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WorseBeforeBetter

(11,441 posts)
Sun Jun 2, 2013, 06:57 PM Jun 2013

Do your homework when exploring options created by health care reform

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Pay or play? If you are a “large” employer with 50 or more full-time equivalent employees (FTEs), the penalty calculation is complex. Failure to offer baseline coverage with one employee getting a taxpayer subsidy means a $2,000 non-deductible “tax” per each full-time employee after the first 30. The penalty for offering an unaffordable plan, or sub-minimum coverage, is $3,000 per actual full-time subsidy recipient.

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There are some creative options for large and small businesses. Regulators turned a bulky law into many more pages of fine print, making medical providers and insurance carriers very nervous. Market confusion is forcing new options from carriers, so watch for plan designs unheard of two years ago. For example, we will now see plans which allow small employers to offer multiple options such as a bronze level, 60 percent type of plan, a silver and gold. Others give a price break for using micro-networks. Very small employers without coverage may find new ways to craft a sub-bronze plan, giving employees meaningful support without breaking the bank.

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Know the risks you are taking when exploring alternatives. Employers can be creative by emphasizing part-time work, resulting in no mandated coverage for those who work less than 30 hours per week. They can also subsidize the employee cost so the plan is barely affordable, meaning no federal subsidy in the exchange. In addition, employers can turn to contractors, staffing agencies and multiple corporate shells to try and skirt mandates. The former means you had better have your recordkeeping in order and adhere strictly to the rules, while the latter are warning signs. Unscrupulous strategies to avoid mandates are in the regulators’ crosshairs.

For employees, the new law is not about free care; it simply improves guaranteed access to individual and dependent coverage. Few experts predict slower increases in total premiums or employee contributions. Our health care system remains procedurally broken and inefficient. Young people will bear more of the cost, and new plan designs will accelerate cost-shifting to all employees. Now is the time to ask good questions and demand more of your personal and professional advisors. Decision day is coming soon.

Bruce Clarke, J.D., is president and CEO of CAI Inc., a human resource management firm with locations in Raleigh and Greensboro. The company helps organizations maximize employee engagement while minimizing employer liability. For more information, visit www.capital.org.

http://www.newsobserver.com/2013/06/01/2932888/do-your-homework-when-exploring.html##storylink=cpy
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Do your homework when exploring options created by health care reform (Original Post) WorseBeforeBetter Jun 2013 OP
A friend works for a small company who uses Paychex for their payroll system and through a Thinkingabout Jun 2013 #1
$104/month? That's cheap. WorseBeforeBetter Jun 2013 #2
He is 55, this is an examlle of grouping together and getting a better price. I wonder about the Thinkingabout Jun 2013 #3

Thinkingabout

(30,058 posts)
1. A friend works for a small company who uses Paychex for their payroll system and through a
Sun Jun 2, 2013, 08:11 PM
Jun 2013

Group offering he is able to get health, dental, disability and life insurance for $104. His health insurance is with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas. BTW, they had an overwhelming response to the offer. This is somewhat what should be available through state exchanges but OOPS Rick Perry is not participate in state exchanges so I do not know how this will turn out. Medicare recipients pays $104 a month so it can be afforded by others.

WorseBeforeBetter

(11,441 posts)
2. $104/month? That's cheap.
Sun Jun 2, 2013, 08:24 PM
Jun 2013

How old is your friend? How extensive the coverage? I know BCBS of NC for a healthy 40-something woman -- back in 2008 - was $264/month. Dental was $39/month. Not too bad, if one is gainfully employed making decent money.

In NC we're going with the federal exchange, with NO expansion of Medicaid. I'll say one thing: October 2013 going forward is going to be *very* interesting...

Thinkingabout

(30,058 posts)
3. He is 55, this is an examlle of grouping together and getting a better price. I wonder about the
Sun Jun 2, 2013, 09:28 PM
Jun 2013

National exchange, this would probably be a large group also and just maybe the seed to national health insurance. We pay more in the US on average for health care and international health is guiding their insured to seek medical health some where else than the US because of the high cost.










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