If you depend on your employers’ insurance cover for your health
insurance needs, you might be making a silly financial mistake. Why? In
the last three years or so, companies are actually reducing employees’
insurance cover or asking them to foot a part of the health bill,
especially for their senior parents, notes Business Standard today.
It was only after the slowdown of 2008 when Indian companies started
cutting cost, where now they spend around 90 percent less on employee
health care needs. In fact, some have also gone and asked employees to
pick part of the bill, on an average Rs 1-1.5 lakh. This simply means,
it makes total sense for you to have an individual insurance policy of
your own as well. This works well, even for those time when you are in
between job or switching job. Where the ex-employers’ cover is no longer
valid and the new employers’ cover is still not active.
This does not mean that your employers’ insurance is useless. In
certain situations, it’s the employers’ insurance cover that will come
to your rescue. Take for instance, your employer’s group policy, which
gives a maternity cover as soon as you join the job. Unlike the
individual policy where you will have a waiting period of a few years.
The report quotes, Divya Gandhi, head – general insurance and
principal officer of Emkay Insurance Brokers, who said, “Here the
employee should check if the group top-up is in line with the
employer-provided scheme. Whereas, individual top-ups are a bit
expensive and one should check for base conditions before opting.” Read
full Business Standard report here.
Firstpost take: The trend mentioned above is scary.
In fact, just recently a survey conducted by insurance broker Marsh,
showed that only 36 percent organisations now sponsor cover for
dependent parents under employee group mediclaim policies. We at Firstpost
think medical cover for each member of the family is a must. We suggest
that you buy a separate family floater policy as well. And, ensure that
it covers at least between Rs 3 lakh and Rs 5 lakh. Next, look into
buying a serious disease disability policy, an accidental
death-cum-disability insurance for yourself and wife, if both are
working. As far as separate maternity cover goes, the one which employer
offers should be good enough. Instead, you should invest in
debt-oriented mutual funds through systematic investment plans (SIPs),
to build a corpus for planned post maternity expenses. And for your
parents, senior citizens’ health insurance policies are available for
people between the age of 65 and 80 years. These policies usually offer
hospitalisation cover, day care expense, medical expense before and
after hospitalisation.
Source: http://to.ly/mdRQ