|
Following is an edited transcript of a
speech delivered by Center president Stephen Moses to an audience of
leading LTC insurance producers, distributors and carriers at a conference
on January 12, 2013 sponsored by
Long-Term Care Financial Partners.
Don’t miss the irony in Steve’s
speech. The good news for LTC insurance is actually very bad news for the
U.S. economy. The only way to reconcile this seeming conflict is to
resolve the LTC financing crisis in the right way. That’s exactly what
the Center for Long-Term Care Reform will recommend to the LTC Commission.
------------
“The Good News and Bad News About
Long-Term Care”
by
Stephen A. Moses
I have good news and bad news.
I’ll spend one minute on the bad news
and the rest of my time on the good news.
The bad news is that all the reasons
consumers have been in denial about the risk and cost of long-term care
still apply and they are getting worse.
- Government programs still pay for
most expensive long-term care in the USA.
- Government LTC benefits are much
easier to get than most people realize.
- And the Federal Reserve still
forces interest rates to near zero which compels carriers to raise
premiums to compensate, making LTCI harder to sell.
OK. So much for the bad news.
Here’s why LTC insurance carriers,
distributors and producers are in the catbird seat primed to do well doing
good for your clients and for your country.
First of all, everything that makes
LTC insurance necessary remains true and is becoming more so. For
example:
- 8,000 Americans turn 65 every day
and that will continue for the next 18 years.
- 70 % of people 65+ will need some
LTC and 20% will need 5 years or more
- LTC is very expensive: As of 2012,
over $80,000 per year for a nursing home; over $42,000 for assisted
living; and over $60,000 for a home health aide on a daily 8-hour shift
But we’ve known all that since the
inception of LTC insurance in the 1970s. Nothing new there.
So what is new? Why will the LTC
insurance market explode within your career horizons and probably during
the current four-year presidential term?
In a nutshell, all the obstacles to a
strong LTC insurance market are about to come crashing down.
Let me walk you through them one by
one.
- The demographic bombshell of aging
boomers is only now beginning to explode with the first of the
77-million-strong generation becoming fully eligible for Social Security
last year and for Medicare the year before.
- Government programs funding LTC are
like Wylie Coyote in the Road Runner cartoon. They’ve gone over the
fiscal cliff still wearing a silly grin, but they’re about to fall like
an anvil. Why?
- Basic federal government debt is
$16.5 trillion, over $52,000 for every man, woman and child in the
country. Our debt to Gross Domestic Product ratio is 100 percent. We
borrow 42 cents of every dollar the federal government spends. Can you
believe that? We go $1 trillion deeper in debt every year. That can’t
continue for long.
- Medicaid, which crowds out 2/3 to
90% of the LTC insurance market according to Brown and Finkelstein, has
a terrible reputation for poor care and is bankrupting the states. Easy
access to Medicaid and its big loopholes will end.
- Social Security pays for about 13%
of LTC through Medicaid spend-through, but Social Security has a $21
trillion unfunded liability. It can’t continue funding LTC.
- Medicare pays generously for
nursing home and home care which enables LTC providers to survive with
most of their patients funded at less than cost by Medicaid. But
Medicare has a $39 trillion unfunded liability, so it can’t continue
either.
- All three – Medicaid, Social
Security and Medicare – will be means-tested. That means they’ll be
welfare programs, not social insurance, and most middle class and
affluent Americans will get less, if anything, from them.
- Home equity will become a major
source of funding for income security, health care and long-term care in
retirement. That’s good for the reverse mortgage business in the short
run and for LTC insurance in the long run as more people realize they
need coverage to protect their home equity.
- 65 million Americans are unpaid
caregivers, 7 of 10 of whom care for someone over 50 years of age.
Those numbers will skyrocket as boomers age.
So what does this mean for you?
We’re about to enter a brave new world
of long-term care. Keep doing what you’re doing and before long prospects
will be knocking on your door instead of vice versa.
The public’s been asleep about LTC
risk and cost because a government safety net has softened the financial
consequences of going without LTC insurance since 1965.
As I’ve explained, that’s ending.
Already you see key changes indicating
the public is finally getting the message. The age of purchase for LTC
insurance has fallen by a decade from late ‘60s to late ‘50s.
You see and hear many more media
stories about the risk and cost of long-term care.
Businesses worry more and more about
absenteeism and “presenteeism” due to employees caring for elderly parents
or worrying about them instead of working. That means you’ll sell many
more group and multi-life policies.
Attorneys, financial planners and
accountants are getting more questions from their clients about LTC. Just
last week an estate planner called me to find out who could help him
protect his clients. I referred him to a major distributor.
People are getting scared. They hear
the news about the federal debt and deficit and unfunded entitlements.
They’re caring for elderly loved ones in huge and rapidly growing
numbers. The public programs they’ve relied on no longer instill
confidence.
These trends develop slowly over
time. They grow and grow like blowing up a balloon. Then they pop and
all of a sudden everything is different. That’s what’s going to happen.
You are in the enviable position of
being in the right place at the right time. Some of you have been
pioneers in long-term care insurance. We know you by the arrows in your
backs.
But your time has come now.
Watch for this scenario to play out.
- Assuming current government
policies stay the same, the American economy will continue to lag.
- Domestic and international
financial pressures will force interest rates up in spite of the Federal
Reserve.
- Federal debt service will skyrocket
putting more financial pressure than ever on government programs that
fund LTC such as Medicaid, Social Security and Medicare.
- Policy makers will have no choice
but to cut back on benefits, eligibility, and provider reimbursements.
- The quality of publicly financed
LTC will continue to decline.
- It is true already and will be more
true in the future that access to quality long-term care at the most
appropriate level is assured only to those who can pay privately.
You are the heroes who will show the
next generation how to avoid the pitfalls of publicly financed long-term
care.
One of the things I love most about
speaking with my many friends who have been selling long-term care
insurance for two decades or more, is to hear their stories about clients
who have gone on claim.
Those clients are so appreciative that
they elevate the producers who sold them their policies to the status of
demigods. How enormously proud that must make them . . . you . . . feel.
And that’s what the future holds for
you if you stay on course. You are the last line of defense between the
people you meet and the dismal future that awaits them if you allow their
denial about LTC risk to prevail.
So my advice to you is “Go forth with
confidence and pride. Know that long-term care insurance is good and
people need it. Everyone you protect is one less person to drag down the
social safety net for the truly needy.”
Look forward in your own old age to
the warm appreciation of all the people you’ve helped. And enjoy your own
retirement someday with the windfall of renewals that are coming your way.
Thank you.
Stephen A. Moses is president of
the Center for Long-Term Care Reform (www.centerltc.com).
Contact him at 206-283-7036 or smoses@centerltc.com. |