Small Business Health Care Discussion: It's the Cost!

Karen Kerrigan

The Obama transition team invited folks to host "health care discussions" over the holidays until December 31. In particular, they were looking for "poignant stories" to help underscore the need for health care reform.

A December 30
Washington Post article reports that the purpose behind these gatherings is to help build broad public support for reform (as if that does not already exist), "betthing that the energetic, technology-savvy supporters who fueled his [Obama's] candidacy will act as a potent counterbalance to the traditionally powerful special interests that have defeated similar reform efforts." According to the article, about 8,500 health care discussions have been scheduled.

If you were not able to host a health care forum, you can still send your ideas to the Obama Transition Websiete page "Health Care - Of the People, By the People" by
clicking here. However, as small business owners, we can guess what your main concerns might be. These are concerns that the Obama team are probably well aware of - rising premium costs; the inability to buy or access coverage due to high costs, the lack of choice in plans, and - to repeat - high cost, high cost, high cost.

The fact that millions of small business owners cannot offer health insurance for their employees (and many self-employed individuals for themselves, or their families) due to high costs continues as one of the more poignant and distressing stories that should have triggered dramatic action by our elected officials long ago.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation/Health Research and Educational Trust annual health benefits survey released in September 2008, "just under half (49 percent) of the smallest firms (three to nine workers) offer health benefits. Among all small firms (three to 199 workers) not offering health benefits, nearly half (48 percent) cite high premiums as the most important reason for not doing so." The survey points out that "premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose to $12,680 for family coverage this year - with employees on average paying $3,354 out of their paychecks to cover their share of the cost."

"Making health care more affordable" is a top concern for small firms, according to a
December 2008 survey of small business owners by the Robert Wood Foundation. Of the 400 small firms surveyed (all of which offer health insurance, and pay for "some portion" of it), 42 percent say "making health care more affordable is the idea Washington should first address," according to the foundation's media release.

If you are at all familiar with SBE Council's congressional testimony, research briefs, Op-Eds, transcripts of radio and television interviews, and letters to Congress as well as the two Administrations over the past 15 years, you know what we have been saying about health coverage and the key issue for small businesses - high, and ever-increasing, costs!

With cost being the top issue, do we really believe that mandates on small firms to "play-or-pay" will really help those firms that cannot afford coverage? While the Wood Foundation survey found that 53 percent of small firms that currently provide coverage do support some type of play-or-pay scheme, no voice was given to business owners who currently cannot afford insurance. Isn't that what we are after here? Providing those who can't afford to offer insurance some options for doing so?

Not surprisingly, 68 percent of the foundation's survey "said they would support a market-based approach to provide employees with tax credits to purchase their own portable, private health insurance, as well as encourage the use of health savings accounts and include tort reform for medical liability lawsuits." In addition "78 percent said they would support a reform package that combines government-sponsored purchasing pools to allow small businesses to purchase insurance at negotiated bulk rates along with tax credits to make offering insurance more affordable for small businesses."

The long-standing concern of business owners that "cost" is the issue when it comes to providing and maintaining health coverage for their employees, should serve to demonstrate that solutions focused on incentives (carrots) rather than punitive mandates (sticks) - particularly in these rough economic times - should ultimately guide the passage of workable solutions that give small businesses real (affordable) options for providing their workforce with the health insurance they need and deserve.


Karen Kerrigan, President & CEO SBEC
www.sbsc.org
Copyright 2009. All Rights Reserved.



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