Ease the Pain of Higher Health-Care Costs

What to do when your boss asks you to shoulder more of the burden.

If you get your health insurance through work, expect to see a memo soon asking you to share more of the pain of rising costs. New health-care-reform initiatives, such as the requirement to offer coverage to children up to age 26, are just one factor in ever-rising medical costs that continue to push up premiums. And sagging profits from the weak economy mean health care hogs a bigger share of the budget.

Large employers expect their health-care-benefit costs to rise 8.9%, on average, in 2011, compared with 7% in 2010, according to a survey by the National Business Group on Health. Part of that increase will be passed on to workers, who have already seen their share of health-insurance premiums skyrocket nearly 150% over the past decade, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Subscribe to Kiplinger’s Personal Finance

Be a smarter, better informed investor.

Save up to 74%
https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/hwgJ7osrMtUWhk5koeVme7-200-80.png

Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free E-Newsletters

Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more - straight to your e-mail.

Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice - straight to your e-mail.

Sign up

To continue reading this article
please register for free

This is different from signing in to your print subscription


Why am I seeing this? Find out more here

Kimberly Lankford
Contributing Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance

As the "Ask Kim" columnist for Kiplinger's Personal Finance, Lankford receives hundreds of personal finance questions from readers every month. She is the author of Rescue Your Financial Life (McGraw-Hill, 2003), The Insurance Maze: How You Can Save Money on Insurance -- and Still Get the Coverage You Need (Kaplan, 2006), Kiplinger's Ask Kim for Money Smart Solutions (Kaplan, 2007) and The Kiplinger/BBB Personal Finance Guide for Military Families. She is frequently featured as a financial expert on television and radio, including NBC's Today Show, CNN, CNBC and National Public Radio.