Health Care Premiums Rise 5% For Year -- Increase Is 131% For Decade

The average family premium for health insurance offered through an employer surpassed the $13,000 mark this year, and the cost of coverage continues to outpace increases in wages and inflation, according to a report released Tuesday.

The average annual premium rose 5 percent in 2009, similar to the prior year's increase and considered modest compared with double-digit increases earlier this decade. Over the past 10 years, premiums have risen 131 percent while wages have increased just 38 percent. In that time, inflation has gone up 28 percent.

The report by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust, based on a survey of more than 3,100 U.S. firms earlier this year, comes at a time when the country is embroiled in a debate to overhaul its health care system by building upon the existing employer-sponsored model.

The report found if premiums to cover families increase by 6.1 percent, the average growth over the past five years, they will exceed $24,000 a year by 2019 - a level many health experts consider unsustainable without efforts to rein in costs.

"When health care costs continue to rise so much faster than overall inflation in a bad recession, workers and employers feel the pain," said Drew Altman, president and chief executive officer of the Kaiser Family Foundation, based in Menlo Park. "That's why we are having a health reform debate."

The average annual cost of coverage hit $4,824 for an individual and $13,375 for a family this year, according to the survey.

About 60 percent of employers offered health benefits this year, down from 66 percent in 1999. While 8 percent of employers said they were "somewhat" or "very likely" to drop coverage, more than 40 percent planned to increase the amount employees pay toward their premiums.

Meanwhile, the amount workers contribute to their health coverage has continued to go up while their benefits have decreased. Over the past decade, worker contributions have increased 128 percent, to $3,515 a year for family coverage.

Employers generally pay 74 percent of the cost of coverage, with smaller firms contributing less than larger companies.

The report shows that a reform bill should include a provision that regulates increases in health insurance premiums if the legislation also requires Americans to buy health insurance policies, according to a consumer group.

The proposals in Congress require Americans to have insurance and employers over a certain size to either provide it or contribute to the cost of coverage.

"The current legislation would actually encourage insurance companies to raise rates in order to increase profits," said Jerry Flanagan, health policy analyst with Consumer Watchdog, which is based in Santa Monica.

"If the government is going to require all Americans to buy health insurance, then the government has the responsibility to make insurance affordable."

Also on Tuesday, Families USA released a report that looked at rising health care costs in California.

The group, using data from the U.S. Census and other sources, found that family health insurance premiums in California rose by 109.2 percent over the past decade, while wages increase by 25.5 percent.

The average family premium for a family hit $13,026 in California, similar to the national average reported by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

For more information on the Kaiser Family Foundation's 11th annual health benefits survey, go to: www.KFF.org.

Rate This Article:

Comments:

Post A Comment

You are not logged in, please do so at the top of the page.

Recent Posts in Protecting Patients:

Will 'progressives' let middle class burn to prove their point?

When Anthem Blue Cross announced its controversial premium increases in California recently, the insurer claimed, "a carrier must be able to receive actuarially sound rates." So it is remarkable that "progressive" San Francisco State Senator Mark Leno, a single payer health care advocate, recently introduced eleventh hour legislation codifying Anthem Blue Cross's "actuarially sound" defense of premium increases in law.

Read More »

New rates at Blue Cross are a meager victory

At the shoe store, 40% off qualifies as at least pretty good. So why does regulators' approval of new, lower rates by Blue Cross of California not feel like victory? There are lots of reasons, but first is that the revised Blue Cross rate hikes are still in double digits, averaging 14% and as high as 20%, while average wages are still falling. And Blue Cross could announce another rate hike whenever it pleases, just as many insurers continue to do.

Read More »

Health reform regulation scorecard: The big stuff is headed to court

Wouldn't it be great if we could all deduct our federal income and investment taxes from next year's income? And if we could also deduct that stress-reducing trip to a spa in Bora Bora? And if the government would just take our word for it? Fantasy for us, but the health insurance industry think that's what federal health reform ought to allow, on a corporate scale.

Read More »

Seattle Story: Pretty good ending

The worst definitely didn't happen in Seattle. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners deferred the worst insurance industry demands for weakening the implementation of health care reform. For a body so closely linked to...

Read More »

Obama's victory lap in rush hour gridlocks LA to raise $1 million for Congress

It took my wife an hour and half to make the two mile commute home Monday, after the secret service closed some of LA's busiest streets at rush hour to shuttle the president from his Beverly Hills hotel to a fundraiser for Congress...

Read More »

View All Next »

Forward This Page To A Friend

CA Hospitals Risk Collapse In Earthquake