Retiree Health Benefit Trends Among the Medicare-Eligible Population

Retiree Health Benefit Trends Among the Medicare-Eligible Population
Author: Paul Fronstin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper examines the prevalence of retiree health benefits among Medicare-eligible retirees. It discusses the percentage of retirees with employment-based retiree health benefits over the 1994-2008 period. It also examines the trend for individually purchased coverage as a supplement to Medicare. Perhaps the single most-important factor that has affected the availability of health benefits for retirees through former private-sector employers was a 1990 accounting rule. FAS 106 required companies to record and disclose retiree health benefit liabilities on their financial statements and triggered many of the changes to retiree health benefits, most notably the sharp decline in the benefits being offered. GASB Statements No. 43 and 45, which impose new accounting standards on public-sector sponsors of retiree health benefits, are similar to FAS 106 and will have a similar, if not greater, impact on the financial statements of public-sector entities. As a result of FAS 106 and the rising cost of providing retiree health benefits, most U.S. private-sector workers will never become eligible for health insurance in retirement through a former employer. Fewer employers are offering health benefits to future retirees; when those benefits are offered, eligibility criteria are becoming harder to meet; and employer subsidies are disappearing. In 2008, 26 percent of 65-69-year-olds had retiree health benefits, down from 32 percent in 1994, and the numbers are lower for older retirees. It is possible that the decline in coverage would have been even larger had it not been for changes in the work status of individuals eligible for Medicare. In 1995, 59 percent of individuals ages 65-69 considered themselves retired, and that fell to 53.6 percent in 2008, while those saying they were working increased from 28 percent in 1995 to 35 percent in 2008. The PDF for the above title, published in the January 2010 issue of EBRI Notes, also contains the full text of another January 2010 EBRI Notes article abstracted on SSRN: “Employee Tenure, 2008.”

Employment-Based Retiree Health Benefits

Employment-Based Retiree Health Benefits
Author: Paul Fronstin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper uses recently released data from the U.S. Census Bureau to examine recent trends in offer rates for retiree health benefits, as well as changes to eligibility for coverage and changes to benefits packages. It also examines how the populations of retirees with retiree health coverage and workers expecting such coverage have changed between 1997 and 2010. The paper ends with a discussion of what might be next for retiree health benefits. Key findings include the following: Very few private-sector employers currently offer retiree health benefits, and the number offering them has been declining. In 2010, 17.7 percent of workers were employed at establishments that offered health coverage to early retirees, down from 28.9 percent in 1997. Between 1997 and 2010, the percentage of non-working retirees over age 65 with retiree health benefits fell from 20 percent to 16 percent. Because employers are under no obligation to provide retiree health benefits, except to current retirees who can prove that they were promised a specific benefit, and because (unlike defined benefit pension plans) employers are not under any obligation to pre-fund retiree health benefits, it is likely that employers will continue to make changes to those programs, especially for future retirees. Earlier research found little impact of reductions in coverage on retirees, but that may be because initial changes employers made to retiree health benefits affected future retirees as opposed to then-current retirees. Over time, more and more retirees have “aged into” those program changes, resulting in the greater impact found in more recent studies. While many employers have dropped retiree health benefits, especially for future retirees, most that have continued to offer retiree health benefits have made changes in the benefit package they offer: raising premiums that retirees are required to pay, tightening eligibility, limiting or reducing benefits, or some combination of these. Increasing retiree contributions tops the list of likely future changes: 43 percent of employers say they are very likely to increase the retirees' portion of premiums next year, and another 35 percent are somewhat likely to do so. Despite the fact that workers are more likely to expect retiree health benefits than retirees are actually likely to have those benefits, the expectations gap is closing: By 2010, 32 percent of workers expected retiree health benefits, while only 25 percent of early retirees and 16 percent of Medicare-eligible retirees had them. Public policymakers face the difficult task of trying to provide solutions for a system that is largely voluntary. As employers view state-based health exchanges as a viable option to retiree health benefits, they may view their own role in providing health coverage to retirees as no longer necessary.

Providing Health Care Benefits in Retirement

Providing Health Care Benefits in Retirement
Author: Judith F. Mazo
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 1994
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

This volume, from the Pension Research Council of the Wharton School, highlights many of the special health insurance problems facing the elderly and some of the solutions that any reform process must consider.