Sunday, December 29, 2013

Placing Odds on your Health (and Its Cost)

Read my Datapoints column in today's New York Times. The really important point in shopping for health insurance is understanding your risks of incurring big bills. That information is difficult for individuals to figure out. (and neither the government or health insurers are making it any easier)  

What Americans could use is an individual assessment of risk based on health history, age, and other relevant factors. We know that it can be done, at least to some degree, since in past years health insurers studied their data to figure out who was likely to have big expenses in order to deny them coverage. Health insurers are not making that data readily available, though. 

For now, Milliman’s estimates which I use as the basis for my NYT column can provide a rough guide. Here's the table Milliman provided. Perhaps in the future we’ll see better ways to help Americans become savvy health care shoppers.

The Risk of Incurring Various Amounts of Health Expense in a Year, Without Health Insurance.
Source: Milliman Inc

(1)
(2)
Trended
Percentage of
Total
Adults (under 65) with
Annual
Claims Greater
Claim
than Column 1
(Rounded)
(Rounded)
$0
93%
$100
90%
$500
80%
$900
70%
$1,700
60%
$2,700
50%
$4,300
40%
$7,300
30%
$13,300
20%
$26,800
10%
$47,300
5%




Friday, December 27, 2013

Two Numbers: The Coming US Retirement Crisis

Read my Newsweek column on how prepared we are for retirement. It's scarier than you think.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Two Numbers: the Rich are getting Richer Faster

Read my latest Newsweek piece. By one measure, at least, inequality is growing at a faster rate.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Bitcoins from Heaven

Bitcoins are traded on unregulated markets and open to manipulation. Read my piece in Newsweek.