Obamacare’s
Biggest Impact
What
is Obamacare’s biggest impact?
Frequently
asked question
Will
Obamcare's greatest impact,
- Be on seniors , whose benefits will be cut to finance Obamacare and assure its fiscal sustainability?
·
Be on the young and healthy, who will be forced
to pay higher premiums to pay for comprehensive government-approved plans for
services they do not feel the need?
·
Be on physicians, who will take pay cuts and be
compelled to give up their independence and to invest in electronic health
records in names of “efficiency” and “care coordination?”
·
Be on the uninsured and the underinsured
who will receive government subsidies and greater access to care?
- Be on the middle class who will, on the average, be paying higher premiums for individual and small group and employer health plans?
·
Be on the nation’s businesses who will
now have to cover full-time employees or pay the federal piper to the tune of
$2000 to $3000 per worker?
It may be none of these. It may be the nation’s low paid retail and fast-food and union
workers. They may asked to forego
full-time employment with benefits for part-time employment without
benefits. This hit will make it
difficult to make ends meet and support either themselves or their families.
Employers across the land are reducing employee hours
to 29 hours a week to avoid health law penalties, The unions are particularly upset. Joseph Hansen, president of the United Food
and Commercial Workers, says the law will have a “tremendous impact as workers
have their hours reduced and their incomes reduced.”
As Grace Marie Turner, president of the Galen
Institute, observes in an August 27
Forbes article entited “It’s a Fact, Not Anecdote, That ObamaCare Is Turning
Us into a Part-Time Nation.”
“ Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows that the
ratio of full-time jobs has completely flipped this year from historic trends.
Last year, six full-time jobs were created for every one part-time job. This year, one only full-time job is being
created for every new part-time job.”
That stark fact is why the Obama administration
delayed the employer mandate for a year.
It was too obvious to ignore. It
did not want the employer mandate to negatively impact (there’s that word again) the outcome
of the November 4, 2014 mid-term elections.
The impact of Obamacare has not gone unnoticed by
the nation’s businesses, large and
small. Delta Airlines and UPS and other
large business have responded by limiting or eliminating the eligibility of
spouses. In the small business sector, the law is resulting in layoffs, fewer
hours, and reduced hiring. Obamacare is increasing employee costs, reducing the desire to provide coverage, and cutting
the incentive to grow. The motivation
will be to drop coverage, reduce full-time to part-time work, and shift employees
to exchanges where workers may qualify for federal subsidies.
Welcome to the new normal – part-time rather than
full-time work, government benefits rather than employer benefits, a tepid rather than a robust economic recovery.
Tweet: Obamacare’s
biggest, most profound, most lasting impact may the great shift from full-time
to part-time work to avoid Obamacare penalties.
No comments:
Post a Comment