Emerging demographics, new legislation, and
budget shortfalls have converged to create unprecedented long-term care
insurance opportunities for both U.S. insurers and consumers.
Sidebar: What’s
Up on Capitol Hill?
By Jennifer C. Rankin
In America, old is in. Newstands are crowded with
covers such as Aging With Style. The country’s president is a Baby Boomer.
Diane Keaton is back. Unfortunately, for every senior model, well-to-do
politician, and movie star, there are millions of Americans who have not saved
nearly enough to fund their retirement, let alone pay for help when they are
unable to do things for themselves any longer. An increasingly popular solution
is long-term care insurance (LTCi).
Long-term care is an extraordinarily complex
subject. There are tax implications and suitability issues. The products
themselves are some of the most complicated in the industry. Missteps on the
part of the consumer can have catastrophic results; those on the part of the
carrier can destroy its image and bottom line. A plethora of care providers is
involved. Associated government programs are dealing with budget shortfalls and
consumer misuse.
Just what do we mean by long-term care? Loosely
speaking, it is a term used to describe the care that individuals who are not
able to perform the activities of daily living require. This includes people
with degenerative conditions, prolonged illness, or cognitive disorders and
those who are recovering from serious accidents or illness—not just the
elderly. Long-term care can take place in your own home, a nursing home, or in
an assisted living facility.
Funding sources include personal savings,
Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance (see Who Will Pay? below). In
aggregate, Medicare/Medicaid pays 60 percent of long-term care expenses,
consumers pay 36 percent out-of-pocket, and private LTCi covers four percent,
according to the American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI).
As you can see, LTCi covers only a tiny portion
of the country’s long-term care expenses. That’s about to change. The
federal government is making it increasingly clear that it wants private
insurance to play a much larger role. "This began with the recommendation
of the Pepper Commission in 1992 and continued with the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) and the long-term care
insurance program launched in 2003 for federal employees and their
families," reports Thomas Day, CLU, CEA, founder of LTC Link and a
long-term care advocate.
There are several bills now pending in Congress
that would allow full deduction of premiums and the pass-through of premiums in
cafeteria plans (see What’s Up on Capitol Hill? below). Both HIPAA and these
bills focus primarily on federal tax breaks for LTCi. HIPAA also closes
loopholes that allowed Americans to abuse Medicaid benefits—loopholes that the
1993 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) also addressed. In addition, many
states offer tax incentives for LTCi.
Despite the small role it currently plays in the
long-term care arena, LTCi is not a new phenomenon. In fact, the first policies
were offered a quarter century ago. They were primarily nursing home-only
policies designed to kick in when Medicare rehabilitation ran out, and in no way
resemble the comprehensive products we have today.
"It took until 1987 for the total number of
policies nationwide to reach 800,000," reports Day, "a literal drop in
the sea of traditional U.S. health insurance policies. Since 1987, the number of
LTCi policies has increased annually at an average annual rate of 21 percent. It
is estimated that at the end of 2000 there were approximately six million LTCi
policies in the U.S. generating about US$ 4.8 billion in annual premiums. About
80 percent of these policies were individual and 20 percent were
employer-sponsored group plans. However, group premiums are only 7.9 percent of
total premiums. More than 2,500 U.S. employers offered LTCi group plans."
According to Day, the number of companies selling
LTCi peaked in 1989 at 143 and has declined slowly to about 100. About one-third
of these companies are Blue Cross/Blue Shield organizations selling in only a
few states. A handful offer LTC cash benefits as riders to life insurance or
annuity contracts. Some 60 to 70 life/health companies licensed to sell LTCi
standalone policies in more than 40 states. In 1998, 10 companies accounted for
more than 70 percent of yearly premiums. In 2000, two companies accounted for
close to half of the market—GE Capital, with a 29 percent market share, and
Conseco, with a 17 percent share—and 10 companies owned about 84 percent of
the market.
Current Affairs
That was then, this is now. According to LIMRA
International, there were 5.3 million LTCi policies (3.8 million individual and
1.5 million group) and and US$ 6.9 billion of premiums in force at the end of
2002. And industry analysts peg the amount of annual claims paid that year at
more than US$ 1 billion.
