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Financial Planning: Long Term Care Insurance
Risk. Every American must plan
for the consequences of risk becoming reality. Some risks decrease
as we age, while others increase. And we insure against these
risks to protect our families and our assets.
As Americans' life expectancies
continue to rise due to the benefits of modern medicine, the
likelihood that we will need long term care increases as well.
Despite the fact that long term
care is a growing reality for a number of Americans, particularly
baby boomers, most are still reluctant to ponder becoming old
and infirm, let alone paying for such care.
Now, more than ever, Americans
should consider looking to financial planners for advice
regarding long term care and the financial pitfalls they could
face.
Asset Protection
In this context, the financial
well being of baby boomers is cause for particular concern. In
addition to their sheer volume (the number of elderly is expected
to double to 77 million by 2030), the aging boomers face longer
life expectancies and dwindling social support programs to sustain
their long term care demands.1 Although
studies indicate that baby boomers may have saved enough for
their retirement, it is evident that they have not sufficiently
prepared financially for their future long term care needs.2
For those concerned about protecting
their assets should they ever need to enter a nursing home or
assisted living facility, purchasing long term care insurance
is the best deal one can make. Consider this: No matter what
age you are now, if you were to buy a mid-priced long term care
policy, chances are you would pay out less in premiums for your
lifetime than you would for just one year in a nursing home.3
The Financial Planning Market
Today
The majority of long term care
insurers continue to market policies primarily to individuals.
The number of providers in this market remains limited, however,
and therefore highly concentrated. This could have a deleterious
effect on premium costs and accessibility to potential consumers.
The HIAA estimates that, at the end of 1996, only eleven sellers
represented approximately 80 percent of the individual policies
sold.4
Employers are beginning to offer
long term care insurance as part of their employee benefits packages,
just as they offer disability and retirement benefits. Yet there
is still much to be done. Despite the billions of dollars lost
annually on both sidesin missed days and decreased productivityemployers
have enjoyed very little success encouraging their employees
to participate. Of the firms offering long term care insurance
in their benefits packages in 1996, the HIAA estimates that less
than six percent of employees participated in the program.5
Public-Private Partnership
Government does play a role in
the financing of long term care, but only to a limited extent
and only after strict conditions are met. Contrary to popular
belief, Medicare coverage for nursing home care is limited. Medicaid
covers more long term care services, but in order to qualify,
individuals must "spend down" their assets to the poverty
level.
The private sector alone cannot
realistically meet society's entire long term care needs. There
will always be a significant need for government participation
to ensure that a safety net exists for society's most destitute.
The American Health Care Association is committed to working
with Congress and other policymakers to craft a viable public-private
partnership that will expand the availability of long term care
insurance for those who can afford it, while at the same time
leaving the social safety net intact and financially secure to
meet the needs of those who cannot afford long term care by themselves.
Facts
- More Americans are more concerned
about financing long term care (69 percent) than about paying
for retirement (59 percent). (National Council on Aging, 1996)
- Seventy three percent of Americans
incorrectly think that Medicare is the primary funding source
for long term health care. (Gallup Organization Inc., Public
Attitudes on Long Term Care: The EBRI Poll. August, 1993;
15.)
- Less than three percent of all
nursing facility costs are currently paid by long term care insurance
plans. (Health Care Finance Administration, Health Care Financing
Review. Summer, 1995: Vol. 16, Number 4.)
- Of the more than 1,000 insurance
companies doing business in the United States, a mere eleven
have written more than 80 percent of the long term care insurance
policies (HIAA). (Health Insurance Association of America, The
Importance of Long Term Care Insurance in Planning the Retirement
of Baby Boomers. Testimony before the Senate Committee on
Aging, March 9, 1998.)
Sources
1U.S. Census Bureau, 1996.
2Health
Insurance Association of America, The Importance of Long Term
Care Insurance in Planning the Retirement of Baby Boomers.
Testimony before the Senate Committee on Aging, March 9, 1998.
3CNA
Insurance Co., 1998.
4Health
Insurance Association of America, 1998.
5Ibid.
January 7, 2009
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