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Here's why healthcare costs seem as if they're skyrocketing

doctor patient
doctor patient

(Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Healthcare costs are actually growing at the slowest rate in decades, Business Insider noted last week.

Based on reader reactions, however, this idea produced a bit of cognitive dissonance. And with good reason, according to data from Neil Dutta at Renaissance Macro Research.

Dutta, the head of US economics for Renaissance, pointed out that the two measures of healthcare services inflation — Personal Consumption Expenditures and Consumer Price Index — are very different.

For PCE, healthcare service inflation is up just 1.1% year-over-year — and, as we noted before, is actually dragging on overall inflation.

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Healthcare services inflation in the CPI, on the other hand, is up 4.1% year-over-year. Dutta noted that this is widest gap between the two since 1967.

This would seem to make no sense. How is it that two measures of the same economic concept end up with such different pictures of healthcare costs? The key difference between the two, according to Dutta, is how they're measured.

"PCE covers payments on behalf of individuals and out-of-pocket healthcare expenses," he wrote. "CPI is just the latter."

Put another way, CPI measures just what the average American is paying out of pocket. PCE includes government payments through things such as Medicaid and Medicare, along with payment by employers through workplace-based plans.

The much bigger cost increase for consumers may be for a variety of reasons, including the increased prevalence of high-deductible plans and increased drug costs being passed on to consumers in the form of higher premiums. The end effect, however, is the burden of payments falling more on the wallets of everyday Americans than on the rest of the system.

Screen Shot 2016 09 06 at 9.26.12 AM
Screen Shot 2016 09 06 at 9.26.12 AM

(Renaissance Macro Research)

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