Monday, May 12, 2008

Green Vehicles equals Cheap Car Insurance

Drivers who are interested in ethical issues may be interested to know that a greener vehicle could also offer financial benefits, according to the British Insurance Brokers' Association Biba.

Technical and corporate affairs executive at the group Graeme Trudgill explained that road tax and car insurance can be reduced by driving an environmentally-friendlier car such as the Toyota Prius.

Mr Trudgill said: "People are looking, especially at the moment with the credit crunch, at what the most affordable methods of transport are." As well as taking steps such as choosing an ethical bank account, consumers can save money and the planet with a green car.

Research by Articlesbase showed that insurance can cost an extra £50 for a non-green car and can also be more expensive to repair than a less eco-friendly model. However, Mr Trudgill added that those looking for cheap car insurance should also know that other factors such as age, experience, the type and value of the vehicle will also be taken into account.

600,000 to quit health insurance in Australia?

By Nick Miller and Leo Shanahan
May 13, 2008
TheAge.com.au

MORE than 600,000 Victorians may quit private health cover, putting more pressure on public hospitals, if the state returns to the participation rate that existed before the Medicare surcharge was introduced.The Federal Government was under fire yesterday for its decision to lift the income threshold at which the surcharge applied, from $50,000 to $100,000 for singles.

The private health insurance industry accused Prime Minister Kevin Rudd of reneging on a promise made days before the federal election to maintain the surcharge. Mr Rudd had used weasel words to hide his true intentions, Australia Health Insurance Association chief executive Michael Armitage said. He said lifting the surcharge threshold was differ- ent to maintaining it in most people's eyes.

Dr Armitage estimated that even after a $600 million budget injection into surgery waiting lists, public hospitals would be $43 million a year worse off. Premiums would increase for those who stuck with private insurance, he said. Others predicted little immediate extra load on the public health system, because those likely to lead the charge out of insurance would be young, healthy professionals.

But AMA president Rosanna Capolingua said it could be a signal to Australians that they could drop their private health insurance or not buy it in the first place.

It would lead to longer waits for elective surgery and other treatment."Those people who genuinely cannot afford (hospital cover) will actually be pushed further down elective surgery waiting lists," she said.

At the end of last year 2.26 million Victorians had hospital cover. In 1997, when the 1% surcharge was introduced, 31% of Victorians had hospital cover. With the introduction of lifetime health cover in 2000 it increased to 42%.

If Victoria returned to the pre-surcharge level, more than 600,000 people would leave private insurance.Canberra's Centre for Policy Development, health economist Ian McAuley, predicted little immediate impact from the change, apart from on insurers' hip pockets. "You will get young people dropping out, the ones who take out cheap policies that are pretty much pure profit for the insurers," Mr McAuley said.

The young did not get sick too often and tended to use public hospitals anyway because they had cheap policies with big excesses, he said.A spokesman for Mr Rudd's office said a promise not to lift the surcharge threshold had not been made.

Friday, September 21, 2007

There is No Such Thing as Divorce Insurance - Why Financial Ignorance is Far From Bliss

September 21, 2007
By Meredith H. Kaiser

When I sold life insurance, I fantasized about shaking the shoulders of women who responded to a financial question with, “Oh, I don’t know any of that stuff. My husband makes the money. I just spend it.”

Outwardly, I remained professional and found restrained ways to encourage them to wake up to the danger of their situation.

What I wanted to say was this. “Why on earth do you give your power away like that?”

Often, these were the same women who ridiculed their husbands for being cheap, selfish and disrespectful towards women.

Let’s pause for a teachable moment. Um. There may be a link here. This is probably what you signed up for.

If when you were dating, your partner was secretive, patronizing, and controlling when it came to money, you had two choices:

1. Run

or

2. Put your entire financial life in his hands by quitting work, having multiple children with him and turning a blind eye toward all of your life-long dreams, talents, and career opportunities.

I continue to be amazed by the numbers of otherwise intelligent women who turn their brains off and go skipping happily - in an overpriced puffy wedding dress — toward door number two.

Even when a spouse is kind and trustworthy, once a woman hands over her financial life to him, inequity is the inevitable result.