Who’s in the game? For starters, the
government. The Federal Government Long-Term Care Program, which is jointly
marketed and underwritten by John Hancock and MetLife, is available to more than
20 million possible enrollees, including active government employees, retirees,
spouses, parents and other family members. During the initial enrollment period
in the first quarter of 2003, the program enrolled 265,000 individuals.
According to Long Term Care America, 88 percent
of individual LTCI policies were written by 10 companies in 2002 (see Some LTCi
Players).
The sector has experienced—and will continue to
experience—a significant level of consolidation. In the past few years:
- Aegon acquired Transamerica, which has LTCi
business.
- John Hancock acquired Fortis Inc.’s
individual LTCi business, then Manulife Financial acquired John Hancock.
- GE Capital acquired LTC insurer AMEX Life and
the LTCi portfolio of Citigroup’s Travelers Life and Annuity. Then, in
November 2003, GE announced it would spin off its life and mortgage
insurance operation in an initial public offering (IPO) of a new company
dubbed Genworth Financial, which it hopes to complete mid-year.
- CNA placed its individual life and LTCi
business up for sale, then retracted the offer because of inadequate offers.
It just entered into a binding agreement to sell its block of life insurance
to SwissRe in a transaction expected to close before the end of March. While
CNA will retain its individual LTC book of business, the insurer will no
longer take new applications for individual LTCi policies. The move does not
affect group LTCi operations.
- Conseco bought American Travelers and Bankers
Life and Casualty, then filed for bankruptcy in 2001. New York state allowed
the company to raise premiums more than 40 percent so it could continue to
service its LTCi policies.
- AIG, AFLAC, Gerber, Principal Life and John
Alden discontinued LTCi coverage.
- UnumProvident, created by a 1999 merger of
three of the largest disability income (DI) companies, announced a premium
rate hike on inforce LTCi policies in February 2003, then backed off. While
other carriers have gotten state insurance department approvals to raise
premiums on in-force policies, UnumProvident was in the midst of defending
itself against several class action lawsuits for alleged DI claims-handling
practices.
When the dust settles, a handful of companies may
control the market. Some relative newcomers are rapidly gaining ground.
"There are a number of large, well-respected and well-funded
companies," writes Day, "such as MetLife, Prudential, New York Life,
Northwestern Mutual, Allianz, State Farm, Hartford, and TIAA-CREF, who are
currently in the market and they are determined to build market share. These
companies have proven in the past that they can be successful latecomers to new
markets. Their sheer size and financial resources make it possible to carve out
significant market niches if they choose to focus those resources directly on
long-term care insurance."
Long-term care insurance is a complicated
product. There are dozens of benefit options and each option offers many
choices. Consequently, a single plan may offer an astonishing array of policy
combinations. Group plan providers, such as employers, typically preselect three
or four benefit combinations plus a few additional riders, which substantially
shrinks the number of choices. Carve-out group plans, which are offered
separately from company-wide plans, offer substantial benefits and tax
advantages to both the employer and the executives to whom they are offered.
From the consumer’s perspective, the choices
can be overwhelming. For starters, a prospective buyer must choose between a
tax-qualified or non-qualified policy. Then he must select:
- A daily benefit amount for facilities care
- A daily benefit amount for home care, adult
day care or hospice
- A benefit period (how long benefits should
last)
- An inflation protection option (or no
protection)
- An elimination period (the amount of time he
will pay for services before the insurance starts paying)
- Stated period benefits (policy pays for a
specified period of years) or pool of money benefits (policy pays a specific
dollar amount) or two-pool benefits (don’t ask)
- Claims/expense-based benefits (every expense
must be submitted for reimbursement) or indemnity benefits (insurer sends
you a check for the maximum allowable daily, weekly or monthly benefit in
the policy)
Some insurers offer discounts for good health or
if the family buys more than one policy. There are surviving spouse, shared
benefit and extended family coverage options; various pay period options;
non-forfeiture benefits; out-of-country coverage; death benefits; waiver of
premium options. These choices are just the tip of the iceberg.
