With National Health Insurance, Workers Could Change Jobs Without Losing Benefits
- Share via
One benefit of national health insurance that David M. Gordon (“National Health Insurance Would Be Cost-Effective,” June 17) failed to mention is its portability from employer to employer. Our current system provides health insurance, pensions and similar programs on a company-by-company basis. When employees change jobs they often discover that significant benefit losses are entailed.
For example, at a new job an employee may discover that his or her previously insured medical conditions (or those of dependents) are not covered because they are “pre-existing.” Pension formulas are often arranged to penalize employees who leave in mid-career. The contrast with Social Security is obvious; under that national system employees can change jobs without any loss of coverage. It is 100% portable.
The concern over rising health costs creates an opportunity for re-examining the decentralized, duplicative and mobility-inhibiting benefit system created by the tax code. That system reflects a bygone era of large, secure employers, long-term careers and economic stability. But in the modern world, many forces have combined to make job changes, both voluntary and involuntary, commonplace.
Benefit programs that are not 100% portable deserve no tax subsidy.
DANIEL J. B. MITCHELL
The writer is a professor at the Anderson Graduate School of Management at UCLA.
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.