I'm not going to read 53 pages, so tell me why are you using an invoice from 2009? Is that the last time you worked for a paycheck?
$50.34 a month
"The average cost of health insurance is difficult to measure precisely. The mean cost in 2008 of insurance from an employer was $4,700 per annum for an individual, and $17,700 per annum for a family of four, according to Kaiser Permanente."
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/2352517
As anyone can see, Bucky Biden thinks his measly $50 per month employee contribution is fully covering his employer provided healthcare insurance plan, what the knucklehead doesn't know is, the actual plan is costing his employer 6-8 times as much as his $50 monthly contribution. Which goes directly to the heart of my initial question, where is the rest of the money going to come from now that I as an employer can pay the penalty which is much lower or let my employees pay their own tax which is now, thanks to ACA is completely affordable for them?lol. that's rich.
did you pull that out of your ass or mouth? i can't tell, they look the same to me.
my employer based health care plan at one of those kushy desk jobs was about $50 a month, $600 a year for basic coverage health care insurance.
how you came up with $330+ per month as the average rather than the top top top end is beyond me.
nope. i worked in fall of 2009, spring and fall of 2010, and the first four or five months or so of 2011 but no health insurance.I'm not going to read 53 pages, so tell me why are you using an invoice from 2009? Is that the last time you worked for a paycheck?
don't make me bust out my wife's health insurance. $220 or so a month for a premium plan with a pre-existing condition on the open market and not through any employer.As anyone can see, Bucky Biden thinks his measly $50 per month employee contribution is fully covering his employer provided healthcare insurance plan, what the knucklehead doesn't know is, the actual plan is costing his employer 6-8 times as much as his $50 monthly contribution. Which goes directly to the heart of my initial question, where is the rest of the money going to come from now that I as an employer can pay the penalty which is much lower or let my employees pay their own tax which is now, thanks to ACA is completely affordable for them?
UB, that is low. My hubby and I paided $783 a month for Blue Cross. It had a $2,400 deductible, then 80/20 for the next $4,000.nope. i worked in fall of 2009, spring and fall of 2010, and the first four or five months or so of 2011 but no health insurance.
did beenthere totally own me by showing me how individuals pay almost $400 a month on average for basic health care? i mean, not even my wife, who has a pre-existing condition and had to buy health care on the open market, not through any employer, only pays about $220 or so a month for her premium plan. and beenthere wants us to believe that it costs $4700 annually for an individual.
fail by beenthere and his ultra-reliable source "ezine.com". lol.
but isn't your hubby on his death bed or something? no offense, i just recall you posting about some medical bullshit he was unfortunate to endure.UB, that is low. My hubby and I paided $783 a month for Blue Cross. It had a $2,400 deductible, then 80/20 for the next $4,000.
Sorry, if I can find an invoice without having to unbox things I've packed I'll scan and post it.
Edit: When he went onto Medicare my single person policy jumped to $836 for me alone.
I have no idea what a "premium" healthcare plan is or costs in Oregon, but I can tell you this, you aren't going to even come close to touching one in California for less than $500 a month, $1,400 for a family plan.don't make me bust out my wife's health insurance. $220 or so a month for a premium plan with a pre-existing condition on the open market and not through any employer.
just admit you're out of your element and grow gangly, sickly yellow twigs.
Average Single Premium per Enrolled Employee For Employer-Based Health Insurance, 2010View 50-State Comparison |
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