In her book, The Feminine Mistake, Leslie Bennetts makes an air tight case for why women should remain in control of their financial lives, no matter what other choices they make. She points to women who use marriage and motherhood as an excuse to abdicate responsibility for their own financial well-being. It doesn’t mean that being a stay at home mom is not a positive option from some women. But intentional ignorance of your financial situation is not a smart choice for anyone.

Both partners can and should participate fully in the family finances. Also, you should remain connected to your chosen career field since stay at home parenting is a temporary position. Kids eventually grow up and have their own lives, you should too. For instance, maintain memberships in professional associations and fulfill continuing education requirements for professional certifications. Nurture professional contacts and relationships. In short, remain employable. Because at any minute you may need to jump with both feet back into the work force in the event of the death, disability or departure of a spouse.

Yes, there is life insurance and disability insurance – both of which I highly recommend. But there is no divorce insurance. And, in the case of divorce, how will you pay the bills – including attorney fees — while you do battle with the person who knows more about your assets (or lack of them) than you do?

If you ignore reality, not only are you deciding to be completely dependent for your current food, shelter, clothing etc., you are also sacrificing accumulation of assets for your retirement. Yes, your contribution of childcare and support of your spouse’s career may do wonders for the “family financial picture” of today, but Ms. Bennetts compares this to pouring millions of dollars worth of renovations into house that you don’t own. Your name is not on the deed. Or it maybe it is, if your spouse set it up that way, but do you know for sure?

Find out where you stand financially. Educate yourself. This should be a team effort between you and your spouse. You may be surprised how grateful he is to share the burden. It is the single best decision you can make because financial ignorance is far from bliss.
http://www.savingadvice.com/blog/2007/09/21/101783_there-is-no-such-thing-as-divorce-insurance-why-financial-ignorance-is-far-from-bliss.html

Life insurance cos putting money in equities?

Source : Moneycontrol.com
The rising equity market has attracted the fancy of life insurance companies. Life insurance companies are inching their way to becoming the largest institutional investors.

Rs 150,000 crore. That’s what 16 Life insurance companies have invested in capital markets till March this year. LIC the largest life insurer contributed about 75% of this investment which comes to about Rs1, 24,000 crores. LIC has already invested Rs 17,000 crore in equities as against Rs 24,000 crore last year. Private insurers too are not lagging behind. Over the last one year, their equity portfolio has swelled immensely.

"About 2 years back we had one third of our total investments into equity today its about two thirds. Of the total money coming in about 80% is going into equity,” says Puneet Nanda, Exec VP & CIO, ICICI Prudential Life Insurance

ICICI Prudential Life Insurance doubled its equity exposure from Rs 5,900 crores last August to Rs 12,200 crores in August this year. Equity exposure of Bajaj Allianz too has more than doubled from Rs 2,150 crores last August to Rs 5,850 crores this year. SBI Life Insurance has trebled its equity investments from Rs 633 crores in August 2006 to Rs 2,600 crores in 2007.

Insurers say the increased equity exposure is driven by ULIPs, which now constitute upto 80% of their total portfolio. And with equity markets on the roll, insurers feel their equity exposure will only grow with time.

http://www.moneycontrol.com/india/news/insurance/life-insurance-cos-putting-moneyequities/20/50/304140

Study finds 89.6 million lacked health insurance

One-third of people in the U.S. under 65 went without coverage for some or all of the last two years, reports an advocacy group.
By Jordy Yager, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 21, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-uninsured21sep21,1,1634196.story?coll=la-news-a_section

WASHINGTON -- -- More than one-third of the people in the United States under the age of 65 had no health insurance for some or all of 2006 and 2007, according to a study released Thursday by Families USA, an advocacy group for the uninsured.

The 89.6 million individuals identifying themselves as lacking insurance for at least a month, according to the advocacy group, was almost double the number of uninsured reported by the Census Bureau for 2006.

"It's simply unacceptable that for lack of basic health coverage, nearly 90 million Americans had to live in fear of illness and injury in the last two years," said Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees national healthcare programs.

California had the largest number of individuals uninsured during some or all of that two-year period -- 13 million, or nearly 41% of state residents younger than 65. Texas was second, with 9.3 million. Americans older than 65 are eligible for Medicare and were not considered in the Families USA study.

More than 70% of those without insurance in part or all of 2006 and 2007 were employed full time, the report said.

Half lacked insurance for nine months or more.

