Only 5% of employers in the
Fact: Health Care Premiums are rising faster than workers wages Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose an average of 6.1 percent in 2007, less than the 7.7 percent increase reported last year but still higher than the increase in workers' wages (3.7 percent) and the overall inflation rate (2.6 percent), according to the 2007 Employer Health Benefits Survey conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust.
The 6.1 percent average increase this year was the slowest rate of premium growth since 1999, when premiums rose 5.3 percent. Since 2001, premiums for family coverage have increased 78 percent, while wages have increased 19 percent and inflation has increased 17 percent.
The average premium for family coverage in 2007 is $12,106. On average, workers now pay $3,281 out of their paychecks to cover their share of the cost of a family policy. While premiums continue to rise faster than wages, this year's gap of 2.4 percentage points is much smaller than the 10.9 percentage point gap recorded four years ago, when premiums rose 13.9 percent and wages grew just 3 percent. (Agent Sales Journal Nov. 2007)
Lets Keep it 100% coverage and reduce the premiums
This is a strategy from Easy To Insure Me .com
We will use 2 equations for a 15-employee group: Current and Future Solution
Equation 1 Current
15 employees
(Yearly Premium) $100,000=Health Care
Equation 2 Future Solution
(Yearly Premium) $60,000 + $15,000 (employees x deductibles) = $75,000 maximum exposure
100% coverage and the employer pays for the deductible
while still saving 20% to 40%
0 comments:
Post a Comment