More and more insurers are adding cost
containment provisions to their products. These provisions include tightening
qualification for coverage, establishing managed care arrangements with care
providers, and requiring care coordination.
According to LIMRA International, agents and
brokers sell more than 95 percent of individual policies. Employer-sponsored
group sales represent two-thirds of group plans sold. Emerging channels include
banks, financial planners, and CPAs.
Many LTCi carriers are targeting pre-retirees,
who typically are fiftysomething. If they have children, they are close to
writing their last college tuition check. If their parents are still alive, they
are highly attuned to the medical expenses associated with aging—and even may
be paying some of those expenses. They also may be panicked about their own
financial future. Americans are notorious for not saving money. Many
pre-retirees are beginning to realize they haven’t put away nearly enough for
retirement and that a serious medical problem would wipe out what little they’ve
put aside. They also realize that putting off an LTCi purchase could result in
substantially higher coverage costs and the possibility of becoming uninsurable.
Perfect Storm
Events have converged to create what many
analysts believe to be the perfect climate for LTCi providers. Among these are:
- Attractive demographics
- Budget woes
- Government program deficits
- Consumer need
- Escalating cost of care
- Low penetration
- Employer concerns
- Possible tax relief
Let’s start with demographics. The growing
population of the elderly in America—especially those over the age of 85—and
the concomitant increase in chronic conditions has caused a rising demand for
LTC services. According to LTC Info, there now are 31 million Americans who are
older than 65 years of age, three million of whom are older than 85. By 2020,
the U.S. population over the age of 65 is projected to grow to 55 million, while
the population over the age of 85 is projected to increase fourfold to more than
13 million. In aggregate, 42 percent of all individuals over the age of 65 will
enter a nursing home in their lifetime. More than one-third of those age 85 and
older will require long-term care.
In addition, the country’s Baby Boom generation
will reach retirement age during the next decade. There are 76 million of them
and they represent more than US$4 trillion in assets, which is about 61 percent
of today’s entire mutual fund market. The Boomers are beginning to shift their
focus from asset accumulation to asset management. As more of them realize they
will need to turn their assets into an income stream on which they can live in
retirement, they will consider income products such as annuities and
dividend-paying stocks. To protect that income stream, they will consider
long-term care insurance.
Another factor sure to enhance the appeal of LTCi
is tight government budgets. The federal budget has flipped from a triple-digit
surplus to a triple-digit deficit. State governments are scrambling to cover
their expenses. Medicaid, which accounts for 20 percent of state budgets and
seven percent of the federal budget, is a large part of the problem. The federal
budget deficit makes new social insurance financially impossible, even if the
government was interested in paying for long-term care, which it is not.
In addition, existing government programs are in
financial trouble. Medicaid is running a big deficit. In fact, 36 states faced
Medicaid budget shortfalls in 2002 and 41 states faced them in 2003. Long-term
care expenditures consume a quarter to a half of most states’ Medicaid budgets
and the federal government pays close to 60 percent of all Medicaid costs. State
guarantee funds, the place of last resort for insureds whose carriers go out of
business, are deeply concerned about who’s going to foot the bill if long-term
care costs spiral out of control.
There also is a growing realization that LTCi is
a viable product that meets a real need. Configured properly for the appropriate
consumer, LTCI enables an individual to keep his independence and dignity
through home care or assisted living, to spare family members from the stress of
handling care themselves or the expense of paying for a care giver, to preserve
assets for a spouse or heirs, and more. Plus Medicaid primarily covers nursing
home care—an alternative many seniors consider a last resort.
The escalating cost of care also is driving
interest in LTCi. Long-term care is expensive. Average nursing home costs range
from US$ 40,000 to 80,000 per year, according to Americans for Long Term Care
Security. Healthcare costs have been growing at twice the rate of the consumer
price index and attempts to control those costs have failed. Analysts expect the
cost of long-term care to grow five percent annually, from 2003, doubling by
2018, and doubling again by 2033.
In addition, there are lots of prospects for LTCi.
Although product sales are increasing every year, less than 10 percent of
individuals over age 65 own an LTCi policy. Participation in group voluntary-pay
plans offered by employers is about six percent.
