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"New Reporting Rule May Drive Health Savings Accounts," by Gloria Lau, Investor's Business Daily, October 31, 2005. More on
"Should Workers Consider Individual Insurance?", by Jennifer Barrett,
Newsweek,
October 4, 2005.
"Paul Zane Pilzer Checks the Pulse of
Healthcare Insurance," by MC News,
Management Consulting News,
February 2006. "Getting Cheaper Health Insurance," by Margaret Price, New York Daily News, November 16, 2005.
The New Health Insurance Solution, by Paul Zane Pilzer,
Soundview Executive Book
Summaries, December 2005.
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By Gloria Lau View Actual Article (pdf) View Actual Page (pdf) Until recently, investors didn't have to worry about companies' health care obligations to workers and retirees. And before disclosure rules changed a decade ago, it was hard for analysts and investors to even know how much they cost. The legal change cut the number of retirees with company-sponsored medical coverage. A decade ago 44% of them had it; less than 20% do today. And most of that 20% gets insurance only because of their old union-type contracts. In December 2006, a similar law will make municipal governments tell the public and their bond investors what they're providing for retiree health care. This may lead more employers to seek ways to cut costs. Paul Zane Pilzer, an economist and former Presidential adviser, predicts that consumer-directed health plans linked to health savings accounts (HSAs) will be the solution. He seems them taking over the health care system in 10 years. HSAs are high-deductible plans that let employers pay a fixed amount to an employee's medical care; the worker chooses how to spend that amount. What the worker doesn't spend, he keeps. Critics say these plans will abandon workers who have little expertise to choose the care providers. And they will force workers to pay more of their medical costs. Pilzer disagrees. He co-founded Salt Lake City's Extend Benefits LLC, which works with clients like Continental Airlines and AutoNation to provide individual insurance plans for their workers. In mid-October, former America Online chief Steve Case's venture, Revolution Health Group, bought two-thirds of Extend. Pilzer spoke to IBD. IBD: Why should consumers opt to take more control of their medical care? Pilzer: Because unlike pensions, health benefits can be terminated at any time - (except) union contracts. Companies are prohibited from eliminating pensions, even if they go through bankruptcy. Not the case with health benefits. IBD: Why should investors care and what can they do? Pilzer: Most companies with union employee contracts like General Motors have retiree health benefits to pay, but I can't stress enough that these are open-ended obligations. Who knows what new devices will be invented tomorrow and that you, the investor, will become obligated to pay for? Our medical industry is constantly defining new diseases that weren't (considered) diseases a few years ago and coming up with new treatments. Yesterday's cause of death is today's cause of disability. People used to die of strokes, but today strokes only disable them. This trend is good if you're the person who doesn't want to die, but it's bankrupting many of our largest and oldest corporations. I'd encourage every analyst worth his salt to state the retiree |
health obligation of
every company he follows. Investors need to be as well-versed
about a company's health care obligations as he is about the company's
business.
IBD: What makes you think that
health savings accounts are inevitable? Most U.S. workers today
happily buy low-deductible plans through their employers. IBD:
How would health savings accounts impact the medical system?
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| PUBLICATIONS |
The
Next MillionairesExplains how you can become of the the ten million new millionaires that will be created between 2006-2016. |
The
New Health Insurance SolutionHow to get cheaper, better health insurance from birth to old age without an employer plan. |
The
NewWellness Revolution How to make a fortune in the next trillion dollar industry--preventative medicine and wellness. |
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New
York Times BestsellerGod Wants You To Be Rich Explains how our economic system is based on our biblical heritage, and you can prosper materially and spiritually. |
Fountain
of WealthAward-winning 6 CD (or cassette) audio series explains the new opportunities for creating wealth in the 21st century. |
Other
People's MoneyPilzer's first book, exposing the S&L Crisis and the history of savings in America. |
Unlimited
Wealth Pilzer's seminal work explaining how we live in a world of unlimited physical resources because of rapidly advancing technology. |
The
Next TrillionWhy the wellness industry will exceed the $1 trillion health care (sickness) industry in the next ten years. |
Real Estate
ReviewCollection of articles on the guidelines for success in commercial real estate investments. |
The
Wellness Revolution How to make a fortune in the next trillion dollar industry-- preventative medicine and wellness. |
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