c_hawkbob wrote:I actually agree with Asea on this, and to answer your SS issue, expand that as well. There is no reason, other than gross mismanagement, that SS shouldn't be funded to excess anyway, It's not our fault that the government has mandated we all pay into this retirement system for our entire lives that they have so grossly mismanaged.
It's like the Kentucky State retirement system, less than a dozen years ago it was essentially fully funded, the the state began borrowing from it (or more accurately diverting funds scheduled to be paid into it to other places) and now it is the least funded retirement system in the country and all of the remedies on the table put the burden of fixing the problem back on the employees.
RiverDog wrote:You haven't addressed the second point in my discussion: Social Security.
Expanding Medicare to age 60 is going to encourage more people to retire early, which would not only put a strain on Medicare, it would put a strain on Social Security.
I retired at age 63.5, so I had to buy my own health insurance for 18 months until I was eligible for Medicare. My premiums were over $1,000 a month for medical and prescription drugs, and that was just to cover myself. The rate would have been even higher had it not been subsidized by my former employer. I've heard that for people over age 60 that private insurance costs over $1500/month with very high deductibles. I had an option to take COBRA for 18 months, which would have still cost me over $500/month vs. my $200 a month if I would have kept working and maintained coverage under my employer's group insurance.
Medicare costs me $144.60 a month plus about $50/month for my supplement (high deductible Plan F) and about $15 a month for my Part D prescription drugs.
Bottom line is that with a minimum age of 65 to enroll in Medicare, there exists today a huge financial incentive for people to keep working at least until they are 65 and eligible for Medicare. If you lower the minimum age to 60, a very large number of people will jump at the opportunity to retire early and start drawing on SS at 80% of their full retirement amount when they reach age 62. That's one of the problems with the solvency of SS: Too many people are taking early withdrawals. The stated goal for the federal government for decades has been to try to keep people working longer. Expanding Medicare to age 60 runs counter to that goal.
The only way this proposal can not put more pressure on SS is if they eliminate early retirement, and even then, there's still going to be a lot of people retiring early as Medicare is cheaper than most employer sponsored group insurance.
Besides, is simply expanding Medicare to age 60 going to address "the problem" as you see it? Why stop at age 60?
Aseahawkfan wrote:1. Earlier you stated you did not want wealthier people getting favored treatment over you because you pay for insurance. And that is not how capitalism works.
Now how does this apply to healthcare. What it means is that the medical system will and should produce healthcare that is specifically for wealthy people, more effective, and costing a higher amount than what a lower income person can afford. Is this acceptable to you?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Do you find it acceptable that different levels of medical care will be provided to people based on their income? This is a feature of capitalism and is working as intended.
Aseahawkfan wrote:2. Do we have real competition for health insurance? I would say no, we don't.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Most employers in my experience offer very few healthcare options. My company in particular offers one. Some employers I've seen offer two to three. Very few offer more than that. Even the various healthcare options offered don't differ greatly, usually a few options better one way or the other. They are often much more expensive if you add family members.
Some higher end jobs offer much better healthcare. Thus showing the clear capitalist idea of a service stratified by income. The more you make or the higher the level of your job, the better the healthcare you will get. Your healthcare is heavily tied to your job and if for any reason you lose your job, you lose your healthcare unless you have a sufficient income to purchase the healthcare as a private option. I would say most don't have this kind of money.
Are you ok with this limited healthcare options tied to your employment? This means the unemployed will either have state healthcare, private healthcare, or no healthcare. This means workers at low income jobs, regardless of whether their healthcare needs are greater or lesser won't have sufficient healthcare to cover their needs and it might be cheaper from a productivity standpoint to let them and their children suffer or die because caring for them would be unprofitable.
Are you ok with this capitalist idea of unequal delivery based on income and it possibly being more profitable to let someone die or get very little care for a serious disease like cancer due to low quality, low income healthcare? Is this acceptable decision making to you?
And do you like having your healthcare tied to your employment so that you must do everything to hold on to a job to ensure you have affordable healthcare if you have insufficient income to pay for high cost of private health insurance?
3. Let's do a few basic case studies.
Buying a car. When you buy a car, you have plenty of time to search for a car at a price level you can afford. There are a bunch of car producers. A bunch of banks offering differing rates on loans. Acquiring a car and at a price you can afford is usually a quality capitalist experience. You have a lot of choices. You have a lot of competition to provide you the money to purchase the car and the car itself. You have many different dealers offering different perks to buy from them competing for your business. You usually have plenty of time to choose with options for other ways to travel like Uber or public transportation. There is zero reason to socialize cars as the car buying experience and capitalism work great together.
