If the current trend continues, it means that the first graders entering the Allegheny County schools in the Pittsburgh area will collectively have $2 billion more available to their community to invest in education and services over the course of their school years. This is in stark contrast to how healthcare’s hyperinflation “tax” has redistributed money from education and middle class incomes to healthcare’s prolificacy. Ideally, the leaders in Allegheny County will follow the lead of the citizen in Orlando that reinvested money that would have otherwise been squandered on healthcare. In the process, he not only improved the health of his company and employees by saving 50% per capita on health benefits, they adopted a nearby neighborhood that was previously crime-ridden.