Retirement Planning Advice and Financial Related Education by Barry Unterbrink, Chartered Retirement Planning Counselor

Thursday, September 14, 2023

Long Term Care Insurance - Required in Florida Some Day Soon?

Could you be forced to buy Long-Term Care Insurance in Florida soon? Is there any precedent for this? Is Medicaid slowly going broke with little money to fund Long-Term Care?

America’s Entitement programs are out of control in this author’s opinion. Federal spending for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are enormous drags on our fiscal health. The programs have promised a lot more than they can deliver, as each legislative decision seems to liberalize the benefits even more.

The 2023 Social Security Trustees Report shows the program being able to pay just 77% of scheduled benefits starting in 2033, one year earlier than the last report. Medicare will run short in its funding also in just 4-5 years.

There are many myths out there regarding LTC; what it covers, and what Medicare does not cover. Virtually no long term care services are covered by Medicare. Nursing and Custodial care is provided after hospital stays covered by Medicare Insurance for a limited time, but not on-going care in your home or a non-hospital facility.

Who Qualifies for Medicaid?

Basically, if you can’t afford to take care of yourself health-wise, and have little money to hire others to do so, you become a ward of the State and could qualify for Medicaid, the jointly funded program between the states and Federal Government. Once certified, you will normally go to a ‘facility’ that can feed you, house you, and medicate you. Medicaid will use your Social Security benefits to pay your costs, and then use the program funds to pay the difference. Long Term Care insurance planning helps you pay for those expenses – partially or fully – so you don’t use all your estate assets, and/or go bankrupt and be forced to go on Medicaid after that.

Long Term Care is an EVENT, not a PLACE. Not being able to dress, bathe, eat, walk, transfer or use the bathroom usually qualifies you for LTC benefits  (2 or more of the above activities minimum). Cognitive diseases such as Alzheimers, Dementia, or Parkinson’s also would give you the green light to qualify. LTC insurance enables you to stay in your home while receiving skilled care -or even family care - also.

Many of the State budgets are in much better shape than the U.S. Federal budget. To get a ‘data-rush’ on all this, head over to https://USDebtClock.org
  Use the link at the upper left to find your state’s data.

I live in Florida, so I’m using that as my example. Plus, Florida is a large state, with 22 million residents, many of them retired and likely to use Medicare or Medicaid services. About 1 in 6 American’s live in either California or Florida; that’s 62 million people. The U.S. Debt Clock shows 64 million social security recipients and 85 million people on Medicaid in America…HUH? Eighty-Five million! One in every 4 American’s are on the dole in the Medicaid program!

             WASHINGTON’S LONG TERM CARE PROGRAM

The Washington State plan, enacted in 2021, set forth a maximum $36,500 lifetime LTC benefit, with other stipulations on age and residency. Their thinking; $100/day benefit for one year. A $100,000 wage earner without a LTC plan in force pays $580/year in taxes to support those collecting LTC. A small dollar amount, but a smallish benefit. Eight million people reside in Washington State.

Last year, California started the ball rolling and established the Long Term Care Insurance Task Force to formulate a worker-funded LTC plan of their own. Here is an excerpt from their Department of Insurance:
Long Term Care Insurance Task Force: The passage of AB 567 (Calderon) established the Long Term Care Insurance Task Force (Task Force) in the California Department of Insurance to explore the feasibility of developing and implementing a culturally competent statewide insurance program for long-term care services and supports.

They want to learn and improve on the Washington State plan for their 40 million citizenry. Insurance insiders tell me the California plan may have up to a 1% payroll tax, with a 2024 launch date. Washington State’s rate was set up at 0.58% of taxable payroll. Pensions, capital gains and other income is not included, just earned income.

Florida is run pretty well under our current legislature. Debt to GDP is about 11%, about the same as Washington State. But Florida is still running a deficit of about $77 Billion a year – last report. Florida's Medicaid budget is $28 Billion, and going into the red this next fiscal year.
Are you starting to see the possibility of some type of Florida LTC plan getting traction?

Tax More or Spend Less

A State managed Long Term Care insurance plan would also give the states much more control over their money since the Federal Government – I assume – would have little say in how to allocate the money to those in need. They could then also share the costs of the current Medicaid program with the Feds, as they now do.

The Florida legislature would have to determine the rules, the potential future claims, and the funding necessary to make it viable and fair for both taxpayers and beneficiaries.

Perhaps Florida brings back the state “intangibles tax”, or some other tax to fund the program. It won't likely have juicy benefits that a private insurer would offer for more money, but it's a start to help those chronically ill get some assistance and have many taxpayers as stakeholders in this important and costly event most of us will someday use.

With the aging of America from the Baby Boomer’s retiring at about 10,000 folks a day, this Medicaid mess in unlikely to get better anytime soon. I look for more states to take LTC matters into their own hands as the Federal Medicaid Program may not be able to stay alive much longer funding millions of residents for years in assisted-living and nursing home facilities. See the current status of state's legislation at the end.

The Hazards of Waiting

The sooner you get LTC coverage, the cheaper it is, like most types of insurance. Plus, you never know when you will need it; age 55, 60, 82?

