Home
  Go 
Topics Login Become a Member 

Locate A Chapter

Healthcare Financial News - New Health Policy Brief Explores Debate Over Employer Mandates

Healthcare Financial News


Thursday, August 13, 2009
New Health Policy Brief Explores Debate Over Employer Mandates

One of the most controversial issues in health reform is the concept of an employer mandate—a requirement that most employers would either have to provide health insurance for their employees, or pay a percentage of total payroll costs to the government. Health Affairs and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) explore the concept—as well as the current state of employer-sponsored insurance (ESI), which provides coverage for 61 percent of the nonelderly population—in the latest in a series of Health Policy Briefs that provide objective, nonpartisan analysis of policy proposals related to health reform.

The series brings together experts from the Harvard School of Public Health, the University of Michigan and Health Affairs to consider arguments both for and against employer mandates. The brief shows that in recent years, health insurance coverage has eroded, leaving one in four full-time workers without insurance sponsored through their employer. Supporters of an employer mandate argue that it would spread the risk and cost of insurance among a larger population, and that requiring all employers to provide insurance would level the playing field for businesses. They also say a mandate would help reduce job-lock, where employees avoid changing jobs in order to maintain their current coverage benefits. Opponents assert that a mandate on employers would burden businesses—especially smaller businesses—with additional expenses at a time when they are already struggling from a contracted economy. They say that increasing employers’ costs for mandatory benefits would lead to more job losses.

Read the Issue Brief.

posted on 8/13/2009 11:04:22 AM (CST)  Permalink