Advantages and Disadvantages on Group Health Insurance VS Individual Health Insurance
In this article we
will explore the reasons that motivate employers to get group health insurance
for employees and we will look at the advantages and disadvantages from both
points of view.
Group Health Insurance
VS Individual Private Health Insurance
Probably the most
significant distinguishing characteristic of group insurance is the
substitution of group underwriting for individual underwriting. In group cases,
no individual evidence of insurability is usually required, and benefit levels
can be substantial, with few, if any, important limitations.
Group underwriting
normally is not concerned with the health or other insurability aspects of any
particular individual. Instead, it aims to obtain a group of individual lives
or, what is even more important, an aggregation of such groups of lives that
will yield a predictable rate of mortality or morbidity. If a sufficient number
of groups of lives is obtained, and if these groups are reasonably homogeneous
in nature, then the mortality or morbidity rate will be predictable. The point
is that the group becomes the unit of underwriting, and insurance principles
may be applied to it just as in the case of the individual. To assure that the
groups obtained will be reasonably homogeneous, the underwriting process in
group insurance aims to control adverse selection by individuals within a
group.
In underwriting group
insurance, then, certain important features should be present that either are
inherent in the nature of the group itself or may be applied in a positive way
to avoid serious adverse selection such as:
Insurance Incidental
to the Group: The insurance should be incidental to the group; that is, the
members of the group should have come together for some purpose other than to
obtain insurance. For example, the group insurance furnished to the employees
of a given employer must not be the feature that motivates the formation and
existence of the group.
Flow of Persons
through the Group: There should be a steady flow of persons through the group;
that is, there must be an influx of new young lives into the group and an out
flow from the group of the older and impaired lives. With groups of actively
working employees, it may be assumed that they are in average health.
Automatic
Determination of Benefits: Group insurance underwriting commonly requires an
automatic basis for determining the amount of benefits on individual lives,
which is beyond the control of the employer or employees. If the amount of
benefits taken were completely optional, it would be possible to select against
the insurer because those in poor health would tend to insure heavily and the
healthy ones might tend to elect minimum coverage.
As the group mechanism
has evolved, however, insurers have responded to demands from the marketplace,
particularly large employers, for more flexibility in the selection of
benefits. This flexibility typically is expressed in optional amounts of life
and health insurance in excess of basic coverage provided by the employer and
in more health care financing choices. Also, increasingly popular cafeteria
plans allow participating employees to select among an array of benefits using
a predetermined allowance of employer funds. Individuals select, subject to
certain basic coverage's being required, a combination of benefits that best
meet his or her individual needs.
Minimum Participation
by the Group: Another underwriting control is the requirement that
substantially all eligible persons in a given group be covered by insurance. In
plans in which the employee pays a portion of the premium (contributory),
generally at least 75 percent of the eligible employees must join the plan if
coverage is to be effective. In the case of noncontributory plans, 100 percent
participation is required. By covering a large proportion of a given group, the
insurance company gains a safeguard against an undue proportion of substandard
lives. In cases in which employees refuse the insurance for religious or other
reasons that do not involve any elements of selection, this rule is relaxed.
Third Party Sharing of
Cost: A portion of the cost of a group plan ideally should be borne by the
employer or some third party, such as a labor union or trade association. The
noncontributory employer-pay-all plan is simple, and it gives the employer full
control over the plan. It provides for insurance of all eligible employees and
thus, eliminates any difficulties involved in connection with obtaining the
consent of a sufficient number of employees to meet participation requirements.
Also, there is no problem of distributing the cost among various employees, as
in the contributory plan.
Contributory plans
usually are less costly to the employer. Hence, with employee contributions,
the employer is likely to arrange for more adequate protection for the
employees. It can also be argued that, if the employee contributes toward his
or her insurance, he or she will be more impressed with its value and will
appreciate it more. On the other hand, the contributory plan has a number of
disadvantages. Its operation is more complicated, and this at times, increases
administrative cost considerably.
Each employee must
consent to contribute toward his or her insurance, and as stated before, a
minimum percentage of the eligible group must consent to enter the arrangement.