Employers are beginning to show a real interest
in LTCi, primarily because they see the toll that providing long-term care to a
relative takes on the employee, which often translates into days off and
decreased productivity. According to a recent National Family Caregivers
Association survey, 54 million Americans, many of full-time employees, are
involved in family care giving. And U.S. businesses now lose an estimated US$ 20
to 30 billion every year due to the lost productivity of employees who provide
care to family members.
Finally, the Bush administration has included tax
incentives for long-term care in its proposed 2005 budget that include an
above-the-line deduction for LTCi premiums and an additional personal exemption
to home caregivers of family members with long-term illnesses. These incentives
would greatly improve the appeal of LTCi products.
Challenges Ahead
Despite these ideal business conditions, LTCi
providers face several challenges, among them:
- High entry costs
- Shifting terrain
- No real preferential tax treatment
- Competition from tax-friendly financial
products
- Underwriting concerns
- Reinsurance
- Mixed press reviews
- Creative consumer accounting
-
Analysts stress that LTCi is not a sector for the
faint-hearted. Many players report underwriting losses on their long-term care
business year after year, so it requires deep pockets and patience.
"Companies that play the middle ground and sell few policies," writes
Day, "will eventually exit the market due to high overhead and adverse
selection from stagnant sales of LTCi."
In addition, every day seems to bring an
announcement of an LTCi provider bankruptcy, investigation, merger or
acquisition. Analysts expect sector consolidation to continue, resulting in a
few large, financially strong players.
In many ways, President Bush has favored
financial vehicles other than insurance during his tenure. For starters, he
broadened the appeal of non-insurance products by reducing the tax on capital
gains to 15 percent. He also wants to replace exsisting tax-favored accounts —
such as IRAs, education savings accounts and 401(k)s — with lifetime savings
accounts, retirement savings accounts and employer retirement savings accounts.
Consequently, the insurance industry has welcomed the tax-friendly treatment of
LTCi in his 2005 budget. Still, the budget and aforementioned bills have not
been passed, which curbs LTCi appeal.
Another challenge is tough economic conditions.
Poor investment results coupled with low interest rates have squeezed profits.
Care costs are escalating. The stock market is improving, but still has a long
way to go. While battling these conditions, LTCi providers also are being hit
with lower-than-expected lapse rates and higher-than-expected claims rates. In
response, "LTCi providers are reevaluating [product] potential and
profitability," writes Alfred C. Clapp, Jr., president, Financial
Strategies & Services Corporation, in his September 2003 analysis for the
CPA Journal. "[They are] offering better coverage, tightening underwriting,
and increasing premium prices."
Analysts expect reinsurers to impose rate hikes
and more stringent requirements on LTCi issuers, which could impair future
improvement in LTCi product design.
Consumer editors are quick to point out the
potential downside of LTCi products. They are not cheap and there are no
guarantees that premiums will not go up just when the policyowner can least
afford it. They also point out that the ability to pay claims, as graded by the
rating agencies, does not signal the intent to pay claims. Most of these editors
tell their readers that choosing the right carrier is their single most
important decision.
More and more well-heeled Americans are finding
creative ways to qualify for Medicaid. In the March 2003 issue of Health Care
News, Stephen A. Moses, president, Center for Long-Term Care Financing, writes,
"Medicaid is a means-tested public assistance program. It is welfare.
People who need acute, emergency, or preventive health care must be dirt poor to
qualify for Medicaid.For anyone who needs nursing home care, however, the
eligibility rules are very different and highly generous. Despite the
conventional wisdom that people must be poor to qualify for Medicaid nursing
home benefits, income only disqualifies the top tier of seniors. In 30
medically-needy states, people qualify if they cannot afford private nursing
home care, which averages about US$ 5,000 a month. In the remaining income-cap
states, most people with monthly income in excess of the ostensible US$1,656
limit can set up Miller income trusts and qualify immediately. Married couples
are allowed to keep up to an additional US$ 2,267 per month in income for the
healthy spouse at home, while the ill spouse receives nursing home care paid for
by Medicaid."Moses also points out that, for most people, assets don’t
interfere with Medicaid nursing home eligibility. While Medicaid recipients are
allowed only US$ 2,000 in non-exempt assets, they also may retain a home and all
contiguous property of unlimited value; a business, including the capital and
cash flow of unlimited value; one car of unlimited value if used for the
recipient’s benefit; a burial trust fund of unlimited value; practically
unlimited home furnishings; and many other exempt assets.In addition, there are
Medicaid planning attorneys who use sophisticated legal techniques to shelter or
divest the wealth of their clients. These include special trusts, annuities,
self-canceling installment notes, life care contracts, and more."The truth
is," writes Moses, "no one has to be poor to receive nursing home care
paid for by Medicaid. All anyone needs is a cash flow problem."
