Watching the Health–Care Squeeze
A 65–year–old couple who retire today and live to life
expectancy can expect to spend almost $300,000, on average,
for health insurance premiums and out–of–pocket expenses,
assuming they have access to retiree health benefits from a
former employer and pay the entire premium.1
But employer–sponsored retiree health benefits are
becoming rare, and the outlook for retirees who will need to
rely on Medicare is also dire. Medicare is facing insolvency
in 2018, and experts are predicting that benefits will be
reduced in the future. Medicare benefits currently cover
only about half the cost of health-care services. If
benefits are reduced, today’s average 65–year–old couple
could need much more than $300,000 for health care.2
The coming health-care squeeze will affect most Americans
regardless of age, net worth, or health. Given the history
of American innovation, the question is not whether the
country will solve its health-care-cost crisis, but how it
will solve it.
When, Not If
“We are continually faced with a series of great
opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems,”
John W. Gardner, Lyndon Johnson’s Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare, once said.3
- Part of the bad news is actually good — and could
help alleviate the problem. Medical progress has greatly
extended U.S. life expectancies and helped reduce the
types of ailments, such as heart disease and arthritis,
that forced people to retire before they were ready. So
rather than living in a society that is saddled with an
aging and infirm population, we could be moving into an
era in which older American workers remain viable, in
demand, and earning income for a longer period.
- The health–care and social–assistance sector already
accounts for about 10% of total U.S. employment.4
The Bureau of Labor Statistics is projecting that
between 2004 and 2014, employment in this sector will
grow more than twice as fast as total employment.5
One of the characteristics of a free market is that
capital tends to gravitate to problem areas because
that’s where breakthroughs — and potentially winning
investments — typically occur.
The way in which our society grapples with the cost of
caring for a graying population will not be painless or
easy. Keeping an eye on how the problem is addressed may
help you decide how to react.
1–2 ) Employee Benefit Research Institute,
2006
3) quotationspage.com, 2005
4–5) Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2006