KiwiSaver-style model proposed

A KiwiSaver-style workplace insurance programme has been suggested as an option worth exploring to increase private health coverage in New Zealand.

Tuesday, April 14th 2015, 2:24PM 2 Comments

by Susan Edmunds

NZIER has released a report to the Health Funds Association, which represents health insurers, on the expanding role of private health insurance in the future of healthcare.

It says New Zealand's health system will face increasing pressure and Kiwi consumers will be asked to increase personal responsibility.

The report, by Michael Bealing and Derek Gill, says there needs to be more honesty and clarity about the future funding of health and disability care and how it can be made fiscally sustainable.

The report draws a parallel with the discussion of retirement income funding and the development of KiwiSaver.

Bealing and Gill suggest a work-based health insurance scheme constructed in a similar way to KiwiSaver needs wider debate.

They say more examination and costing is required but the most promising workplace approach would comprise measures including an ongoing information programme to raise public awareness of the need for private health cover, automatic enrolment in a workplace-subsidised employer plan and a targeted enrolment subsidy.

"A workplace based scheme that nudges people towards greater personal responsibility with features like preferred providers, portability and non-exclusion – adopted in the KiwiSaver scheme – could play an important role in making the New Zealand health system more sustainable."

HFANZ chief executive Roger Styles welcomed the report.

He said there were 600,000 New Zealanders covered by workplace health policies, about half of which were subsidised. "There is a lot of support out there for extending that."

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Comments from our readers

On 15 April 2015 at 11:21 am LNF said:
Flawed concept
With Kiwisaver the funds, both employer and employee are transferred to the individuals account for the future definite benefit of the individual
With the above concept the funds of both the employer and the employee are transferred to the insurance companies account with no direct benefit to the individual. Yes there might be some benefit in the event of a need to claim, but that is all
This is a silly concept. While they are about it, why not make all insurance covers semi compulsory like this. Income protection for a very real start.
On 16 April 2015 at 9:25 am dcwhyte said:
"New Zealand's health system will face increasing pressure" - if the Government of the day so deems, e.g., as in the current U.K. scenario.

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