What’s
all the fuss? How serious is the problem of Long term
Care?
The problem is huge! As a society, the American people
traditionally do not revere our elders: rather, we
have a history of discarding them, which hasn’t been
a problem because life- spans have been shorter, which
meant people spent down their assets and died. With
the increases in technology and medicine, we will live
longer than our finances allow.
This is going to create an extreme economic problem
for our country, as well as for families and individuals
alike. Most Americans do not achieve true financial
freedom as it is. Sure some people will be successful
in accruing and accumulating significant assets, but
more likely most will be dependent upon Social Security
just to pay their basic living expenses.
The costs and dollars for any form of extended care
are simply un-calculable, open-ended, and an absolute
financial disaster.
So, you ask what is all the fuss? Planning for Long
Term Care is essential. It requires a proper combination
of financial and estate planning combined with open
and honest family planning.
How does a client begin planning to guard against the
costs of Long Term Care?
The basic spirit in planning is to assure that there
is liquidity and a properly designed asset protection
plan in effect. We all want to preserve our assets,
but the challenge is to create income streams to assure
there is money available to make choices about care.
Mostly, we want to eliminate the undue burdens that
will be placed upon our families.
Most people obviously want to protect their health
and protect their family from financial disasters.
Planning for long-term care is critical, because it
is a family disaster: dollars flow out, assets are
liquidated, and estates are quickly depleted.
Could
your family sustain a $60,000 annual loss? If so, for
how long?
Can the costs really be that much? I have
assets, so do I need it?
I think this is an area where self-insurance is ridiculous.
After all, the exposures are unlimited. That’s when
you buy insurance! This isn’t a $1,000 problem; it’s
a potential total elimination of your assets. What’s
the price to protect a lifestyle and lifetime of accumulation?
My thinking is this: To preserve a $1,000,000 to $4,000,000
estate, we might be talking about less than 1% annually.
For estates larger than that, perhaps the expense is
manageable. On the flipside, if you have assets under
$1,000,000, you’d be crazy not to guarantee you don’t
have to sell your home to pay LTC expenses. So insuring
becomes a logical choice for most. That’s Long Term
Care Insurance!
But, the real reason to plan for LTC expenses isn’t
totally financial. It’s emotional – (Have you ever
been in a medical facility?) Ask someone who has been
through this and they will tell you that having cash
flows from insurance to allow choices in care is a
godsend.
That reminds me – Doesn’t MediCare
pay for LTC expenses?
No! That’s the fallacy that many people who are in
denial about this issue want to rest upon. MediCare
pays 90 days! (And the days come with many strings
attached!)
Many people falsely believe they can shift or transfer
assets to qualify for MediCal (California), but they
are absolutely mistaken. Those days are over! If you
have assets greater than $50,000.00, you had better
do some planning.
Okay, so the need is great, and
MediCare is not an answer. Won’t the government come
up with a plan for a problem this big?
I think it’s too early to predict. Clearly the dollars
are not there. My impression is that the covered medical
costs alone, plus prescription drugs, create more challenges
for Social Security without the additional cost of
LTC. So, my answer is, no; although there is bound
to be a lot of discussion on the subject.
So why aren’t more people doing
LTC planning?
That’s a great question. There are lots of reasons.
More people are aware of the need to do planning, yet
there continues to be a huge obstacle in approaching
this issue. We really have overcome this!
You see, people don’t want to spend money for something
they don’t want to think about and don’t want to use.
But collectively, as a society, we have to plan. We
need to help our clients address the impact of a debilitating
sickness or illness. Families have to talk and prepare
planning.
This is a societal problem, and each of us has a responsibility
here. Firstly, we must create an infrastructure that
induces people to enter jobs to care for and help this
segment of our society. So that people changing bedpans
and helping people ambulate or toilet aren’t paid the
same as people flipping burgers.
There is much confusion in the
media and press that is contradictory – you seem to indicate that LTC planning
is for almost everyone! Isn’t it just for older people?
We all need to begin planning for this now, for our
parents, for our employees, and for our selves. The
need does become greater beginning at ages 50 and up,
but this is not a senior problem, it can happen to
anyone.
Let’s say 15 or 20 out of 100 people will require some
form of long-term care before they die. All 100 should
get insurance coverage, because they are creating Financial
Certainty.
Financial planning involves the creation of financial
certainty. 100 out of 100 people have to address the
LTC issue. Some may self insure and many will buy coverage.
You could be worth $50 million, but it has to be addressed
because if a family member requires care (and I don’t
care how wealthy you are), it affects the family dynamics.
There’s an emotional / psychological component and
a financial component. Both require a type of communication
that breeds frank and honest planning.
So, if you think I have strong opinions about this
issue, you are correct. The problem is huge, and the
press has been negligent on this issue.
Financial Certainty is appealing
and obviously insurance creates that. But at what cost? Surprisingly, not that expensive. In many cases the
premiums are tax deductible, both to individuals and
business owners.
You can go wild with plan design, but a properly designed
plan should fit your budget. I’ve written plans for
as little as $400 a year, and as much as $80,000, so
there’s quite a spread.
What should someone look for in a good LTC insurance
plan?
Billions of dollars in assets. (I am referring to
the carrier you buy from). Buy from a big, reputable
company. This is a fairly new risk for insurers and
we have yet to see the real impact on claims.
Plan design requires making five decisions: how much,
how long before benefits begin, how long does it pay,
does it address inflation, and does it cover Home Health
Care? There are a lot of complexities, but with good
council, the solution is really an easy one – a good
broker does this for you.
Where do I begin?
Begin with a discussion with your attorney; prepare
current wills, trusts, Durable Power of Attorney; and
make sure your financial house is in order.
Seek out a Long-Term Care specialist, one who is an
individual Broker rather than a “captive” agent.
Run the numbers and think with your heart. This is
a take action issue!
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