Tuesday, May 28, 2013

THE COST OF OBAMACARE WILL HURT MANY EMPLOYEES

Health insurance premiums are likely to skyrocket under the Affordable Care Act

A CNN poll conducted on May 17 and 19 shows that 54 percent of those polled oppose Obamacare while 43 percent support it. The Republicans believe that what they see as flaws in Obamacare will lead to congressional election victories in 1014. If successful, they will vote to kill Obamacare, but their action is sure to be met by a presidential veto and they probably won’t have enough of a majority to override it.

UP TO 75% COULD BE HIT BY OBAMACARE TAX
By Greg Richter

Newsmax
May 27, 2013

The so-called "Cadillac Tax" facing employers who offer premium healthcare plans to their workers already is affecting employees, even though it doesn't kick in until 2018.

Employers say they have to get started bringing down costs now, The New York Times reports, so employees who are used to $20 co-pays at the doctor's office and $500 deductibles are learning a new reality. Many now are looking at deductibles as high as $6,000 for families.

That's exactly how Obamacare planners designed it, the Times story says. The intent of what is officially known as the Affordable Care Act all along was to get companies to drop plans that protect workers from the high cost of healthcare, which can lead to unnecessary tests and procedures.

"The consumer should continue to expect that their plan is going to be more expensive, and they will have less benefits," Cynthia Weidner of the benefits consultant HighRoads told the Times.

Still, the tax is one of the most controversial parts of the healthcare law. It imposes a 40 percent tax on the portion of a health plan's cost that exceeds $10,200 for an individual and $27,500 for a family. That cost includes what both the employer and employee pay.

Some employees are feeling the pinch already. The Times talked to a nursing assistant who had to drop out of school and get extra jobs to pay for medicine for her husband, who has cystic fibrosis.

"My husband didn’t choose to be born this way," said Abbey Bruce.

“The reality is it is going to hit more and more people over time, at least as currently written in law, ” said Bradley Herring, a health economist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Herring estimated that as many as 75 percent of plans could be affected by the tax over the next decade — unless employers manage to significantly rein in their costs.

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