New employees entering the business must be informed of their insurance
privilege. If the plan is contributory, employees may not be entitled to the
insurance until they have been with the company for a period of time. If they
do not agree to be covered by the plan within a period of 31 days, they may be
required to provide satisfactory evidence of insurability to become eligible.
Some noncontributory plans also have these probationary periods.
Efficient
Administrative Organization: A single administrative organization should be
able and willing to act on behalf of the insured group. In the usual case, this
is the employer. In the case of a contributory plan, there must be a reasonably
simple method, such as payroll deduction, by which the master policy owner can
collect premiums. An automatic method is desirable for both an administrative and
underwriting perspective. A number of miscellaneous controls of underwriting
significance are typically used in group insurance plans, but the preceding
discussion permits an appreciation of the group underwriting underwriting
theory. The discussion applies to groups with a large number of employees.
A majority of the
groups, however, are not large. The group size is a significant factor in the
underwriting process. In smaller plans, more restrictive underwriting practices
relating to adverse section are used. These may include less liberal contract
provisions, simple health status questions, and in some cases, detailed
individual underwriting of group members.
Group Policy: A second
characteristic of group insurance is the use of a group policy (contract) held
by the owner as group policyholder and booklet-certificates or other summary
evidence of insurance held by plan participants. Certificates provide
information on the plan provisions and the steps required to file claims. The
use of certificates and a master contract constitutes one of the sources of
economy under the group approach. The master contract is a detailed document
setting forth the contractual relationship between the group contract owner and
the insurance company. The insured persons under the contract, usually
employees and their beneficiaries, are not actually parties to the contract,
although they may enforce their rights as third party beneficiaries. The four
party relationship between the employer, insurer, employee, and dependents in a
group insurance plan can create a number of interesting and unusual problems
that are common only to group insurance.
Lower Cost: A third
feature of group insurance is that it is usually lower-cost protection than
that which is available in individual insurance. The nature of the group
approach permits the use of mass distribution and mass administration methods
that afford economies of operation not available in individual insurance. Also,
because group insurance is not usually underwritten on an individual basis, the
premiums are based upon an actuarial assessment of the group as a whole, so a
given healthy individual can perhaps buy insurance at a lower cost. Employer
subsidization of the cost is a critical factor in group insurance plan design.
Probably the most significant savings in the cost of marketing group insurance
lies in the fact that group commissions absorb a much smaller proportion of
total premiums than commission for individual contracts.
The marketing system
relieves the agent or broker of many duties, responsibilities, and expenses
normally associated with selling or servicing of individual insurance. Because
of the large premiums involved in many group insurance cases, the commission
rates are considerably lower than for individual contracts and are usually
graded downward as the premium increases. Some large group insurance buyer's
deal directly with insurance companies and commissions are eliminated. In these
cases, however, fees frequently are paid to the consultants involved. The nature
of the administrative procedures permits simplified accounting techniques. The
mechanics of premium collection are less involved, and experience refund
procedures much simplified because there id only one party with whom to deal
with such as the group policy owner.
Of course, the
issuance of a large number of individual contracts is avoided and, because of
the nature of group selection, the cost of medical examinations and inspection
reports is minimized. Also, regulatory filings and other requirements are
minimized. In the early days of group insurance, administration was simple.
That is no longer true. Even with group term life insurance, for which there is
no cash value, the push for accelerated death benefits, assignment to viatical
companies, and estate or business planning record keeping means that the
administration of coverage may be as complex as with an individual policy.
Flexibility: in
contrast to individual contracts that must be taken as written, the larger
employer usually has options in the design and preparation of the group
insurance contract. Although the contracts follow a pattern and include certain
standard provisions, there is considerably more flexibility here than in the
case of individual contracts. The degree of flexibility permitted is, of
course, a function of the size of the group involved. The group insurance
program usually is an integral part of an employee benefit program and, in most
cases, the contract can be molded to meet the objectives of the contract owner,
as long as the request do not entail complicated administrative procedures,
open the way to possibly serious adverse selection, or violate legal
requirements.