Healthcare. What is that experience like? You get a job. Your company has already chosen what healthcare they will provide. You will take what your company provides, nothing, private healthcare of your choosing, or if low enough income you will get state help. Then once you get that healthcare, you will get the service the healthcare has agreed to provide, usually very similar between companies for the same cost level with few options. If you don't have too much wrong with you, you can pay out of pocket to doctors which is often cheaper than you would pay for healthcare. If you get anything major wrong, then you can attempt to pay out of pocket for severe treatment which is often costly far exceeding what even a middle income person can afford.
Let's take a broken leg. You break your leg. You or someone will call the local government subsidized 911 service. We have already decided to socialize emergency medical response. Transport to the hospital may be socialized or partly paid for by insurance and charged to the consumer. Once you arrive at the hospital, the staff will see to treating your broken leg. They will attempt to ascertain your insurance at some point to ensure you can pay for it. If you don't have insurance, then they start a tab and if possible forward you to a state facility for the uninsured if not an emergency. Your insurance pays the agreed upon amounts for treatment of a broken leg and any rehabilitation treatment required that is available to your level of insurance based on your job or income. You receive that. You don't have much control over this process unless you have the money to pay for additional treatment out of pocket. All things must be justified to the insurance company and agreed upon to be paid by them.
This exact same process occurs within a socialist system. Because for nearly all intents and purposes, American private health insurance works much like a socialist system. Huge pools of money are taken in the form of premiums and paid out to medical people at agreed upon rates for agreed upon treatment. All of this negotiated prior to the person requesting service. If you try to get something your insurance hasn't agreed to pay, then you will have to argue with your insurance company or pay out of pocket.
How does this substantially differ from a socialized system other than having to pay an insurance company a higher premium for them to make a profit? You don't have a lot of control over how your insurance company negotiates prices or services. There are a limited number of providers providing the same levels of service based on how much you can pay. Wealthy people still get service first because they can outbid you for services by paying out of pocket supplemented by insurance.
Is this superior to say a German or Scandinavian system? What proof do we have that it is?
If I am correct, you are referring to a statement I made regarding the coronavirus crisis that if I were in the same hospital as Jeff Bezos and my odds of surviving were better than he was, that I should get the ventilator before he does. That has nothing to do with capitalism. It's triage. Sure, there's going to be exceptions, like if it were a war and a general was given higher priority as he's more important to the overall effort than some buck private. But if the only difference is our bank account, there should be no priority given simply due to class. It's like organ recipients. It is illegal in the US to "buy" an organ. Recipients are screened by their survivability then it's first come, first served.
This is not how it works. My wife used to work in a nursing home. There were some residents that were on private insurance, some that were on Medicare, and others that were on Medicaid. If what you are saying is true, then the person on private insurance would get preferred treatment while the person on Medicaid would be at the bottom of the totem pole because private insurance pays much better than either Medicare or Medicaid. The caregivers don't have a clue as to which person is covered by which insurance. They all get treated equally. It's not like the sinking of the Titanic where the first class passengers got the seats in the life boats while those in 3rd class were left to drown.
You may not see it as employees have to accept the carrier that the employer selects, but there are a lot of carriers out there. There are 10 in WA state that sell to small businesses. Here's a list of them:
https://www.insurance.wa.gov/health-ins ... businesses
Aseahawkfan wrote:As far as Biden's proposal, it's just a slow step towards eventual socialized healthcare.
RiverDog wrote:I almost would rather see us go to Medicare for All rather than the piecemeal approach.
If they were to infuse Medicare with a lot more funding so that it pays providers roughly the same as private insurers, then I might be more receptive. But my big fear is that it is going to result in a lower quality of care.
The other thing I worry about is that it will cause more people to retire early and further de-stabilize Social Security. Once again, SS would have to receive a very large infusion of money to keep it solvent if we reduce even further the worker to retiree ratio.
I want to see some specifics on how the Dems are going to pay for these grandiose schemes outside of their nebulous "tax the rich" or "tax Amazon" generic answer any liberal gives to address financial concerns.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The 60 year old limit might cause them to retire earlier if they have enough money to cover their expenses, but I doubt it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I'm not even sure most would take Medicare at 60. From what I understand Medicare absent some better plan like Medicare Advantage isn't that great. The private health insurance provided by an employer would probably beat base Medicare if not allowed to be had as supplemental insurance.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You and your wife have supplemental insurance to boost your Medicare right or something from your employer? That kind of stuff would have to be worked out before we shifted. That is why I recommend studying the German, Canadian, or Scandinavian models prior to implementing them and planning careful for a switch.
