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City hire bicycles are too dangerous to carry children
Columnist Nabila Ramdani questions why Paris authorities encourage the practice despite the dangers
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Dismay at death charges from French banks
A reader writes of his shock at high costs following a bereavement
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WA card renewals: Prefecture asked for four years of tax returns
Connexion reader had expected the process to be straightforward
Free glasses are a mirage
One wonders if the pledge to reduce the ‘ reste à charge ’ for glasses and dental prostheses to 0% will work.
The government says there will be no increase in mutuelle premiums but consultants Mercer Conseil estimate the rise could be as high as 8.9%.
Insurance is not magic. If claims payments go up, premiums increase. Insurance firms have to make profit.
This begs the question: Is it not better to be your own insurer for recurring costs? If you must change glasses every two years and it costs, say €500, your insurer will ask for a premium from you to cover this plus overheads and profit. You may pay €600 for your glasses.
Better to put €20 into your piggy bank every month!
The problem is health insurance falls somewhere between two types of insurance: Life insurance, an inevitable pay-out upon death – and non-life insurance where the principle is that indemnification follows a sudden unforeseen event.
Geoffrey Auckland, Blois
