this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2023
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They are a scam, but they are also yet another tax loophole for people that are rich enough to be unconcerned with the broken healthcare system. They are pushed by the investment banks that actually manage all that money and large corporations sign their employees up for these plans because they count as "providing healthcare," so they aren't penalized, also the various HR departments and other C-Suite execs get huge kickbacks and bonuses for cutting employee costs.
They suck in more ways then just stealing people's money.
What’s funny is that, if you’re rich enough to take advantage of it, the advantages that it provides are kinda small potatoes, especially considering the BS paperwork they require.
That is true. But if you are rich enough to take advantage of it, you aren't necessarily handling your own finances personally. This doesn't mean you are a billionaire, merely a <10millionaire or "middle-class" as the Democrats would say. The same people who were clamoring for pell grants for entrepreneurs who operate a business in a disadvantaged area for 3 years. Or the people who can afford to "run" a non-profit while they are attending Harvard or whatever.
Basically if you don't need it, it's trivial to benefit from it.