"This is a story of working people, working families. This is not a story of people looking for a handout," said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA. "These are people who simply can't afford to pay for health coverage with their modest paychecks."

Since Families USA's first study, covering the years 1999 and 2000, the number of periodically uninsured individuals has risen by 17 million. The most significant factor in the that increase is the rising cost of insurance, Pollack said.

According to the most recent census data, about 47 million people said they were uninsured in 2006. That figure comes from the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey, which is conducted yearly. Among other things, it asks people if they have been uninsured in the previous calendar year.

But that survey does not give an accurate assessment of the uninsured, Pollack said, because it can exclude people who may have been uninsured for less than the whole year.

The Families USA report considered data from both the Current Population Survey and the Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation, which included people who said they were uninsured for just part of a year. The report projected through 2007.

"This is not a contradiction, but a fuller picture of Census Bureau data," Pollack said at a news conference.

jordy.yager@latimes.com

The Dark Side of Hillary Clinton's Health Care Plan

The public face of Hillary Clinton's new health care plan is sunny, filled with choices for consumers and bright with promises for better health care for all. But a close examination of the proposal alongside other initiatives of Sen. Clinton in the past few years reveals a dark side she wants to hide from public view until after the election is over.

By Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,297493,00.html

In her program, she speaks of how health care is the right of every "American" — but she has a rather expansive definition of "American." In 2005, Hillary co-sponsored legislation in the United States Senate to offer free health insurance, under the State Child Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) to the children of illegal immigrants who have lived in the United States for five years. So, those who have dodged the immigration cops for five years successfully would be rewarded not only with legal status and a path to citizenship, but with immediate free health care for their children.

Indeed, when Democrats and liberals speak of the 50,000,000 uninsured Americans, more than one fifth of those are illegal immigrants. Thus, about one in five of the beneficiaries of her program for universal health insurance are illegal aliens. (Illegal immigrants are a disproportionately large segment of the uninsured population because legal immigrants and citizens who live in poverty are eligible for Medicaid, but illegal immigrants are not.)

Would Americans like to reward those whose only connection to our country is that they flouted our laws to come here with free health insurance for themselves and their children? Doubtless Hillary knows the answer is no, so she is determined to hide that aspect of her plan from the public.

Hillary speaks of the importance of stopping health insurance companies from raising premiums on those who are sick. But she does not mention the inevitable flip side of her proposal — to raise premiums on those who are well. On the one hand, she would cover all those with chronic conditions with low cost health insurance and, on the other, would stop insurance companies from "cherry picking" healthy and young people for their insurance plans. The net effect would be a major increase in health insurance premiums for the vast majority of Americans.

In effect, her plan would turn "insurance" into "subsidy." The concept of insurance is that one pays a relatively low premium to guard against catastrophic expenses that are outside of our ability to meet financially. But Hillary's program would really be nothing more than a cash transfer from the healthy to the sick, not an insurance program at all.

Hillary says that her program would provide "universal" coverage for all. In order to achieve universality, one must make the program compulsory. The bulk of the uninsured do not want to have to pay for insurance. They are healthy and don't want the added burden of health insurance. That is why about half of those who are eligible for free or low cost insurance under the State Child Health Insurance Program have not signed up. Their parents don't want to.

So Hillary's program, as she freely admits, would require health insurance as a pre-condition of employment. Not having health insurance would be a violation just as driving a car without automobile insurance is illegal. The resulting coercion would force millions to pay for coverage they do not want and feel they don't need. But to pay for her national program, Hillary needs everyone to be covered so she can use their revenues to subsidize the coverage of those who are ill.

But the main defect of Hillary's program is that it leaves out any attempt at cost control. With health care absorbing 16 percent of our economy, Bill Clinton's warnings of economic disaster if its share of our national income passed 12 percent back in 1993 sound almost quaint today. Cost control is a vital part of any plan for universal coverage. Indeed, without it, extending coverage just offers a blank check to patients and providers which would drive even higher the share of our economy that goes to health care.

It was Hillary herself who explained this concept to Dick in 1993. The reality has not changed. Hillary will be forced to control costs as the implicit and vital element of any health care reform. This control of costs belies her contention that she would leave the health care system untouched except to extend coverage to those who now lack it. Because she would need to limit utilization and lower costs, she would be forced to ration health care and to impose government mandated and controlled managed care on all Americans.

