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Retirement Health Benefits Are Down For the Count

By Staff Report

Mar. 15, 2005

Only one-third of all midsize and large employers offer retiree health benefits, and a growing number of those are terminating coverage for future retirees or shifting to an access-only approach with retirees paying the full cost.

Eight percent of employers with retiree health plans terminated coverage for future retirees in 2004, and an additional 11 percent are very or somewhat likely to end coverage this year, according to the new Kaiser Family Foundation/Hewitt Associates survey of 333 large employers with retiree health plans.


“The prospects for retiree health coverage are slowly disappearing for America’s workers, and retirees who have it will be paying more,” says Kaiser president Drew Altman.


Last year, 13 percent of employers with plans ended their subsidies and offered retirees access to benefits with retirees paying 100 percent of the costs. Eighteen percent of employers expect to do so this year. Companies that continued subsidized coverage in 2004 raised the retirees’ share of costs by an average of 25 percent, and almost all expect to raise the retirees’ share again this year. More than half of all the companies with subsidized plans have capped their contributions, with half of these hitting their cap in 2004 and 28 percent anticipating that they will hit it within the next three years. The survey report is available at www.kff.org.


–Fay Hansen

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