Are drug addicts and obese people richer than healthy people?

There is a very special problem now that smokers, alcoholics and obesity people are receiving huge subsidies if they unfortunately die at a young age.

People with healthy lifestyles receive very limited salaries because they are said to want to live and look forward to many long-term benefits. The Daily Mail cited reliable sources saying that a high annual allowance for people with weaker health is an encouragement to them. That makes them feel more loving and active.

Insurance companies adjust profits in such a way that people in poor regions enjoy higher subsidies because they often have a shorter life expectancy than people in other regions. The new health allowance has made low-income people ignore healthy advice, while middle-class people tend to be healthier.

Picture 1 of Are drug addicts and obese people richer than healthy people? (Artwork: abcnews) Tom McPhail - a pensioner at Hargreaves Lansdowne's financial advisory office, said: although people with weaker health will be given more priority, an extra allowance will be given. High means they will be able to die soon.

Grants for people with weak health developed and replicated from initial subsidies founded in 1990 for people with severe illness.

Increasing competition has led insurance companies to compete for larger grants, especially for people with poor health, who die early and will only have to pay insurance premiums. less than.

About 1,500 health and lifestyle-related factors, including obesity, increased cholesterol and high blood pressure, have been noticed by insurance companies. The ' lifestyle ' subsidy (for those with unhealthy lifestyles) has resisted the government's efforts to persuade people to actively exercise and to follow a healthy diet.