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Survey Provides Indication of How Employers Will React to Health Reform
According to a press release, key findings of the study include the following:
- Most employers anticipate that health care reform will increase their organization’s health benefit costs. Most say they plan to pass on the increase to employees (88%) or reduce health benefits and programs (74%). The majority (82%) of employers surveyed, however, remain committed to their leadership role in creating a culture of health by providing workforce health improvement/wellness initiatives.
- Most employers intend to continue offering health insurance coverage instead of paying a penalty. Specifically, starting in 2014 when large employers must offer minimal essential coverage to full-time employees or pay a penalty, 88% of surveyed employers are either definitely, or likely, to continue to provide health benefit coverage.
- More employers could be unwittingly subject to the 40% excise tax on high-premium “Cadillac” plans. Towers Watson estimates that the excise tax will affect more than 60% of employers when it becomes effective in 2018, with many more to follow soon after. Only 46% of the employers surveyed, however, believe they will be subject to this tax.
- More than three in four employers (85%) believe that health care reform will reduce the number of large organizations offering employer-sponsored retiree medical benefits. The survey also found that 43% of employers that currently offer retiree medical plans plan to reduce or eliminate them.
- Fifty-eight percent of employers surveyed believe health care reform will drive large employers to adopt total replacement consumer-driven health plans (CDHP) for their active employees.
This entry was written by Ilyse Schuman.
Photo credit: MBPHOTO