This problem is debated hotly whenever the U.S.
economy is in recession. During the last recession, for instance, Congress and
President Clinton closed some eligibility loopholes, mandated estate recoveries,
made it a crime to transfer assets to qualify for Medicaid, and replaced the
criminalization of Medicaid asset transfers with the criminalization of Medicaid
planning advice. According to Moses, "None of these measures succeeded.
States didn’t enforce tougher eligibility rules or Medicaid estate recovery,
nor did the federal government compel them to do so. Criminalization of asset
transfers was repealed and criminalization of Medicaid planning advice was
deemed unconstitutional." The bottom line? The more seniors can tap
Medicaid money, the less incentive they have to purchase an LTCi policy.
Competitive Advantage
Rather than railing against the media, savvy
insurers are positioning themselves to win in a challenging climate. They are:
- Building teams of highly-skilled LTCi
professionals
- Making a long-range commitment to long-term
care
- Emphasizing rate stability
- Signaling their commitment to paying claims
- Investing in a highly-trained sales force
- Educating consumers
Long-term care insurance has unique actuarial,
product design, underwriting and sales requirements. Serious insurers are
putting much time and effort into examining the business risks from all angles
and pricing responsibly.
The policyowner knows he may not make a claim for
25 years and he’s expecting his insurer to be there. "I believe many
carriers are selling the product as a defensive move—they don’t want to be
left out if sales really start soaring", says Day. " Without a firm
commitment, they won’t stay with it if the going gets tough. A good indicator
of the commitment level is to observe the level of resources devoted to a
company’s long-term care business. For instance Allianz is serious because it
dumped its third party administrator and acquired LifeUSA which has an
established LTCi administration department. This was an expensive move but one
that signals commitment. Aegon is serious because every company it acquires is
soon selling long-term care insurance. Northwestern Mutual is serious because it
formed a separate company that only sells long-term care. These are but a few
examples."
Generally speaking, the LTCi industry has limited
claims experience, which makes it very difficult to guarantee rates for insureds
who may not make a claim for decades. Most offer a guaranteed-renewable-premium
option, which means the company cannot increase an individual’s premiums for
age or health reasons. Savvy consumers know, however, that their insurer can
file a rate increase for a class of policyowners—or all policyowners—on a
specific contract form in any given state. Carriers who intend to make
significant inroads into the LTCi sector are strengthening their underwriting
philosophies, keeping rate increases under control, and communicating their
commitment to rate control. Despite the occasional, albeit well-publicized, rate
hike, industry-wide rates have been reasonably stable during the past decade.
The most frustrating part of purchasing LTCi for
the consumer is getting a straight answer about a company’s claims experience.
Financial editors are cautioning consumers that a rating agency’s assessment
of an insurer’s ability to pay claims is not the same thing as an insurer’s
intent to pay claims. "If you ask the carrier how well it pays
claims," writes Day, "you’ll get the same response: We pay 90
percent or more of our claims in a timely manner. There is really no way of
knowing which company is most reliable with claims except by reputation. My
observation after 18 years in the insurance business is that companies with a
long-standing image or reputation to maintain are best with claims. Some of
these companies or their parent companies have been in business over 100 years.
They didn’t survive that long by not paying claims. I have observed that some
of the smaller, more aggressive companies don’t care that much about image and
are more likely to dispute claims."
Because LTCi is complicated and the wrong choice
of benefits now may not have implications for decades, many consumer editors are
advising readers to deal with sales people who specialize only in long-term care
insurance.
