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Small Businesses Will Gain Under New Health Reform Bill

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NJmaverick Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-05-10 11:04 AM
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Small Businesses Will Gain Under New Health Reform Bill
Our current health care system creates particular challenges for small businesses. But the new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act provides various forms of relief for small businesses who often struggle to pay for their employees’ health coverage.

Small businesses spend about 18 percent more on average than large businesses for comparable health policies. This is largely due to high administrative costs, which can be up to 30 percent of premiums; their limited ability to spread risk because of these businesses’ small scale; and a lack of market power when negotiating rates with insurers.

One-third of workers at firms with fewer than 25 employees are uninsured. High uninsurance rates among small business employees partly reflect the fact that their employers are less likely to offer coverage, especially at the smallest firms that pay the lowest wages. Firms with fewer than 10 employees that pay low wages (in the bottom quartile) had a coverage offer rate of 18.4 percent in 2008 compared to the national average of 56.4 percent. Overall employer sponsored coverage offer rates have declined by nearly 5 percent over the past decade, but the decline for small businesses was significantly steeper at 21 percent for firms with 10 to 24 workers and 28 percent for firms with fewer than 10 workers.

The recently passed Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act makes substantive improvements to our health care system that will better provide small business employees access to affordable, quality health coverage. The new health reform law provides certain small businesses with a tax credit to help pay for coverage in the years leading up to the establishment of state health insurance exchanges in 2014. The state health exchanges will have further reformed insurance market rules, which will provide small businesses with a new avenue for purchasing coverage. And if small businesses decide not to offer coverage, lower-income employees will likely receive subsidies to purchase coverage within the exchange.


http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/04/small_business_health_calculator.html
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hfojvt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-05-10 11:40 AM
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1. la la la I can't hear you
It's not single payer, so it sucks.

I sorta need to find out, is there some kind of mandate for some small businesses to provide coverage?
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kctim Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-05-10 11:44 AM
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2. Gain?
Good for them, I guess. As for me, I am 'gaining' the great pleasure of shopping for a new insurance company and plan AND 'gaining' additional duties and work because the small business I work for has stopped hiring and will not replace those who quit, in order to stay under 29(?) or whatever number.

But, I guess not offering health plans for employees is a form of "relief" for businesses, so the article is right about that.
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Abq_Sarah Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-05-10 01:03 PM
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3. It helps companies
That can already afford to purchase insurance. If you can't afford it, the tax credit doesn't help you since it can't be claimed until the end of the tax year.

If you are a sole proprietorship, partnership or a LLC, your wages and the wages of any family members who work for the company are ineligible for the tax credit.

The tax credit is phased out in 5 years.

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