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Health Works Collective > Policy & Law > Health Reform > Health Care Inflation
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Health Care Inflation

JohnCGoodman
JohnCGoodman
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This graph is from Milliman, courtesy of Uwe Reinhardt, who provides this commentary:

This graph is from Milliman, courtesy of Uwe Reinhardt, who provides this commentary:

More Read

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Not Surprising That Sick People Aren’t Always Happy About Costs

The estimated average cost of health spending from all sources for a typical privately insured American family more than doubled in the last decade, to $19,393 in 2011 from $8,414 in 2001. Over the decade, the index exhibited an average compound annual growth rate — widely known in the trade as C.A.G.R. — of 8.8 percent, although, in recent years, that rate has ranged between 7 and 8 percent.

Despite that recent abatement, the growth rate is still more than twice the rate at which total average employee compensation has grown, for all but the top executives among private employers. In recent years, the growth in employee compensation has hovered beneath 3 percent.

In other words, health care is chewing up employees’ paychecks like Pac-Man in the famous arcade game. And there is considerable empirical evidence that the employer’s ostensible contribution to the employee’s health-insurance premiums actually comes out of the employee’s take-home pay.

   

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