4 ways to fix private health insurance so it can sustain a growing, ageing population
- Written by Stephen Duckett, Director, Health Program, Grattan Institute
Since 2015, the share of younger people (aged 20 to 39) with private health insurance has dropped from 24% to 22%.
People in this age group contribute more in insurance premiums than they claim in pay-outs. So this decline ends up pushing prices up for the 44% of Australians with private insurance.
And new private health insurance coverage data shows this trend continuing.
Our latest Grattan report outlines a four-step plan to stop this trajectory and fix the private health insurance system. The first step is preventing insurers increasing premiums if they cannot demonstrate the policy offers value for money.
What’s the private health insurance ‘death spiral’?
An ageing population, increased use of health services, and rising health-care costs are driving up the benefits insurers have to pay out each year.
As pay-outs increase, insurers raise premiums, to recoup these costs.
Rising premiums make health insurance less affordable and less attractive — particularly to younger and healthier people.
Read more: How do you stop the youth exodus from private health insurance? Cut premiums for under-55s
As younger, healthier people drop their insurance, the insurance “risk pool” gets worse; people who hold insurance are older and more likely to use their benefits and use them to a greater value.
This increases the cost of premiums, younger people drop out, and the death spiral starts again.
What does the data say?
The chart shows the overall trends in private health insurance over the past six years.
Authors: Stephen Duckett, Director, Health Program, Grattan Institute