Forward-thinking insurers are bolstering their
marketing programs with comprehensive consumer education programs. Good examples
are New York Life’s Education Center, GE’s Center for Financial Learning,
and MetLife’s Life Advice, all of which are Web-based, exceptionally helpful,
and truthful about the pros and cons of LTCi.
As you can see, long-term care insurance is
poised to take off. America is graying, legislators are determined to secure tax
relief, and the government is unable to foot the bill. And some of the nation’s
most respected companies have entered the sector. Resource will keep you posted
as events unfold.
* * * * * * * * * * *
So what’s it like to be in the LTCi game? For
insight into market place challenges and opportunities, Resource turned
to Kenneth Grubb, senior vice president of New York Life’s long-term care
operations. An industry veteran with 30 years of experience—a dozen of them in
the long-term care industry—he chairs the Health Insurance Association of
America (HIAA) LTC Committee and testifies in Congress about LTC products and
their consumer benefits.
Resource: How is the typical
LTCi product structured? Do you see any emerging product design trends?
Grubb: Most products cover
services across the spectrum—home health care, facility care, and assisted
living care. This means many forms of service delivery are covered: care in your
home, care in assisted living facilities, adult day care, informal care by
someone not living in your home, and care delivered in a skilled care facility
such as a traditional nursing home. Early long-term care products were bought as
nursing home coverage only. The new, more comprehensive policies are almost
"nursing home avoidance". Today consumers are purchasing long-term
care insurance to ensure they can stay at home for as long as possible and
maintain their independence. Some developing trends include benefits that
mitigate the high cost of purchasing inflation protection and plan designs that
encourage home care. Some carriers offer alternate means of funding the
policies. An example is a 10-pay policy, where one pays much higher premiums for
10 years. At the end of the 10 years, the policy is paid up.
Companies are introducing policies offering more
basic benefits; i.e., a "compact car" plan versus one with
"luxury car" features. Both have value, but the "compact" is
less expensive. Another method of accomplishing the same end is to have a solid
"base" plan that can be enhanced by adding optional riders such as
benefits that might appeal to married couples.
Customers are increasingly focused on how
inflation will impact their ability to pay premiums. New York Life’s LTCSelect
Premier product offers a particularly innovative feature, the CPI-U option, an
inflation protection rider pegged to the urban consumer price index. This
patent-pending feature has flexibility and helps us to provide policyholders
with the right amount of coverage at the right price when they need services.
Resource: What distribution
channels are the major players using to sell LTCi? Do you see any emerging
distribution trends?
Grubb: The most common
distribution model for LTCi is through traditional broker/agents who specialize
in long-term care or make it a large part of their business. Second to this
would be sales through a national network of career agents, the New York Life
model.
In terms of emerging trends, banks and other
financial services companies are showing interest in selling LTCi. An example
would be the trend for agents and brokers to sell within wire-houses. Direct
marketers are slowly entering the LTCi market, but the product thus far has been
resistant to that sales methodology. More LTCi policies are being sold through
employers, stockbrokers now have an interest in LTCi and financial planners and
accountants are becoming aware of the importance of including LTCi in their
clients’ plans.
Resource: The consumer press
has given LTCi mixed reviews, warning prospective buyers about future premium
rate hikes and other issues. What advice do you have for those who are in the
market or wish to enter it?
Grubb: LTCi is a core
product of New York Life. As such, we assembled a team of long-term care
insurance professionals highly skilled in LTCi actuarial issues, product design,
underwriting and sales to avoid making financial or pricing decisions that put
our rate stability at risk. We price responsibly and have carefully examined the
business risks, such as morbidity, lapse rates and investment income
assumptions. Carriers need to have a good grasp of what’s happening in this
marketplace. It is essential to use realistic pricing and to balance risk.
