March 29, 2007
IS IT STILL A REVOLUTION IF THE STUPID PARTY DOESN'T REALIZE THEY EFFECTED IT?:
Health Savings Accounts can do double duty as backup for insurance, retirement booster (Associated Press, 3/29/07)
New rules governing Health Savings Accounts are making them more attractive to consumers, who can use HSAs to help reduce health insurance costs now - and, potentially, in retirement.Health Savings Accounts are like Individual Retirement Accounts for health care. They were created by Congress in 2003 so that workers could cover some of their medical costs with pretax money if they have high-deductible health insurance plans.
The idea is that workers and their employers can fund the tax-free accounts, with withdrawals used for copays at doctors' offices, prescription and nonprescription medicines, and hospital services not covered by insurance.
Because unused balances in the HSAs can be rolled over from year to year, some financial advisers are suggesting that the accounts can be a way for families to accumulate money to be used to cover health care costs in retirement, including Medicare deductibles and long-term care insurance.
JoAnn Mills Laing, author of "The Consumer's Guide to HSAs," said that there were 3.6 million HSA accounts at the end of 2006 with $5.1 billion in deposits, up from 1.1 million accounts with $1.2 billion in deposits at the end of 2005.
She predicts further growth, in part because more companies are offering high-deductible insurance plans to their workers. That's because these plans are less costly for employers and employees than traditional health policies but still give workers coverage for medical catastrophes.
You could spend every minute of the next CPAC conference trying to explain this to the Right and they'd never get it. Posted by Orrin Judd at March 29, 2007 7:13 AM
I've tried explaining to people that a dollar saved today is $10-20 in 30 years or so, and they just don't get it.
They carp about one operation "wiping" the savings out, forgetting that there will still be insurance programs.
They insist that everything will be more expensive, never realizing that re-connecting the consumer with the provider will lower costs (through competition).
Etc Etc etc.
The fact is that no one is telling anyone any of these things. One actually needs to go somewhere to look into it, and no one is interested.
Posted by: Bruno at March 29, 2007 8:30 AMBC/BS of Illinois finally this year is offering a basic catastrophic/major medical plan, so we are going to transfer over. Until now they wanted to sell you a comprehensive plan that we didn't want and after-tax it was more expensive than the bare bones plan we had.
OJ - thanks for the URL on a prior post to the eHealthInsurance website!
Posted by: Rick T. at March 29, 2007 8:55 AMRick, when we reached 65, I tried to find exactly that type of major medical/catastrophic insurance, but was told that it's Medicare or an HMO via Medicare. Bruno's right that without competition, the sky's the limit on costs.
Posted by: erp at March 30, 2007 9:11 AM