Retirees Could Lose Their 'Guaranteed' Health-Care Benefits
by Allison Schrager
11:49 AM EDT March 18, 2015
California's struggling to pay for health care for retired state employees, with an estimated $72 billion in medical costs coming in the next 30 years. Governor Jerry Brown's solution: Make workers start contributing money to pay for the health care they'll need after retiring.
Three years ago Brown pushed through a pension system reform to increase the amount public workers must contribute to their pensions, but that effort left health costs for retirees untouched. And while pensions are certainly in trouble, retiree health care is potentially a much bigger deal. Health-care inflation rises faster than pension inflation, and unlike with pensions, employers are not required to prefund health benefits. (The U.S. Postal Service is a notable exception, and don't think they don't complain about it.)
Until recently, the courts had regularly said that health-care benefits must be honored. In January, that changed: The Supreme Court unanimously decided that retiree health benefits are not necessarily guaranteed. Retirees who once worked for M&G Polymers USA sued because they were suddenly required to contribute to their health-care costs. Free health care for life wasn't explicitly promised in their contract, but the retirees claimed that health benefits, like vested pensions, can't be taken away. The court disagreed.
Few companies still offer health care to their retired employees. The Employee Research Benefit Institute estimates that in 1997, some 29 percent of private-sector employees worked somewhere that provided health insurance after retirement. In 2010, fewer than 18 percent did. Most retirees qualify for and take Medicare, with employer coverage to supplement it. But for some 2 million retirees who are not old enough to qualify for Medicare, employer health plans are their only insurance.
The ruling came at an interesting time. Since 1992, private companies have had to list health-care obligations as a liability on their balance sheets. Being forced to disclose health-care costs led many employers to ditch retiree health care. A Kaiser Foundation report speculates that the remaining plans may soon be eliminated, too. The existence of Medicare Part D (which offers prescription drug benefits) and the Affordable Care Act (which offers a nonemployer-based insurance option for retirees under 65) makes it easier for employers to eliminate retiree health care, because retirees have viable alternatives. The only thing standing in their way was the obligation to honor existing benefits. The court's decision made getting out of those obligations much easier.
more...
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-18/retirees-could-lose-their-guaranteed-health-care-benefits
PoliticAverse
(26,366 posts)CountAllVotes
(20,870 posts)They do not deserve the benefits they worked for all of those years eh? They have likely paid in TWO pension systems, Social Security and State of California pension systems.
All of the payments were taken out of the paycheck and gee, for a low level worker they probably got a pittance of a paycheck and worked anyway for THE BENEFITS, not the crap job they were doing for 20+ years!
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts)Fumesucker
(45,851 posts)It only seems Just..