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by duxup
2253 days ago
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I think if you do that it becomes really hard to compare a lot of things. So health insurance is a cost ... albeit not the same for everyone, at some companies you pay surprisingly little and that is compensation ON TOP OF your pay... Other places not. It's really hard to get good 1:1 comparisons. Taxes and etc in the US are widely unevenly applied depending on the situation compared to what seem to be 'more' standardized and predictable numbers, services, in Europe. |
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It’s also very easy to compare even if you are an employee, as health insurance premiums are shown in box 12 code DD of an employee’s W-2. And health insurance premiums don’t vary that much between healthcare.gov and ACA complaint insurance that employers subsidize.
What is clear is that there exists a healthcare expense in life, and so if you are paying for it via taxes in one region, you would have to figure out how much it costs in the other region where it’s not included in taxes to make the comparison more accurate.
You can use this table from the state of NJ to reasonably guess how much healthcare will cost you in a moderately high CoL area in the US:
https://www.state.nj.us/dobi/division_insurance/ihcseh/ihcra...