But would dropping insurance coverage actually make sense for healthy
individuals? To find out, we've built a tool to run those kinds of numbers!
For 2011, the Kaiser Family Foundation's annual survey of
Employer Health Benefits reports that the average annual premium for an
individual health insurance policy in 2011 was $5,429, or $15,073 per family.
That contrasts with a potential penalty tax of the higher of either $695 per
individual (or $2,085 per family) or 2.5% of annual income, which will go into
effect in 2016 (HT: Bob Vineyard). So the only question left is "what are the odds
of one needing health insurance on short notice?"
We'll define those odds as the chance that an individual will need care in a
hospital. We found the statistics for Australia, which breaks those odds down by age
and gender, and which we'll assume are similar for individuals in the United
States.
Playing with the numbers in our tool, what we find is that the less likely an
individual will need medical care, the more it is to their advantage to drop
their current health care coverage and become uninsured, buying it only if it
becomes necessary, then to drop it again once its not needed.
We also find that it takes a very high level of income to justify continuing
one's health insurance coverage. In both cases, the worst off an individual
would be is if they must pay both the tax penalty and the annual health
insurance premium year they require it. But then, if enough people drop their
coverage to pocket the savings, look for health insurance premiums to rise at
rates even faster than they do today!...
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