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Is the COBRA continuation premium subsidy working? |
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The article looks at the plight of the unemployed who are losing their COBRA subsidy at the end of December. The only cheap health insurance option will be term insurance. |
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| Author: Grace Oaks |
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Once the recession hit and unemployment spread, it became obvious to Washington that people were likely to be out of work for longer periods of time. There simply were no jobs waiting to be filled. The Obama administration therefore passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) which provides a 65% subsidy for the COBRA premiums for up to nine months. This is funded by their former employers who claim the payments as a credit on their payroll tax. Accordingly, we come to the position where an already attractive premium rate is further subsidized by the federal government through the IRS. This actually boosted the number of people who were able to afford to maintain coverage during their unemployment. There's only one problem.
The ARRA subsidy is limited to a nine month period from the date the employee loses employment in qualifying circumstances. The bill was signed into law in March and so the first group of employees who qualified nine months ago will be losing their subsidy this December. As time passes, there will be a rolling wave of unemployed people dropping out of the subsidy program and, for the most part, losing their health coverage because the full COBRA premium is unaffordable. There has been talk of trying to put a new bill through the legislature to extend the period of subsidy to twelve months or beyond. But, in the midst of debating healthcare reform, there's no appetite for this issue as well. We therefore have an irony in that Washington's push to provide cover for the mass of some 50 million adult Americans without health insurance will, if successful, come too late to provide continuity of insurance for these unemployed. This is not to say that there's no cheap health insurance out there. For the uninsured with a little money, the obvious option is term insurance. For a few dollars a month, basic cover can be put in place for a limited number of treatments. At this time, some insurance is better than no insurance.
About Author
Sites like http://www.healthinsurancemate.com/our-articles/cobra.html let Grace Oaks help people around the world in understanding and learning more about the subject. See what Grace Oaks has written for the site here.
Article Source:
http://www.1888articles.com/author-grace-oaks-24697.html
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