Posted on 11/25/2013 5:27:12 PM PST by markomalley
For 75 million Americans who get their insurance through large companies, the Affordable Care Act is a mixed bag. Experts tell NBC News the new healthcare law is only slightly increasing premiums next year, but causing some companies with the most generous plans to reduce their employees benefits.
Aaron Baker, 36, his wife Billie and their two young children are covered under a generous health insurance plan offered by the private Midwestern university where hes worked for 10 years. When they opened their benefits notice this year, they were pleased to see their $385 premium is only up by four dollars next year. However, they were shocked to discover that instead of covering the first dollar they spend with no deductible, the Bakers plan now includes a $1,000 deductible and a $2,500 out of pocket maximum. They also will still have small co-pays for services.
According to the enrollment notice, the changes are to relieve future health plan trend pressure and to put the university in a position to avoid the excise tax that becomes effective in 2018. The 40 percent excise taxoften called the Cadillac tax is part of Obamacare and is levied on the most generous health plans. Its designed to bring down overall health costs by making companies and workers more cost-conscious. The thinking is that if consumers have to pay more expenses themselves, through higher deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses, theyll avoid unnecessary or overly costly procedures. And that is supposed to make care more affordable for everyone.
Billie Baker doesnt think much of that concept. I think that saying that your insurance is too good so we're going to give you a penalty, she said, is sort of outrageous to me.
Said Aaron, You would think the government would want employers to offer good health care packages to their employees. It seems like that is not the case.
A survey by the International Foundation of Employees Benefits Plans (IFEB) released in August found that 16.8 percent of respondents had already started to redesign their health plans to avoid the Cadillac tax and 40 percent said they are considering action. A survey of Fortune 1000 companies by Towers Watson, a top benefits consulting firm, found a much higher number. Sixty percent of the these major companies, which employ about 20 million American workers, say the looming excise tax is already having a moderate or significant influence on benefits decisions for 2014 and 2015. Though the tax doesnt take effect for years, some companies are starting to make gradual changes now so as not to make dramatic changes at the last minute.
The tax will require a company to pay a 40 percent levy, starting in 2018, on the amount by which the total costs of health plans exceeds an annual limit of $10,200 for an individual and $27,500 for a family.
There are many factors that result in health care costs going up at certain levels, said Ron Fontanetta, a director at Towers Watson, but there's no question that we've seen some action on the part of employers in part because of the concern of a looming excise tax.
We've had employers shifting costs to employees for some time. But this is really very different, said Robert Laszewski, president of Health Policy and Strategy Associates, a consultant who works for health industry firms.
This is more of a seismic change, because most employers are looking forward to this Cadillac tax in 2018 and realizing they're going to have to get ready for it now. And you can't just shift costs to avoid it; you have to cut benefits.
The Presidents top economic adviser, Jason Furman, says only a small percentage of plans will be hit by the tax once it takes effect four years from now. He disputes claims that the Affordable Care Act is causing employers to put more financial burden on employees.
There is nothing in the law that tells you you need to raise copayments or deductibles. Furman told NBC News. In fact, the law limits your ability to shift costs to your workers.
Furman told NBC News that for the most part, very little will change for people getting their insurance through large employers.
The new healthcare law is having much less impact on health care premiums than on benefits. Towers Watson estimates its adding an average of 1 to 2 percent to what premiums otherwise would be next year. The administration claims the impact is negligible.
But that has not kept some companies from instituting double-digit premium increases. Andrea Caulfield of Alexandria, Va., who says shes had great health benefits for the past five years, was so stunned when she opened this years notice that she says she thought it was a misprint. She now pays $313 a month for herself, her husband Rick and their 13-year-old son Patrick. Next year, it would be $825 a month. That includes a new premium surcharge because her husband could get coverage through his own employer.
She says thats not remotely affordable. Neither one of us is getting pay increases or even cost of living increases, so there's no way we could budget for this additional cost, Caulfield said.
Her employer cited multiple factors that led to the change the rising cost of healthcare and significant costs under the healthcare law, including a temporary $63 fee that must be paid for each covered employee, spouse or child starting in 2014. The fee is intended to fund a program to help spread risk for insurers participating in the exchanges.
Other companies also are charging more for spouses. Xerox has had a surcharge for spouses for the past three years. Its rising to $1,500 in 2014. Earlier this fall, UPS told employees it will exclude spouses who have access to coverage elsewhere altogether in 2014.
Caulfield credits the Affordable Care Act for added benefits like guaranteed coverage for people with pre-existing conditions, but she wishes she didnt have to pay for it.