RiverDog wrote:Take if from a guy that's been there within the past couple of years. There are A LOT of people that would take an early out at age 60, and a whole bunch more when SS is available at age 62. If insurance coverage hadn't cost my wife and I over $2000/month to buy on the open market, at least one of us would have pulled the plug at 60, and if one of us hadn't retired at 60, we darn sure would have at 62. We had plenty of savings to supplement SS, and I would have been eligible to draw from my pension. But we wouldn't have been able to afford paying $2000/month in premiums for 5 years. The cost of insurance was the only reason that kept me working as long as I did. I would have done anything get off graveyards and have my weekends off. I personally know of a lot of friends and co-workers that would retire if they had such an opportunity.
Half my graduating class in high school have expressed a jealousy at my ability to retire at 63.5. Many are just now hitting the rocking chair as we were born from September 1954-August 1955, so we're hitting 65 years old and are eligible for Medicare. Since my birthday is in October, I'm a few months older than the majority of my 550 classmates, so there have been a number that are asking questions of me about Medicare and Social Security via Facebook.
Trust me. There are A LOT of people that would take an early out if they could get on Medicare at age 60.
Medicare Advantage is horrible. It's like a HMO. You have to see doctors that are in their network. With traditional Medicare, you can see any doctor or specialist you want so long as they accept Medicare, which most do. There are a lot horror stories out there about people that signed up for a Medicare Advantage plan, found out they had cancer, then couldn't see the specialist their doctor had recommended. And if you start taking MA then decide you want to change back to a traditional Medicare, you may have trouble getting a Medicare supplement as they aren't required to accept you. I'm not sure if it covers international travel, but my guess is that it doesn't. MA wasn't available in my county last year so I never even considered it. It is cheap, and some plans include dental. It's like any other insurance: You don't know how good it is until you need it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Most of your friends have enough money to survive with a much lower social security amount? Good for them. I don't know how many are in that position. My other gets like 2/3 I think of her normal social security for early retirement. She survives on it with a paid off house, but she definitely doesn't have a lot of wiggle room without much savings.
Medicare Advantage is horrible. It's like a HMO. You have to see doctors that are in their network. With traditional Medicare, you can see any doctor or specialist you want so long as they accept Medicare, which most do. There are a lot horror stories out there about people that signed up for a Medicare Advantage plan, found out they had cancer, then couldn't see the specialist their doctor had recommended. And if you start taking MA then decide you want to change back to a traditional Medicare, you may have trouble getting a Medicare supplement as they aren't required to accept you. I'm not sure if it covers international travel, but my guess is that it doesn't. MA wasn't available in my county last year so I never even considered it. It is cheap, and some plans include dental. It's like any other insurance: You don't know how good it is until you need it.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Maybe my father has something else. He said having supplemental insurance with Medicare helped expenses a lot.
RiverDog wrote:I certainly don't want you to interpret this as criticism of your mom as I know nothing about her circumstances, but no one should ever go into retirement with Social Security as their sole source of income. You have to have some other source of income, whether it be a pension, annuity, IRA, or whatever. I would say that about 3/4 of my high school classmates are still working or retiring this year. It's not all about going to college and climbing the corporate ladder, either. One classmate was a Forrest Gump-type of mentally challenged individual, didn't graduate, worked for the county as a janitor for 40 years, and retired at 62 with a nice pension from the state.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Pensions are getting more and more uncommon. My father built up a 401k, but my mother not so much. She retired early to take care of her elderly mother with some pressure from her siblings. She is not well set up at all.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It would be interesting to see what percentage of retired folk are more like you versus like my mom. Given what I've read of American savings and companies putting downward pressure on retirement all the time whether social security will be welfare by the time current generations retire. You may have been one of the last generations to have solid retirement options, with most folks now relying on 401k tied to increases in the stock market. Though some kind of state or government job will still be the best option for the pension route as I think they are the main jobs still offering that type of retirement. I know even Boeing in their new contract eliminated pensions for matching 401ks instead.
RiverDog wrote:Pensions are a relic of the past. They were well intended but ill conceived and are suffering from exactly the same fate as SS: Life expectancy has increased and the retiree/worker ratio has decreased. Plus companies in traditional union type jobs that typically had pensions, like automakers, have been eliminating thousands of jobs through automation, which further diminishes the worker-retiree ratio. Older established companies are being weighted down because of them. I can remember 10-15 years ago reading that for every new Ford car or truck that you purchased, $1500 goes directly to their pension fund, whereas Nissan and Honda, relatively newcomers to the American workforce without the "legacy" costs associated with having a large number of former retired workers, was given a huge competitive advantage. Governments, including the military, needs to get out of the pension business and convert to some form of 401K or individual retirement program.
