Article Snip: "AI Overview
Yes, health care is included in the CPI-W (Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers), but it does not directly track 20%+ increases in total insurance premiums. The CPI measures only the
out-of-pocket portion of premiums, and its health insurance component tracks insurers' retained earnings (overhead/profit) rather than the full premium cost.
Why CPI-W Doesn't Surge with Premium Hikes:
Retained Earnings Focus: The CPI-W calculates the cost of insurance based on premiums minus claims paid (what the insurer keeps). If premiums go up 20% but insurer claims payouts also increase, the measured retained earnings—and thus the CPI—might only show a small increase or even a decrease.
Lagging Data: The health insurance CPI is heavily lagged, often reflecting insurer margins from one or two years prior.
Out-of-Pocket Focus: The index largely ignores premiums paid by employers (the majority of worker coverage).
Utilization Normalization: Pandemic-era fluctuations showed that when people went back to the doctor (normalizing care), the insurance index dropped, despite premium increases.
Consequently, while consumers feel the brunt of higher premiums immediately, the Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI Health Care component may not show it until much later, or at all. "
Iran Retalliates on Qatar | Will Trump "massively blow up" Iranian Gas
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Iran Retalliates on Qatar, Will Trump "massively blow up" Iranian Gas Field
Now as Promised? Article Title: Trump threatens to "massively blow up"
Iranian ...
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