I know we all have to work together to help each other, but sometimes they have these big ideas but they really don't think about the little person, working really hard and each spouse working one job and we still can't quite make it.
The family will now purchase coverage through Ricks employer. It will cost $70 more per month than her current plan. It is not their preference, but Andrea says they dont have a choice.
I'm part of that percentage that was told, you're gonna be able to keep your coverage, but that's really not what happened.
Robert Laszewski says the bar for employer-based healthcare plans has moved.
In the past, employers compared their benefits to each other, said Laszewski. And they had very rich benefits. Now we see a real phenomenon where employers are comparing their benefits to Obamacare and that's the new reference point. So it's really about, I have better benefits than Obamacare. And of course many of the Obamacare deductibles are 2000 dollars.
Jason Furman says the real story is how much the growth in health care costs and cost sharing have slowed in the last few years.
This past year, adjusted for inflation, premiums rose 2.3 percent. That's one-third the rate that they were growing a decade ago, Furman said.
You just can't blame everything in the health system on this law. It had a lot of problems before it, and it's actually helping to make them better.
I think it was just a way to let labor slide on the WW2 wage controls and it got enacted into law.
It’s no more logical than making car insurance tax exempt.
Just depends on who has the most powerful lobby in the tax writing rooms of Congress.
I’m not in favor of taxes.
I just feel our tax system is a mess of lobbyist driven preferences.
Interest is an expense. There is no reason to tax income going to interest (cash flow as opposed to "profit") as interest paid should be taxed as real income to the Banksters (but taxed just once).
Thanks to Obamacare, that percentage of AGI is now 10%
Along with that $1200/yr in my HSA that used to be tax free
along with the hike in my premium.
You have explained quite a bit to the washed and unwashed.
Insurance was a benefit to counteract Roosevelt.
You have to answer the question:
What should be taxed to fund the gov't?
(Wealth?, Assets (neglecting liabilities)?, Cash Flow Income?, Profit?, Labor hour input?, Investments?, # of kids?, Nation wide trade outflows and inflows?, etc.)
I don’t particularly want anybody else to pay taxes on their insurance, just give those of us who buy our own to write off 100% of our premium to put us on the same playing field as a UAW worker
So are you in favor of bringing back the credit card interest deduction?
Car Insurance is a cost to your production and should be exempt from taxation.
Clearly.
It's a cost of being stupid. Why tax the stupid for spending stupidly? Debt is slavery.
Amen. Been one of my pet peeves for years.
“... depends on who has the most powerful lobby in the tax writing rooms of Congress.”
No doubt.
If the employer-paid health insurance would lose its tax exempt status, and government truly wanted to promote a public policy of health insurance, then one consider making all insurance premiums paid as tax credit to the individual filer without having to itemize deductions. (Those who don’t buy insurance, no problem, they get the bill for services - no one picks up their tab.)
Sure Congress and the lobbyists would not go for this as it will cause people to lose power and their lobbyist jobs.
Healthcare is such a right in Democrats opinion that they tax very generous private insurance that people voluntarily pay for!!
All part of the Healthcare Socialist redristubtion
“there is no reason that home mortgages should be tax preferred.”
If I am not mistaken, the real estate interest deduction has been around since the passage of the 16th Amendment, when I am sure the average citizen did not own property. Only now that the average Joe owns some, are do we talk about taking it away. I miss Reagan.
Insurance is now mandatory. Think about it.
If they get retired, they need to be stripped of their golden parachutes, and shoved out the back of the plane while flying over the ocean
Most "medicine" these daze is pill prescriptions.
Vets have access to writing script for drugs. They are also generally pretty smart and would know much about common mammalian diseases in humans. Given that they have script access to drugs, they could easily be much less expensive than the bureaucracies wrapped around human docs these daze.
Especially if your dog had a specific "issue". Just sayin'.
Lotsa peeps die in the Hospital, plus Hospitals are a nexus of some nasty bugs.
I'm not sayin' Hospitals are all bad, but Caveat Emptor.
“Healthcare is such a right in Democrats opinion...”
Except the Socialists are clever enough not to believe their own lies. They say these things to divide people and to gain power. First they convince you it is a right,... the ignorant were not educated in the socialist schools to know it is not a “right”, ...then once you have given them the power to impose the “right” (even the packed Supreme Court rubber stamps the deal), Socialists now in control take away one’s freedom, consolidate their power and make the average ignoramus pay for the “right”.
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