% higher payments for care than not-for-profit counterparts. Furthermore, private equity acquisitions accelerate cost inflation and compromise quality by cutting essential services like nurse staffing.
Healthcare Delivery
The Profiteering Paradox How For-Profit Healthcare Delivery Drives Up Prices and Undermines American Affordability Executive Summary: The Unaffordable Mandate of Profit Maximization The structural dominance of the for-profit model within the U.S. healthcare provider sector—encompassing hospitals, physician groups, and increasingly, specialized facilities—is the primary and quantifiable driver of escalating, unsupportable healthcare costs. The inherent financial…
ACA/Obmacare
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) transformed U.S. healthcare by expanding insurance access, banning coverage denials for pre-existing conditions, and establishing online marketplaces for standardized plans. It introduced Medicaid expansion, subsidies, and cost-sharing reductions to make care more affordable. At the same time, the ACA overhauled provider payment systems, emphasizing quality and cost efficiency through programs like Accountable Care Organizations and hospital readmission penalties. Funded by targeted taxes and fees, the ACA reshaped insurance regulation, strengthened hospital finances in expansion states, and remains the foundation of modern American health policy.
The ACA
The Affordable Care Act's Financial Engine How Federal Subsidies Underwrite Private Insurers, Hospitals, and Pharma I. Introduction to the Affordable Care Act (ACA): Regulatory Foundations and Economic Goals The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), signed into law on March 23, 2010, represents a fundamental restructuring of the U.S. healthcare finance system. Prior to…
BABY FORMULA
Infant formula began in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a scientific alternative for babies who could not be breastfed. Over the decades, formula recipes evolved in response to nutritional research-but also to major public-health failures. A series of contamination tragedies in the 1970s culminated in the Infant Formula Act of 1980, which established strict nutrient standards, safety rules, and FDA oversight. The current U.S. infant formula system sits at the intersection of public health regulation, nutrition science, industrial production, and market structure—and its complexity became visible during the 2022 nationwide formula shortage.
Baby Formula
The US Infant Formula Market Paradox A Deep Dive into History, Regulation, and the Economic Drivers of High Cost I. Executive Summary and Foundational Context 1.0. Introduction and Scope Infant formula is classified not merely as a staple food product, but as a highly specialized, critical medical food subject to exceptional regulatory scrutiny, profound public…
BRICS NATIONS
The BRICS bloc—originally Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—has evolved into a focal point of the global shift away from Western-dominated finance and trade. Recent expansion and de-dollarization efforts, including the growth of the New Development Bank and alternative payment systems, signal a reordering of economic power toward the Global South. Simultaneously, tariffs, debt crises, and fragile supply chains reveal the limits of globalization and the rise of new regional alliances. From the North–South Transport Corridor to Africa’s deepening ties with China, these developments underscore an emerging multipolar economy defined by competition, connectivity, and contested sovereignty.
Structural Shock
Structural Shock Tariffs, Debt, and the Permanent Rise of BRICS' New World Order Overview The global economic order is undergoing a profound structural realignment, accelerated by two major systemic forces: the imposition of escalating protectionist tariffs by the United States and acute sovereign debt distress across the Global South. These pressures are serving as powerful…
Introductory & Overview Resources
- What Is the BRICS Group and Why Is It Expanding? – Council on Foreign Relations — A concise overview of BRICS: its origins, expansion, and global role.
- BRICS | Encyclopaedia Britannica — A detailed encyclopaedic entry on BRICS: history, members, and significance.
- Explainer: What Are the BRICS? – Americas Society / Council of the Americas — A clear introduction for readers new to the group.
Membership, Structure & Expansion
- About the BRICS – Official BRICS Website — Details on membership, objectives, and current initiatives.
- The BRICS Group: Overview and Recent Expansion – UK Parliament Commons Library — A neutral summary of BRICS’ structure and 2024 expansion.
- What to Know About the BRICS Group of Countries Rivaling the G-7 – World Economic Forum — Examines geopolitical context and influence.
Economic & Geopolitical Implications
- BRICS – Investopedia — Financial overview and origin of the acronym.
- BRICS: Definition, Meaning and Usage – Modern Diplomacy — Analysis of BRICS’ role in global realignment.
- Research Guides: BRICS – Library of Congress — A curated academic guide with further reading and resources.
Further Reading & Videos
- The Basics of BRICS – YouTube Intro — A beginner-friendly video overview of BRICS: what the acronym stands for, who the members are, and what the group means.
- BRICS: The Rise of a New Global Order? – YouTube — Longer analysis of how BRICS fits into the shifting global order.
- The Heat: 2025 BRICS Summit – YouTube — Coverage of the 2025 BRICS summit and its geopolitical implications.
- 4 BRICS Power Moves You Didn’t See Coming This Month – YouTube — Short-form breakdown of key strategic moves by BRICS countries.
- Analysis: BRICS Considers De-Dollarization Measures – YouTube — Focused video on BRICS financial strategy, especially currency/trade alternatives.
- Why is BRICS Suddenly Running EVERYTHING? – YouTube — A provocative (and more informal) take on how BRICS is changing global influence.
Academic & Official Documents
- BRICS: Membership & Expansion — Guiding Principles, Criteria & Standards (2023) – official document — The document from BRICS states outlining the criteria for membership expansion.
- Economic Integration among the BRICS Nations: Prospects and Challenges (2024) – academic article — A peer-reviewed study exploring economic integration issues within the bloc.
- The BRICS Group: Overview and Recent Expansion – UK Parliament Research Briefing — A clear, policy-oriented briefing that covers origins, structure and expansion of BRICS.
- Research Guides: BRICS – Library of Congress — A curated resource list of books, papers and other sources about BRICS.
- Documents – Official BRICS Website (2025 Presidency & previous years) — The official portal for summit declarations, issue-notes, and formal documents of the bloc.
Advanced Academic & Working Papers on BRICS
- Between Development and Geopolitics: A Semantic Analysis of the BRICS Summit Declarations (Dec 2024) – BRICS Policy Center — Explores how BRICS declarations reflect tensions between development agendas and geopolitical positioning.
- Expansion of BRICS: A quest for greater global influence? (2024) – European Parliament Briefing — Focuses on BRICS growth and implications for world order.
- “The BRICS, Global Governance, and Challenges for Institutionalization” (SAGE Journals) — Examines how BRICS as a bloc is institutionalizing (or failing to) in global governance.
- Asymptotic dependence modelling of the BRICS stock markets — A quantitative study on extreme-value risk spillovers among BRICS equity markets.
- The impact of Egypt’s accession to the BRICS group on the foreign-exchange crisis in Egypt (2024) — Empirical study of how a new BRICS member’s accession affects its foreignasset dynamics.
- “BRICS: A step towards a multipolar world?” (Journal of Political Science) — Discussion of BRICS’ role in shifting from a unipolar to a multipolar global order.
- “The Economic Potential of the BRICS Countries: Challenge to the World Economy” (2024) — Investigates how BRICS economies challenge traditional global economic structures.
- BRICS: Analysis – BRICS Policy Center (2024) PDF — A compact analytical volume covering economy, globalization, and development in BRICS.
- Brief on BRICS (2025) – Ministry of External Affairs (India) — Official summary of BRICS as of 2025: membership, trade share, population.
- The Economic and Geopolitical Significance of the BRICS Nations: A Comparative Analysis (2024) — Comparative study across BRICS members on global influence, strengths & challenges.







