I decided I couldn't afford to spend seven hundred and fifty dollars a month for a baseline medical care, and I let the COBRA go. It means I do owe the insurance company about that much for what they paid for while I was making up my mind. But this is the really odd thing. I had been paying about a hundred and fifty dollars a month for medications while I was insured. (the COBRA is just under six hundred dollars a month: that and the medicine cost was how I got to the seven-fifty figure)
This time when I bought the medicines without insurance the pharmacist pulled some kind of discount out of the air and it cost me eighty-three dollars.
I really don't understand why the insurance companies charge such high premiums. "Because they can" is the natural answer, but the thing is, they can't. Not with everybody's wages falling and all the support systems falling out, and housing and fuel and food costs not dropping. For example. I have been making about $1,000-$1,400 a month since I got laid off: and now I am an "independent contractor" which means I'm responsible for my own taxes, etc (in other words, this is going to hurt me again next year, even if I do get a real job again). So $600 a month for insurance plus $150 a month for medicine is simply not happening. I could go on about the rest of my expenses -- they are not generally high, compared to other supposedly "middle-class" people -- well, I'm a professional with certifications, doesn't that make me middle-class? Right? -- but you don't need me to break down all my expenses to see that I'm just not going to make it on $400 a month after medical expenses. That's before we get to the fact that I'm actually supporting two households on this money (no, he can't work his way through: it's illegal. No, he can't get grants: they don't give them to students at foreign schools. Yes, we're taking loans out for him. No, we can't take out enough loans to cover it all)
Discounting the kid in school -- though a lot of families are in the same boat, there, since financial aide has been gutted all over the place -- it's still not enough money. And I have a ridiculously low mortgage, and I lack a lot of other expenses that many have. So the picture emerges: the insurance companies raise their rates, and people can't pay them. Sooner or later they'll discover that they just aren't getting the premiums.
I don't understand how the mandatory incurance coverage will work when it kicks in next year. If individual insurance rates remain the way they are, we'll turn into a country of blatant scofflaws overnight. Supposedly you'll have to pay a fine if you don't have medical insurance. But if we don't have the money, we don't have the money. I can hardly imagine they'll garnish my house over it. Would they?
On another front: I kind of lost today and I kept thinking it was Monday, which would have made things even worse.
This time when I bought the medicines without insurance the pharmacist pulled some kind of discount out of the air and it cost me eighty-three dollars.
I really don't understand why the insurance companies charge such high premiums. "Because they can" is the natural answer, but the thing is, they can't. Not with everybody's wages falling and all the support systems falling out, and housing and fuel and food costs not dropping. For example. I have been making about $1,000-$1,400 a month since I got laid off: and now I am an "independent contractor" which means I'm responsible for my own taxes, etc (in other words, this is going to hurt me again next year, even if I do get a real job again). So $600 a month for insurance plus $150 a month for medicine is simply not happening. I could go on about the rest of my expenses -- they are not generally high, compared to other supposedly "middle-class" people -- well, I'm a professional with certifications, doesn't that make me middle-class? Right? -- but you don't need me to break down all my expenses to see that I'm just not going to make it on $400 a month after medical expenses. That's before we get to the fact that I'm actually supporting two households on this money (no, he can't work his way through: it's illegal. No, he can't get grants: they don't give them to students at foreign schools. Yes, we're taking loans out for him. No, we can't take out enough loans to cover it all)
Discounting the kid in school -- though a lot of families are in the same boat, there, since financial aide has been gutted all over the place -- it's still not enough money. And I have a ridiculously low mortgage, and I lack a lot of other expenses that many have. So the picture emerges: the insurance companies raise their rates, and people can't pay them. Sooner or later they'll discover that they just aren't getting the premiums.
I don't understand how the mandatory incurance coverage will work when it kicks in next year. If individual insurance rates remain the way they are, we'll turn into a country of blatant scofflaws overnight. Supposedly you'll have to pay a fine if you don't have medical insurance. But if we don't have the money, we don't have the money. I can hardly imagine they'll garnish my house over it. Would they?
On another front: I kind of lost today and I kept thinking it was Monday, which would have made things even worse.
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