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In this episode, Tom tackles a headline that sparked outrage: “New healthcare plans could slap families with $31,000 deductibles.” Sounds terrifying. But Tom breaks it down with one simple question: Are we reacting to the word deductible… Or are we ignoring the math? This conversation dives into how high deductibles, tax strategy, employer savings, and individual behavior all intersect — and why most media coverage misunderstands how healthcare plans actually work. 🧮 The Deductible Myth vs. The Premium Reality The core argument: Most Americans never hit their deductible. Tom explains: Only a small percentage of people reach even a $5,000 deductible. Of those, many qualify for grants or supplemental coverage programs. That leaves a tiny fraction truly exposed to full deductible risk. So what’s the bigger financial threat? Guaranteed monthly premiums. You must pay premiums every single month. Deductibles? Only if you use the coverage heavily. That’s a very different risk profile. 🏢 Why Businesses Should Pay Attention Tom flips the conversation from politics to business math. If deductibles rise: Premiums drop significantly. Employers reduce guaranteed costs. Savings can be used strategically. He emphasizes that businesses can: Allow employees to purchase individual ACA-compliant plans. Use tax-advantaged reimbursement structures. Capture massive EBITDA impact. If a company saves $100,000 annually and operates at a 7x valuation multiple? That’s a $700,000 increase in company value. This is not political. It’s arithmetic. 🏛️ The Role of Donald Trump and Mehmet Oz The proposal discussed in the episode involves: Higher deductibles Lower premiums Greater tax deductions Increased use of Health Savings Accounts Tom’s key insight: If structured correctly, lower premiums create taxable income shifts that can: Increase federal tax revenue Increase take-home pay Reduce employer burden Improve business valuations The controversy isn’t about feasibility. It’s about public perception. 💰 Why Lower Premiums Change the Tax Equation Under current structures: Employer and employee health premiums are tax-free. Large premium costs create zero taxable income. If premiums drop significantly: That difference becomes taxable compensation. Federal revenue increases. Employees may net more money. Employers regain financial flexibility. Tom’s stance: This only works if structured properly — especially through HSAs and Section 105 plans. Otherwise, Americans might misuse direct cash incentives. 🧠 Supplemental Coverage: The Overlooked Strategy Tom also highlights: For high deductibles, supplemental policies like: Hospital indemnity Critical illness Gap coverage Can often be purchased inexpensively and dramatically reduce exposure. Meaning: The headline number ($31,000) doesn’t equal real-world risk. 🏗️ The Bigger Issue: How Businesses Buy Insurance A recurring theme: Most employers are: Overpaying for premiums Not using tax law strategically Leaving value on the table Accepting increases without scrutiny Tom argues the system rewards: Commission-driven brokers Carriers benefiting from premium volume Lack of financial literacy around healthcare purchasing And punishes: Employers who don't get involved Employees who don’t understand plan design 🏠 The Mortgage Comparison One of the most powerful analogies from the episode: Some families pay $5,000 per month for health coverage. That’s equivalent to: A luxury home mortgage. Without building equity. Tom’s perspective: If healthcare costs remain this high, employers may eventually find more value in directly compensating employees rather than overfunding carriers. 📌 Key Takeaways ✔ High deductibles do not automatically equal financial catastrophe ✔ Most people never reach their deductible ✔ Premiums are guaranteed costs — deductibles are conditional ✔ Lower premiums can increase business valuation ✔ Tax strategy is central to healthcare reform ✔ Supplemental coverage can offset high deductible risk ✔ Media headlines often ignore financial structure