The Cairns Post

Penalties a sick joke

Govt fees double health insurance costs

- SUE DUNLEVY

MORE than one million Australian­s are paying up to $3000 more for private health insurance as a result of government means tests, age penalties and subsidy cuts.

Government health insurance penalties are more than doubling the cost of health cover for some at a time when rising premiums are forcing people to drop their insurance.

For some people, these pen- alties are pushing their health insurance costs up from about $3000 to more than $6100. When coupled with premium rises over three times the inflation rate, the penalties are helping drive an exodus from health cover.

The proportion of the population with health insurance has started to fall for the first time in 17 years.

And two years after the federal government set up a private health insurance reform process, little has eventuated.

A News Corp investigat­ion into the effect of government health insurance penalties has found tens of thousands of Australian­s lost access to some or all of the 25 per cent private health insurance tax rebate under a means test introduced in 2012.

As a result, they are paying up to $1077 a year more for their cover. If they also delayed taking out their health insurance until late in life, they could be paying a government Lifetime Health Cover penalty worth up 70 per cent or $2100.

More than one million Australian­s are paying this LHC penalty that increases the price of insurance by 2 per cent for every year they delayed taking out cover after they turned 30.

The federal government has also cut the subsidy it provides for health insurance from 30 per cent to 25 per cent, adding a further $166 to the cost of health insurance by indexing it at a rate lower than premium rises. When these charges are added to the average $4000 annual premium for family cover, it means some Australian­s are paying more than $6000 for health cover – twice the $3000 bill faced by those not hit by the penalties.

A national Ipsos Australia survey commission­ed by health fund broker iSelect found more than one in four Australian­s didn’t know whether or not they were paying a Lifetime Health Cover loading on their policy.

Spokeswoma­n for iSelect Laura Crowden said one in four iSelect customers aged 31 were paying a LHC penalty adding an average 29 per cent to hospital-cover premiums.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia