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What's Behind 9% Jump in Employer-Paid Health Insurance Premiums? - YouTube
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bjbjLULU JUDY WOODRUFF: And to the rising
cost of health insurance, which appears to
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be surging once again.
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A new survey of businesses found that annual
premiums for a family of four climbed to $15,000
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this year.
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The Kaiser Family Foundation, which releases
the annual survey of employer-paid insurance,
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reported an increase of 9 percent, up from
3 percent last year.
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The report also documented a dramatic decade-long
rise for both employers and employees.
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Annual employee contributions now total more
$4,100 on average.
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That's more than 130 percent higher than back
in 2000.
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The survey also found that, to cut costs,
more employers are enrolling in high-deductible
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policies that cut annual premiums, but require
employees to pay more out of pocket for medical
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care.
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And here to tell us more about all this is
Susan Dentzer.
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She's the editor-in-chief of the journal Health
Affairs and an analyst for the NewsHour.
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Susan, it's good to see you with -- and have
you with us again.
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SUSAN DENTZER: Great to be here, Judy.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: So, let's start with a clarification.
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We're saying that the premiums that employers
pay went up 9 percent in the last year.
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Does that mean that employees are paying that
much more?
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SUSAN DENTZER: Well, actually, what went up
was the total cost of an employer's health
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coverage package for an employee.
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So all of that went up 9 percent.
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We know that, as you said, on average, many
employees will be paying only about $4,000
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or so toward that $15,000 cost in effect of
the coverage package.
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For about 50 percent of American workers who
have employer coverage, they are paying 50
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percent of the amount of the coverage.
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So -- and actually what we see in the most
recent year is that employers were picking
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up more of that cost increase than employees
in this particular year.
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That's not always the case, but it was the
case this year.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: So what's behind the increase?
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SUSAN DENTZER: Well, there are lots of things
that go into the steaming cauldron of higher
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health costs.
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One issue clearly is that we just have more
chronic disease.
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Chronic disease cost is driving about 75 percent
of our total health spending as a country.
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We have now lots of diabetes, lots of cancers
that are now considered increasingly a chronic
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disease.
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And, of course, the biggest won is cardiovascular
disease.
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We know that we pay more than other countries
in terms of prices for health care.
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So that's causing some of the increase.
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And, in fact, there was an increment in drug
price inflation that fed into the price increase...
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JUDY WOODRUFF: So costs are going up.
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SUSAN DENTZER: Underlining health care costs
are a big share of this.
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Now, there is some effect from higher health
insurance premiums, but it's not the biggest
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driver.
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And the clearest way you can see this is,
if you think about large employers in particular,
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most large employers who are employing 200
people or more don't usually buy insurance,
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technically, for their workers.
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They pay those health costs out of their own
pockets.
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They're what's called self-insured.
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Well, their costs are going up just as fast
as those costs of people who actually have
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insurance policies.
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So that's what tells you that it's really
not insurance that is driving most of this
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increase right now.
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It's really the underlying cost of health
care and health spending.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: And, as we mentioned, it's
part of a trend.
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We're seeing it go up over the last decade.
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So, it's not new but, it just seems to -- it
seems to be a big increase in one year.
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SUSAN DENTZER: It clearly was a big increase.
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And we have had a couple of years where the
increases had been much more moderate.
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Now, it should also be said, though, that
there are lots of signs on the horizon that
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there's downward pressure on health spending
and on insurance.
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For example, the White House has pointed out
that the Federal Employees Health Benefits
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plan, which covers about eight million federal
employees and their dependents, their costs
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for the next year are only going to go up
about 3.8 percent.
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So we're seeing a kind of a mix of signals.
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This Kaiser survey is looking back over the
last year.
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When we look forward, we see some downward
pressure on health spending that could actually
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be quite beneficial.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: And when you see this notion
that almost a third of covered workers now
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in high-deductible plans that increasingly
employers are saying, OK, your premium may
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be less, but you're going to have to pay more
an individual treatment that you get.
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SUSAN DENTZER: Well, actually, in many circumstances,
it's the employees themselves opting for those
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high-deductible plans...
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Ah.
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OK.
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SUSAN DENTZER: ... and for a very simple reason.
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They cost less.
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The premiums are lower for that from -- than
more comprehensive coverage.
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And for 17 percent of covered workers, they
actually have not only a high-deductible plan.
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They have a health savings account or something
like that associated with it, so they can
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actually put dollars aside to pay for health
expenditures.
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So, in some instances, it's very much the
employee deciding, hey, I can get a break
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on my health insurance costs by going into
these policies.
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Why not take it?
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JUDY WOODRUFF: So, I hear what you're saying
about why all this is happening.
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And, of course, there's political noise today
as well.
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Republicans are out there saying, well, aha,
this is connected to the Obama administration's
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new health care law.
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The White House is saying, no, that it has
something to do altogether with pricing.
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And, I mean, how much is the new health care
law a factor, or is it?
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SUSAN DENTZER: It's a minimal factor.
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Again, if you look at just the insurance piece
of it, one -- one clear thing that we know
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has happened in the past year is that 2.3
million more young adults are now covered.
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And they got coverage through their families,
their parents' insurance plans, typically,
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because of a specific provision in the Affordable
Care Act, which now enables individuals who
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are not offered an employer coverage themselves,
young adults can actually stay on their parents'
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policies up to the age of 26.
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So we know that that was one clear impact
of the Affordable Care Act.
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However, young adults are some of the cheapest
people to insure.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Because they're healthy.
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SUSAN DENTZER: Because they're, relatively
speaking, healthy.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Yes.
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SUSAN DENTZER: So that could not really have
driven the cost increase.
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Best guess is maybe, maybe 1 or 2 percentage
points of this 9 percent increment was possibly
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due to the Affordable Care Act, but more likely
it's these other factors that are driving
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the situation.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Just quickly, Susan, all this
takes place with a backdrop of the idea that
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there are less overall employer-sponsored
health care coverage, that that is less and
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less a part of the health insurance picture,
that fewer employers want to do that.
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And it's my understanding that's a trend that's
taking place, even as we focus today on the
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cost of employer-sponsored care.
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SUSAN DENTZER: That has been a long-term trend,
especially for small companies.
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If you're working in a company that has 200
or more employees, about 97 to 99 percent
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of those firms continue to offer health insurance.
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If you drop down to very small companies,
three employees, nine employees, that coverage
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clearly has been eroding.
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And, actually, interestingly, last year, in
the same survey, there was a big uptick of
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coverage that seemed unexplainable.
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Now that's disappeared.
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And now we see again coverage for those smaller
firms has been eroding.
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Now, we are several years away from the full
implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
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So we will have to see what happens when subsidies
begin to kick in and other things take effect
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to broaden insurance coverage.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Well, a lot of factors at play,
and we're just glad we have you here to help
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us understand it.
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Susan Dentzer, thanks very much.
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SUSAN DENTZER: Thank you, Judy.
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gd,l gd,l JUDY WOODRUFF: And to the rising
cost of health insurance, which appears to
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be surging once again Normal Microsoft Office
Word JUDY WOODRUFF: And to the rising cost
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of health insurance, which appears to be surging
once again Title Microsoft Office Word Document
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