Posts Tagged ‘superficial reasons’

Spiraling Health Care Costs

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Americans are deeply unhappy with the country’s programs and . And rightly so. As one author observed, “A recent only 17 percent of respondents in the United States were content with their - system . . . Why the ? The are simple enough to describe: the system is hugely expensive, very bureaucratic, and extremely patchy. The expenses first: U.S. a third more, per person, than that of the closest rival, superrich Switzerland, and twice what many European countries spend. The alone spends more per person than the combination of public and in Britain, despite the fact that the provides free for all residents.”

The United States pays more for per capita than any other industrialized nation — and even then, is not a comprehensive, pay-for-everything national program like those of many nations and United States per capita continue to escalate rapidly.

Here’s what you need to know about as you plan for retirement.

Americans age sixty-five and over spend four times more on on average than do Americans under the age of sixty-five. At the of this decade, the average per capita - for a person under the age of sixty-file was about $2,800. For people over the age of sixty-five, it was $11,089. And for Americans ages eighty-five and older it was $20,001. Clearly, outlays are likely to get substantially larger as you age. You need to plan for them.

U.S. expenses have grown mightily. U.S. expenses have dramatically escalated each year as new medications, new treatments, , and innovations have come onto the market.

For example, the median nationwide cost for a hospital stay — excluding physicians charges — was $11,280 in 1997; by 2004 it was almost double at $20,455. The average total cost for treating a heart attack climbed 40 percent in just seven years. All in, have escalated fast and the increases are gaining momentum.

are likely to continue to grow unabated. Unlike in other countries, no laws meaningfully curb the continual climb of and drug in the United States. For example, many Americans continue to import drugs from Canada because Canadian prices are significantly lower. This is true even though the new Features introduced in 2006 offset the cost of pharmaceuticals for U.S. retirees. To curb the cost of medicines, Canada prohibits drug companies from advertising on its television channels. In the United States, on the other hand, the very legislation that created the new drug benefit (Part D) expressly prohibits the federal government from attempting to negotiate lower prices with drug companies.

Count on it: medical are sky-high and likely to keep climbing unless there is a radical overhaul of the system.

More and more corporations are cutting back on benefits as medical soar. Recent statistics show companies cutting benefits and requiring employees and retirees to pay more for them. As one survey of corporate benefit trends concluded, “[Benefit] reductions have become not just common, but expected, with the only question now being of how much more of a reduction in benefits and or an increase in cost will be directly placed on individuals . . . In the end . . . individuals, either as taxpayers or consumers, will need to pay the bill.

I believe this trend will gain greater momentum over the next decades. It will be part and parcel of the continuing erosion of employment benefits — like the demise of traditional pensions — that is taking place throughout the country. Just like pensions, more and more - expense is going to become a do-it-yourself responsibility because heath insurance are simply becoming too great for companies to shoulder competitively.

Taken all together, you can count on: (1) higher and higher , (2) more --benefit cutbacks by U.S. employers, (3) the need to factor large - expenses into your funding plans, and (4) the need to buy supplemental - insurance to shield your savings from cost attack.

Of course, these views will not come as a surprise to most folks. Recent polls show that — immediately after the foremost financial concern of having enough money for retirement — the next great concern of most Americans is . More than half of adult Americans are “very worried” or “moderately worried” about being able to pay for serious illness or catastrophic - expense.

Copyright © 2008 by Jim Schlagheck

The above is an excerpt from the book Cash-Rich Retirement

by Jim Schlagheck

Published by St. Martin’s Press; March 2008;$24.95US/$31.00CAN; 978-0-312-37740-3

Copyright © 2008 by Jim Schlagheck

Author

Jim Schlagheck is an author, banker, longtime advisor to the ultrawealthy, and the coproducer of the public television series Retirement Revolution. He has written numerous articles on investing, retirement, and finance, and is also an acclaimed speaker who describes better ways for retirement readiness to audiences of wealth-management professionals and lay investors nationwide.

Jim Schlagheck is an author, banker, longtime advisor to the ultrawealthy, and the coproducer of the public television series Retirement Revolution.

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