The Washington State LTC plan, when announced in 2021 resulted in tens of thousands of applications to life insurance companies that write LTC policies,  that they had to stop accepting new business for 6-7 months!

For a quick comparison quote, I ran a $3,000 a month benefit for a healthy 55 year old male, with a $108,000 pool of money lasting 3 years. The cost is $221/month.
The Death Benefit to his heirs if no LTC used; $72,000, with a 3% compound inflation on the initial $3,000 benefit built in.  
Refund of premium can be added at no cost if you wish to cancel the policy.

A 50 year-old woman would pay $181/month. Surf over to this link for an interactive LTC quote for your area of the country: https://tinyurl.com/5n7xktn3

Do you have life insurance that no longer suits its initial goal? Exchange it for an LTC policy.

I believe in this type of coverage for you or your loved ones. I’ve owned my hybrid policy for 2.5 years now, and see the cash value growing each month and can rest assured with every medical report / check-up that should I need my LTC money, it will be there for me each month.

Forward this to those who may benefit from this retirement planning advice, please.
For a more accurate quote for yourself, contact me.

I'll circle back when I hear more news on the California and potential Florida LTC plans.

~Barry
(954) 560-3622

UPDATE from my 9/14/23 Post: Here is list of states that are in the process of LTC discussion or legislation: Discussion: AK, NC, IL, ME, MA, MI, NH, OR, VT.  Progressing legislation: CA, MN, NY. In-force now: WA

I am licensed to provide LTC insurance to my clients using stand-alone and hybrid LTC insurance solutions. I have been full-time active and licensed in the retirement planning field since 1993.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, July 24, 2023

Financial Market's - 2023 Performance

The second quarter of 2023 continued to build upon the 1st quarter’s gains in stocks. The broad market’s Dow Jones Industrial stocks rose +4%, while the S&P 500 Index rose +8.7% for the three months.

The performance out of the gate in January surprised many, in that the economy, inflation and interest rate worries were still important drivers of a potentially slowing economy.

The S&P 500 rose more than the Dow Industrials due to the heavy concentration of technology stocks performing very well. Think Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft.  

The stock Sectors that performed well the first 6 months included Information Technology, +35%, Consumer Discretionary, +30% and Communication Services, +30%. With the S&P 500 up near 16%, no other Sectors of the 10 beat the S&P 500! Energy lost 10%. Health Care was down 4%, Utility stocks lost 6%, Financials (banks) and Real Estate* lost 2% each. Consumer Staples was even. So you can see, the gains were quite narrow-based sector-wise.

The Federal Reserve increased interest rates three times in the first half of 2023 also, to try to soften demand for both money and goods – hoping to tame inflation. It’s been working fairly well thus far, as prices overall are dropping year-over-year. The Feds target is 2% inflation; we’re at 3% year-over-year now. But many areas are well above 3% in the last (June) report. 

Rents are up 8%, hotels +5%. The bean counters call these Shelter Costs, and they are a big component to the prices used to calculate inflation. Also, food prices are up 5.7% year-over-year. One relief is energy prices; gas, oil; down about 16%. It doesn’t feel that way at my gas station, though. 


So, the Federal Reserve’s interpretation of which inflation time-frame to look at can result in how they adjust interest rates. July 26th – this week – is their next interest rate decision; look for some fireworks perhaps in the stock and bond markets starting Wednesday.

Bonds and Gold could not keep up with the price rises in stocks, however.

Gold increased just $87 for the six months, after surrendering some of the $155 gain through March 31st. Still, that was good enough for a +4.8% gain in the first half, so it did contribute to performance. Gold traded at its yearly high in early May near $2,050 an ounce, settling at $1,912 end of June. Today the yellow metal is near $1,960.

Bonds, also commonly referred to as Fixed Income, traded mostly flat for the quarter. A bond’s total return consists of its interest payments + its capital appreciation or depreciation. Corporate and Treasury debt reported small losses of ¼% to ¾% for the three months. A one-year U.S. Treasury Note now pays 5.35% vs. 4.75% at year-end. That’s 12% more interest earned as a saver, OR 12% more costly as a borrower.

In sum, the stock market is having a good year through June 30th, and maybe is looking forward to 2024 with no recession forming. Looking at just July thus far, stocks are UP 2.5% to 3%, while Gold added 2%. The short term trend is indeed favorable.

Still, stock prices are essentially even over the two year stretch ending June 30th. Reported inflation is up +12.3% during that time. $112.30 needed now to buy $100 of the same stuff in June 2021, showing that most investors are behind after factoring inflation into their total return.

Here's hoping Summer is unfolding spectacularly for all.
Thanks for reading.

~Barry

*
The Real estate sector is fairly broad, covering commercial, residential and Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT's) and Real Estate operators that buy and develop land. It does not include Residential Home Builders. That industry group has been a very strong performer in 2023. Think Lennar, KB Homes, Pulte Homes, D.R. Horton, Toll Brothers. These stocks have averaged about a +45% gain this year, far surpassing the average stock price gains noted in my article.