According to a 2015 report from the Federal Reserve, 31% of all retired Americans have no pensions or retirement savings, so your mom is certainly not alone. If she has her house paid off, then she shouldn't have a huge problem making it. I would imagine that she's getting somewhere in the neighborhood of $1500/month. So long as she doesn't have any debts, she should be able to get by but she's not going to be able to go on any expensive vacations.
I prefer a 401K's anyway. They're portable, you can take them from employer-to-employer, you can roll it over into a qualified self directed IRA if your next employer doesn't have one, you can contribute to them (you can't contribute to a pension), and you can determine how to invest it. Plus pensions aren't necessarily fully guaranteed. A 401K, less any vesting rights on company contributions, is all yours. No one owes you anything.
Boeing was very wise to get out from under their pension and convert to a 401K. They can vary their contributions, cut it back in years that are lean, like this year and their 737 Max problems, use it to give their employees a bonus in years they do well. They can't compete against an international company like Airbus that doesn't have them.
Aseahawkfan wrote:This is true (about pensions). Something is going to have to change substantially. 401ks are not bad, but with the market getting hit like it is right now I"m not sure they are great answer either.
Aseahawkfan wrote:She (your mother) is not even getting close to this ($1500/month).
I prefer a 401K's anyway. They're portable, you can take them from employer-to-employer, you can roll it over into a qualified self directed IRA if your next employer doesn't have one, you can contribute to them (you can't contribute to a pension), and you can determine how to invest it. Plus pensions aren't necessarily fully guaranteed. A 401K, less any vesting rights on company contributions, is all yours. No one owes you anything.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Pensions were a killer for Boeing. World has changed too much to make pensions viable.
RiverDog wrote:The only guarantees in life are death and taxes. There is no hiding place from a severely depressed economy as we've seen in the past 2 months. We have a good friend, a former neighbor near 70, who never held a steady job in her life mainly because her hubby wanted her at home. They got divorced, she lost the house she'd live in for 35 years, and now lives in an apartment and just gets by living on very meager SS and whatever money she made when they sold the house. No kids or family to draw on for support. But she survives, very active in her church with a large network of friends.
As much sympathy as I have for your mom and others that have had more than their share of misfortune, we simply can't design a 100% fool proof system that's going to prevent everyone regardless of personal circumstances from ever falling through the cracks. That was the promise of communism, and we saw how that worked out. If we all had guarantees, there wouldn't be near the motivation to work.
Yea, you're right. My wife was a nurse for 40 years and gets slightly more than her FRA at a little over $1800/month pre tax. $700-800/month would be pretty tough to live on if you had significant housing expenses. But if 1/3 of recipients are living on SS alone, it can be done.
Pensions are a killer for all older, established companies. And it's not just pensions, either. A lot of them have other "legacy" costs like health insurance that they're having to pay their retired employees. I was lucky in that I got grandfathered into a retiree medical program.
Aseahawkfan wrote:She's managing it. She's used to living on a very tight budget and doesn't complain as she felt it was more important for her to take care of her elderly parents. I send her some help now and again. She's still healthy enough she could pick up a part time job somewhere for a little extra cash. And it would get her out of the house, which would be nice. Preferably something social and easy for 15 or 20 hours a week.
Pensions are a killer for all older, established companies. And it's not just pensions, either. A lot of them have other "legacy" costs like health insurance that they're having to pay their retired employees. I was lucky in that I got grandfathered into a retiree medical program.
Aseahawkfan wrote:That is why I think socialized healthcare is inevitable. Companies don't want the headache of paying for or managing healthcare. It would be better to take all those premiums that go to healthcare companies and build a giant, national pool of healthcare money to draw from. It would be like insurance on a national scale with a much larger pool of money to draw from. It's more of a matter of how to do it, how to price it, and how to manage it at this point. As far as it happening, you may live to see it, but it may be the next generation. But it's coming unless folks like Buffett, Bezos, and that other guy can figure out a better way to do healthcare than Germany and Scandinavia.
RiverDog wrote:Oh, I think it's inevitable, too, but not because it's a headache for companies to pay for and/or manage health care. IMO the nation has been trending towards the left side of the scale ever since Roosevelt with a Reagan or Contract with America Congress tossed in at random intervals. There'll be a lot of liberal ideas advanced, less military spending, socialistic medicine, more stringent environmental regulations, etc.
Aseahawkfan wrote:[I hope they keep communicating too. It's been shown that people who can communicate in a common language and share more in common even if that culture is built over the internet are less likely to make war and seek to harm each other and more likely too cooperate. We've never had a better tool for cross cultural and global communication of ideas until now. We just need America to not withdraw, but continue to show the world freedom is a valuable cultural trait and can indeed thrive and survive without communistic or socialist like controls.
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