For the first time, the word "no" would come into our system. Do you need open heart surgery? Are you a poor risk because of smoking or diabetes or age? No longer would the bureaucrat at the other end of the phone say "we won't pay for it" or "you don't need it" or "we can't fit you in at our facility." The answer would simply be no — even if you pay for it yourself, you may not have one. It is this type of coercion that drives Canadians over the border to the U.S. in search of medical options denied them at home under their socialized medical structure. Now it would operate on both sides of the border.

Finally, Hillary seeks to finance the system by ending tax breaks for the wealthy, by which she means any household with $250,000 or more in income. Never mind that she has spent that money several times over. But why use income taxes to finance her system? Why not do what Democrats and Republicans are now pushing in Congress — to finance it by raising cigarette taxes? That way we get a double impact: higher tobacco prices cut smoking, particularly among teenagers, and reduce health costs and the revenues pay for her expansion of the system. The current Congress is passing legislation to raise cigarette taxes 61 cents per pack to pay for a $35 billion expansion of the State Child Health Insurance Program. Why not raise them $2 per pack to raise the $110 billion Hillary says her health care proposal will need?

In selling her program, Hillary seems to imply that she was under the hypnotic control of her advisers (presumably Ira Magaziner) in 1993 when she designed her previous health care reform. Now she says she is in charge. "I'm the decision maker now," she told The New York Times. "I have a plan that is 100 percent my plan." But what was the 1993 initiative but her plan, concocted in secret and foisted in toto on a Congress which wouldn't pass it?

Now she says she would not "have approached [health care reform] in the same way" as she did in 1993. Now she will be informed by "a greater dose of humility and empathy and understanding of what it takes to get things done in our political system."

That and a determination to conceal the true implications of her proposal until after she is elected.

Dick Morris served as Bill Clinton's political consultant for 20 years, guiding him to a successful reelection in 1996. He is the author of New York Times bestsellers Because He Could, Rewriting History (both with Eileen McGann), Off with Their Heads, and Behind the Oval Office, and the Washington Post bestseller Power Plays.

Copyright Eileen McGann and Dick Morris 2006. To obtain free copies of all of the columns and newsletters by Dick Morris and Eileen McGann for non-commercial use, please sign up at www.dickmorris.com.

Insurance program faces veto from Bush


WASHINGTON — President Bush on Thursday repeated his threat to veto an expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), calling Congress' proposals a "step toward federalization of health care."

Congressional lawmakers have called for substantial funding increases for SCHIP by raising taxes on various tobacco products. SCHIP is set to expire at the end of the month, and Congress is expected to vote on reauthorization next week.

Negotiators have said a compromise bill from the chambers will be closer to the Senate version, which includes a funding increase of $35 billion over five years, while the president has proposed a $5 billion increase.

Senate approves FDA fee programs

Congress sent President Bush legislation Thursday giving the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) new powers to ensure the safety of prescription drugs.

The Senate passed the FDA bill by voice vote Thursday, a day after the House approved it. Bush is expected to sign it.

The bill would renew for five years two programs to collect fees from drug and medical-device manufacturers to defray the FDA's expense in reviewing products seeking agency approval. The bill also would beef up the agency's powers to police drug safety.

Agriculture secretary Mike Johanns resigns

President Bush announced the resignation Thursday of Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns and offered support for his anticipated campaign for a Senate seat from Nebraska.

"If it's Mike's decision and Nebraska's choice, he would make an outstanding member of the United States Senate," Bush said. Deputy Agriculture Secretary Charles Conner took over as acting secretary.

Several state officials said Johanns, a former Republican governor of Nebraska, is expected to seek the Senate seat being vacated at the end of next year by Republican Sen. Chuck Hagel.

Group asks Guiliani to drop Rep. King

A leading Islamic civil-rights group called on Rudy Giuliani on Thursday to drop Rep. Peter King from his presidential campaign after King called for greater scrutiny of U.S. mosques. Giuliani rejected the idea and stood by his friend of 41 years.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations said Giuliani should drop King over his "extremist and Islamophobic views and comments."

King, R-N.Y., said this week that there are "too many mosques in this country, there's too many people who are sympathetic to radical Islam."

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