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![]() A Near-Term Solution For Health Insurance CostsBy D. Bruce Merrifield Jr. |
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A strong majority of U.S executives rate healthcare insurance costs as their #1 concern. The poster company for this problem might be GM, which announced on June 7 that it will lay off at least 25,000 jobs, or almost 8 percent of its U.S. workforce. In a renewed effort to cut costs, GM will focus on its $5.6 billion annual healthcare bill that averages over $1,500 per car. Intense discussions have begun on health insurance with GM union leaders.
HSAs: The Only Business Solution
on the Horizon
After 30+ years of healthcare reforms, HSAs are the first reform that has addressed two of the core problems of our dysfunctional healthcare system: 1) Only corporations, until now, have been able to buy (and save on) health insurance with tax-free dollars; 2) Having access to the finest, unlimited, unrationed healthcare regardless of one's personal health habits is not an entitlement; third partiescorporations, government and our grandchildrencan't afford it. However, HSAs now provide tax-free dollar incentives for individuals to be responsible for being more healthful and shopping frugally for personally, sufficient, healthcare solutions. Because health insurance costs and deductibles will continue to climb, most corporate health insurance plans soon will have high enough deductibles for all employees to qualify for HSAs. Because health insurance dollars are part of total employee compensation, companies might as well let those employees who want to have the ownership and control of the premium savings from high-deductible, lower-premium policies by flowing as much of it as possible through their HSAs. It's a simple empowerment and freedom opportunity that treats employees like the adults that they are. HSAs will be further enabled by pending federal legislation for tax credits for funding HSAs for low wage earners and making comparison shopping for healthcare provider solutions viable. Independent, supportive shopping services such as subimo.com already are rushing to fill the consumer healthcare shopping information need. Enrollment rates for HSAs to dateby a greater variety of peoplehave surpassed all forecasts by all parties. The first wave of enrollees are decidedly not just the young, healthy, single and/or wealthy that the critics of HSAs have predicted. What are the most current, revised future forecasts for adoption of HSAs? Who really knows? Forrester Research, for example, recently upped their forecast for 2012 to 17.6 million HSAs with deposits/assets totaling $35 billion. The point is that this wave is big and broad based. While HSAs are not the solution for all of our nation's healthcare problems, there is no political momentum for creating any other type of significant reforms on the horizon. Perhaps the healthcare crisis will be a big 2008 election issue, but in the meantime, every business has a survival imperative to continuously study and incorporate HSAs as an option, if and when possible. HSAs are already providing some true sustainable and continuously improving cost savings instead of the simple cost-shifting that critics feared. True Savings From HSAs? Five insurance companies, as of May 2005, announced premium rate cuts on policies for HSAs because of competition and better design of policies that let individuals custom tailor where the deductibles and varying sizes of co-pays apply to get only the insurance coverage they want. One industry guesstimate is that by September, rates for HSAs will settle 30 percent lower than rates in mid-summer 2004. Doctors' offices are starting to post discounts for services that are paid with credit cards, and some doctors are moving completely to cash or credit card only practices. Check out simplecare.com for one national network of primary care physicians doing this. The best, most mature proof for savings from HSAs comes from South Africa where HSAs have been legalin a more expansive form than in the United Statesfor 11 years. Here are some key questions with the short answers that I gleaned out of a fascinating testimony that drew significantly on South Africa's experiential outcomes. (You can read the full testimony at www.ncpa.org/prs/tst/JCG_Testimony.pdf.) Will HSAs Control Costs? Yes. Will HSAs only appeal to healthy, young, single and/or wealthy people? No. The demographics for U.S. enrollees show broad demographics and even counter-intuitive averages. Will HSAs encourage employers to reduce benefits? No. Employers don't need an excuse to cut benefits or raise the employee's cost for insurance; they have to provide the best competitive compensation/benefit package that they can afford to attract and keep good employees. Will HSAs force patients to pay retail prices while HMOs pay wholesale? No. HSAs can be part of provider networks that get network prices, and cash-only doctors are sprouting up to offer the same services that network providers do for dramatically lower prices because of the absence of network overhead costs. Creating a Total-Health Productivity Culture
Because employees all along the personal health spectrum will have instant motivation to be incrementally more healthful and savvier medical shoppers, they all have a chance to save money by shopping for sufficient solutions. To help employees become incrementally more healthy, every company regardless of size should (re)start a simple-to-scale, wellness program with the goal of creating a wellness, total-health productivity culture. It's possible that, in a few years time, offering HSAs will become an expected option and a necessity for luring the most responsible, health conscious employees from other employers that also have HSAs. Because HSAs have better total tax and spending characteristics than IRAs and 401K plans, they may well become the preferred vehicle for most employees to save. But, why stop at empowering employees just for healthcare spending? Why not ask the employees to become engaged in creating better service value propositions for the right core and target customers in the right target customer niches? If employees could understand the chain of connections between their efforts, better service value, better customer retention and bigger gain sharing bonuses, they could help to make it happen. Otherwise, most employees simply don't care about saving the company's money to improve the shareholders' ROI; many even think profits are evil. They don't realize that company profits reinvested per employee per year is the cost of their having a secure and expanding career. Teach them so they can appreciate, play and win in the game of business too! |
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Welding & Gases Today Fall 2005 Volume 4, No. 4 Entire contents are Copyright © Data Key Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. Nothing may be reproduced in whole or part without written permission of the publisher.