Companies should make decisions on a sound actuarial basis, and not become
enamored by near-term loss ratios. Companies have to manage how they’re doing
compared to how they expected to do at that point in time. They need to have
very low loss ratios early on to support high loss ratios anticipated in the
later durations (i.e., you expect few claims in the early years but many more as
the policies mature over time). Of equal importance is the skill set of the
carrier’s underwriters. To protect the risk pool for both the carrier and the
policyholders (the consumer wants stable rates), it is critical to select people
from the application pool who need long-term care insurance, not people who
already need long-term care services or are likely to very near term.
When consumers are considering purchasing
long-term care insurance, they should ask questions: How long has the carrier
been in the insurance business? How long have they been in the LTCi business?
What are the company’s ratings? Has the company ever filed for a rate increase
on its in-force policies? It is also important for consumers to learn whether
long-term care insurance is a core product in the company’s business plan. The
consumer should be comfortable that the company has the proper skills to manage
the risk and is in the business for the long run as their need for benefits is
likely to be many years in the future.
Resource: What’s happening
on the legislative front? What are LTCi writers lobbying for these days?
Grubb: Tax treatment is a
hot issue. There are some situations where LTCi premiums are tax deductible if
the policy is tax-qualified under HIPAA. Some business owners may deduct LTCi
premiums and there is some relief to individuals who have met the medical
deduction limit filing their individual returns. Also, recent legislation
allows, with limitations, long-term care insurance to be purchased with pre-tax
dollars through health savings accounts (HSAs). Some states offer deductibility
of all or part of LTCi premiums from state income tax, but the federal
government has not yet enacted legislation. The industry is strongly lobbying
for tax relief for those who purchase long-term care insurance.
Resource: Are there any
international opportunities for LTCi players, especially leading multinationals
such as New York Life?
Grubb: Long-term care
insurance is a new product and there are still tremendous growth opportunities
in the United States. While some countries are exploring it, America is furthest
along in the long-term care market.
Resource: Is there anything
else you’d like to tell our readers, who are executives in the life/health
industry?
Grubb: The long-term care
marketplace is a great one to be in and—when properly managed— offers strong
growth opportunities. It is not only a viable product from a sales and
profitability perspective, but it is also an important societal issue. Long-term
care insurance makes a tremendous impact on people’s lives. Market awareness
is improving as consumers are becoming more conscious of the need for LTCi and
how the product can work for them. We are pleased with where we are in the
market. Our strategic decision to offer valuable products, underwrite them
carefully, and price them properly is serving us well as we grow our presence in
the LTCi market.
At press time, President Bush’s proposed 2005
budget includes tax incentives for long-term care, including an above-the-line
deduction for LTCi premiums and additional personal exemption to home caregivers
of family members with long-term illnesses.
Also in the hopper are various proposals for
federal legislation:
HR 2096: Introduced by Reps.
Nancy Johnson (R-Conn.) and Earl Pomeroy (D-N.D.) in May 2003, HR 2096 provides
for an above-the-line tax deduction, caregiver tax credit, greater consumer
protections and the ability to purchase long-term-care insurance through a
section 125 or cafeteria plan. The bill also simplifies the phase-in and has a
portability feature. Under the bill, taxpayers could deduct 25 percent of LTCi
premiums from 2003 through 2005, 35 percent in 2006, 65 percent in 2007, and 100
percent in 2008 and after.
S 1335: Sponsored and
introduced by Sens. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) and Bob Graham (D-Fla.) in June
2003, S 1335 is the Senate companion bill to HR 2096.
HR 1406: A bill that permits
more states to enter into long-term care partnerships. The Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1993 (OBRA) prohibits the development of long-term care
partnership programs beyond the four states (Conn., N.Y., Ind. and Calif.) where
such programs already exist. President Bush has included LTC partnerships in the
FY04 budget request; however, the current prohibition must first be lifted. H.R.
1406 does just that. LTC partnership programs allow people owning state-approved
LTCi policies to qualify for Medicaid without "spending down" their
life savings. There are two partnership models: dollar-for-dollar protection and
total asset protection. In both cases, Medicaid becomes the payer only after the
partnership policy benefits are exhausted.
