Friday, May 16, 2014

Employer Mandate Coming : Consequences Are Negative

The Affordable Care Act, ObamaCare,  is working to perfection - costs are going up and workers are being shifted into the exchanges or being laid off forcing millions into unemployment and dependency. Exchanges are failing to provide coverage's as they are a complete failures.

Hundreds of millions of tax dollars are wasted for the most part, but there are a lot of democrat benefactors that have gotten rich that proclaimed their efforts to build their state exchanges would work. Many website builders knew from the beginning they would fail, but went ahead anyway knowing their particular bank accounts would be fattened.

Socialist democrat strategy depended on these failures as they also knew the Affordable Care Act would not work from the beginning.

What's left when all is said and done, government sponsored health care, 'Single Payer' coverage and the death panels that will be front and center that proponents said didn't exist.

WOW - how cool it this? - what to flee, run away from this nightmare? Oh wait, millions are just waiting to vote for more of the same. There is no escape. Democrats are likely to vote for more death and pain. It's just their particular nature to do what they are told.

Negative Consequences of the Employer Mandate
Source: Emily Egan, "Primer: Employer Mandate," American Action Forum, May 2, 2014.

May 15, 2014

The Affordable Care Act's (ACA) Employer Shared Responsibility provision -- more commonly referred to as the employer mandate -- requires all employers with 50 employees to provide health insurance coverage beginning in 2014, explains Emily Egan, health care expert at the American Action Forum.

Failure to comply with the mandate results in fines. However, the Obama administration announced in July 2013 that it would be delaying enforcement of the mandate until 2015. Additionally, the administration announced further delays in February 2014, giving employers with less than 100 employees until 2016 to comply with the mandate.

Employer-sponsored insurance is the largest source of insurance for Americans under age 65, and companies compete for employees by offering health benefits. However, as insurance costs increase, fewer companies are likely to offer benefits.
  • In 2011, employer-sponsored insurance coverage for non-elderly adults sat at just 59.5 percent, down from 70 percent in 2000.
  • The ACA encourages employers to shift their employees onto the health car exchanges, because the cost of providing insurance exceeds the penalty (between $2,000 and $3,000 per employee) of not offering insurance.
  • The mandate encourages businesses to stay small (under 50 employees) and not expand. An employer with 50 employees is subject to $40,000 in fines for failing to offer health insurance.
  • According to a 2013 Gallup poll of small businesses, 41 percent held off hiring new employees, 19 percent reduced their workforce and 18 percent reduced employees to part-time work. Similarly, a survey from the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans found that 19 percent of small employers were reducing hiring in order to avoid the employer mandate, while 15 percent were adjusting their workers' hours so that fewer employees would be subject to the mandate.
Egan points out a loophole that exists in the law. Employers are penalized under the ACA for two reasons: failing to offer minimum essential coverage, or offering coverage that is unaffordable.
  • When employers offer unaffordable coverage to an employee that receives a premium subsidy on the exchange, that employer is fined $3,000.
  • The IRS plans to calculate "affordability" based on an employee's portion of the cost of individual coverage. However, many employees need family coverage, not individual coverage. Therefore, employers can require large employee contributions for family policies, while making their individual coverage affordable. This means that the employee would not qualify for subsidized exchange coverage -- because he has technically been offered affordable coverage -- and the employer will not be liable for the $3,000 penalty.
While the employer mandate, Egan writes, was intended to coerce companies to offer health insurance, it is unlikely to do so because of the many incentives in the ACA that will push workers to part-time work and discourage hiring.
 

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