Experience Rating:
Another special feature of group insurance is that premiums often are subject
to experience rating. The experience of the individual group may have an
important bearing on dividends or premium-rate adjustments. The larger and,
hence, the more reliable the experience of the particular group, the greater is
the weight attached to its own experience in any single year. The knowledge
that premiums net of dividends or premium rate adjustments will be based on the
employers own experience gives the employer a vested interest in maintaining a
favorable loss and expense record. For the largest employers, insurers may
agree to complicated procedures to satisfy the employer's objectives because
most such cases are experience rated and reflect the increased cost.
Some insurers
experience rate based on the class or type of industry, or even based on the
type of contract. For small groups, most insurance companies' use pooled rates
under which a uniform rate is applied to all such groups, although it is
becoming more common to apply separate pooled rates for groups with
significantly better or worse experience than that of the total class. The
point at which a group is large enough to be eligible for experience rating
varies from company to company, based on that insurer's book of business and
experience. The size and frequency of medical claims vary considerably across
countries and among geographic regions within a country and must be considered
in determining a group insurance rate. The composition (age, sex, and income
level) of a group will also affect the experience of the group and, similarly,
will be an important underwriting consideration.
Advantages and Limitations of the Group Mechanism.
Advantages: The group
insurance mechanism has proved to be a remarkably effective solution to the
need for employee benefits for a number of reasons. The utilization of
mass-distribution techniques has extended protection to large numbers of person
s with little or no life or health insurance. The increasing complexity of
industrial service economies has brought large numbers of persons together, and
the group mechanism has enabled insurance companies to reach vast numbers of
individuals within a relatively short period and at low cost. Group insurance
also has extended protection to a large number of uninsurable persons. Equally
important has been the fact that the employer usually pays a large share of the
cost. Moreover, in most countries, including the United States, the
deductibility of employer contributions and the favorable tax treatment of the
benefits to employees make it a tax effective vehicle with which to provide
benefits.
Another significant
factor, and one of the more cogent motivations for the rapid development of
group insurance, has been the continuing governmental role in the security
benefits area. Within the United States, Old-Age. Survivors, Disability, and
Health Insurance programs has expanded rapidly, but many observers believe
that, had not group insurance provided substantial sums of life insurance,
health insurance, and retirement protection, social insurance would have
developed even more rapidly. As economies worldwide continue to reduce the size
and scope of social insurance programs, we can expect the demand for group
based security to grow even more.
Disadvantages: From
the viewpoint of the employee, group insurance has one great limitation- the
temporary nature of the coverage. Unless an employee converts his or her
coverage to an individual policy which is usually ore expensive and provides
less liberal coverage, the employee loses his or her insurance protection if
the group plan is terminated and often also at retirement because employment is
terminated. Group life and health protection is continued after retirement in a
significant proportion of cases today in the United States, but often at
reduced levels. Recently, with the introduction of a new U.S. accounting
standard (FAS 106) requiring that the cost of such benefits be accrued and
reflected in financial statements, an increasing number of employers have
discontinued post retirement life and health benefits entirely. When such continued
protection is not available, the temporary nature of the coverage is a serious
limitation.
Retiree group health
insurance often is provided as a supplement to Medicare. Another problem of
potential significance involves individuals who may be lulled into complacency
by having large amounts of group insurance during their working years. Many of
these persons fail to recognize the need for, or are unwilling to face the cost
of, individual insurance. Perhaps of even greater significance is the fact that
the flexibility of the group approach is limited to the design of the master
policy and does not extend to the individual covered employees. Furthermore,
group plans typically fail to provide the mechanism for any analysis of the
financial needs of the individual which is a service that is normally furnished
by the agent or other advisor. Many agents, however, discuss group insurance
coverage with individuals as a foundation for discussing the need for
additional amounts of individual life and health insurance.
If you would like some
more details, perhaps you are a small business owner and are considering group
health insurance for your employees, please feel free to contact me
[http://www.health-insurance-buyer.com] for a one on one no hassle free
consultation.
Carlos Diez is a
senior benefits consultant for health-insurance-buyer.com, click here for a
free no obligation quote [http://www.health-insurance-buyer.com] we are a
referral service that refers consumers to the insurance carriers that can best
fit their wants and needs. He holds life, health, and annuity licenses in 48
states and is appointed with over 88 carriers.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/expert/Carlos_Diez/624269
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