HR 4946: A tax deduction to
help middle income people defray the cost of insurance for LTC has won passage
in the House on a 362-61 vote. HR 4946 would permit the deduction for a
taxpayer, a taxpayer's spouse or a dependent and it would apply whether or not
the taxpayer itemizes tax deductions. The new deduction would be limited to
individuals earning between US$ 20, 000 and 40, 000 in adjusted gross income and
between US$ 40, 000 and 80, 000 for married couples filing jointly. In addition,
the taxpayer would have to pay at least half of the insurance premiums. HR 4946
would also permit an additional personal tax exemption, worth US$ 3,000 in 2002,
for members of a taxpayer’s family who function as long-term caregivers and
expands the types of expenses drug manufacturers can claim as a tax credit in
testing drugs for certain rare diseases.
HR 1: Congress has included
a provision in H.R. 1, the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and
Modernization Act of 2003, that will let holders of the new Health Savings
Accounts use tax-deductible contributions to pay for qualified long-term care
insurance and long-term care services.
S 538: Introduced by Sen.
Hilary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) and passed by the Senate in April 2003, S 538
calls for the establishment of a program to assist family caregivers in
accessing affordable and high quality respite care.
HIPAA: Over the years,
numerous bills have been introduced to clarify the tax treatment of LTCi and
long-term care expenses in the tax code. The substance of these proposals was
included in the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA),
which was signed into law in August 1996. HIPAA amended the tax code to treat
private long-term care policies and long-term care expenses the way health
insurance policies and health care expenses are currently treated under the
code, effective January 1, 1997. These changes have several different
dimensions. Amounts received under a "qualified" long-term care
insurance plan are considered medical expenses and are excluded from gross
income. Contributions of an employer to the cost of qualified long-term care
insurance premiums are excluded from the gross income of the employee.
Out-of-pocket long term care expenses are allowed as itemized deductions to the
extent they and other unreimbursed medical expenses exceed 7.5 percent of
adjusted gross income. Self-employed individuals are allowed to include premium
costs of long term care insurance in determining their allowable above the line
deduction for health insurance expenses. HIPAA enhanced private sector financing
of long term care by authorizing these tax incentives for individuals and
employers to purchase long term care insurance. HIPAA also criminalized certain
Medicaid asset transfers executed for the purpose of qualifying for public
assistance. Long term care insurance policies that were purchased before January
1, 1997 were grand fathered in and are considered tax-qualified for federal
purposes. They will remain tax-qualified if there are no material changes made
to them.
BBA
Prior to 1997, Medicare payments were very
helpful in allowing long-term care recipients to stay at home and avoid
institutions. But, Medicare was never intended to pay for chronic, long-term
home care. A 1989 lawsuit asserting rights of homebound recipients as well as a
lack of Medicare oversight allowed the system to get out of hand. Home health
payments by Medicare increased an astounding 25 percent a year between 1990 and
1997, about four times the health care inflation rate. In 1996, Congress passed
the Balanced Budget Act (BBA) and the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA), both of which restricted Medicare home health and
reasserted the intent of only covering acute-care recovering patients was
reasserted. In November 1997, under BBA, Medicare adopted an interim payment
system based on a projected 1999 implementation of a Prospective Payment System
for home care. PPS greatly restricted eligibility and reimbursements for
homebound patients. Medicare home health benefits went from a high of US$ 18.3
billion in 1997 to US$ 9.5 billion in 1999, a drop almost in half.
OBRA: The Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1993, President Clinton's first budget, provided much of
what is needed by closing many of the loopholes that made Medicaid eligibility
so attractive. It also required every Medicaid program in the country to recover
benefits paid from the estates of deceased recipients. OBRA '93 did two things:
codified 1986 legislation on the prohibition of certain types of trusts and
expanded the rights of states to go after funds in a decedent recipient's
estate. OBRA '93 effected a strikingly new approach to Medicaid eligibility, and
in so doing, effectively curtailed many of the techniques previously employed by
lawyers and their astute clients.
In addition, many U.S. states offer tax
incentives for long-term care insurance, including various deductions and
credits. These are too numerous and nuanced to describe here.
The National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC) has developed LTCi model regulations that address in-force
premium price increases, affordability and suitability, but these are
recommendations without sanctions for violators.
Sources: LTC Forum, LTC Link
* * * * * * * * * * *