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Cebu_4_2
23rd March 2015, 11:21 AM
Obamacare Is Really Expensive for Small Businesses. Surprise! (http://reason.com/blog/2015/03/23/obamacare-is-really-expensive-for-small)

Lousy news for growing the economy, creating jobs, and overall increasing prosperity

J.D. Tuccille (http://reason.com/people/jd-tuccille/all)|Mar. 23, 2015 12:06 pm

Leviathan"Complying with the health care law is costing small businesses thousands of dollars that they didn't have to spend before the new regulations went into effect," reports AP business writer (http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2015/03/22/affordale-care-act-small-business/24959177/) Joyce M. Rosenberg. This should be a surprise to exactly nobody. In general, government mandates have poor track record of making people's lives less expensive and complicated. Specifically, businesses around the country have reported over the past year that Obamacare raised their healthcare costs and they anticipated more hikes to come. Hiring—especially of full-time employees—has taken a hit as a result.

Writes Rosenberg:

The Affordable Care Act, which as of next Jan. 1 applies to all companies with 50 or more workers, requires owners to track staffers' hours, absences and how much they spend on health insurance. Many small businesses don't have the human resources departments or computer systems that large companies have, making it harder to handle the paperwork. On average, complying with the law costs small businesses more than $15,000 a year, according to a survey released a year ago by the National Small Business Association.Last summer, Federal Reserve Banks around the country surveyed businesses in their regions. In the service sector (http://www.dallasfed.org/microsites/research/surveys/tssos/2014/1408/specquest.cfm), about 82 percent of businesses told the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas that the Affordable Care Act raised costs for them in 2014; 91 percent expected increased costs in 2015.

http://cloudfront-media.reason.com/mc/_external/2015_03/-federal-reserve-bank-of-dalla.jpg?h=175&w=560
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

The manufacturing sector (http://www.dallasfed.org/microsites/research/surveys/tmos/2014/1408/specquest.pdf) told a similar story of rising costs with more anticipated to the Dallas Fed.

The New York Federal Reserve Bank (http://www.newyorkfed.org/survey/business_leaders/2014/2014_08Supplemental.pdf) received similar reports from businesses of increased health costs from the Affordable Care Act, again with predictions of more of the same in 2015.

Businesses told the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia (http://www.philadelphiafed.org/research-and-data/regional-economy/business-outlook-survey/2014/bos0814.txt) they planned to raise prices, hire fewer workers, and use more part-timers because of the increased costs associated with the health law—unhappy news reported by the other surveys, too.

Looking only at small businesses, one-third of respondents (http://www.nsba.biz/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Health-Care-Survey-2014.pdf) to a National Small Business Association survey said they were holding off on growth plans because of ACA costs. Smaller numbers planned more subcontracting and part-time hiring.

http://cloudfront-media.reason.com/mc/2015_03/SmallBizACA.jpg?h=414&w=560National Small Business Association

The National Federation of Independent Business's Research Director Holly Wade told the Senate Finance Committee (http://www.nfib.com/article/nfib-updates-senate-on-obamacare-data-validates-the-doubters-68446/) last week that, in terms of Obamacare, "The problems that many predicted have arrived but most of the promises for small business owners remain unfulfilled. We found that 62 percent of small business owners are paying higher premiums while only eight percent say their costs have dropped."

Higher costs for small business because of the mandates and compliance burdens mentioned by Rosenberg were somewhat anticipated by the law's authors. They were intended to be offset by tax credits. But getting those tax credits involves, yes, more compliance costs.

"Qualifying for the credits is cumbersome and complicated," noted Wade. “The tax credit is temporary but the mandate is forever, so the financial advantage is very small over the long run. It's certainly not enough to offset the higher costs and the administrative headaches that the law imposes on small business owners."

Which isn't good news for growing the economy, creating jobs, and overall increasing prosperity.

J.D. Tuccille is managing editor of Reason.com.

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Shami-Amourae
23rd March 2015, 11:26 AM
Yeah it sucks for me. I can't afford healthcare so I'm penalized for not being able to afford it. How swell.

midnight rambler
23rd March 2015, 11:38 AM
Yeah it sucks for me. I can't afford healthcare so I'm penalized for not being able to afford it. How swell.

So why do you persist in hopping on the sheep-shearing conveyor belt? Apparently you like it...

Shami-Amourae
23rd March 2015, 11:45 AM
So why do you persist in hopping on the sheep-shearing conveyor belt? Apparently you like it...

...Because people with guns will come kill me and/or throw me in a cage if I don't.

Ares
23rd March 2015, 11:49 AM
...Because people with guns will come kill me and/or throw me in a cage if I don't.

Get a bigger gun. :D j/k

midnight rambler
23rd March 2015, 12:03 PM
...Because people with guns will come kill me and/or throw me in a cage if I don't.

Apparently they've got you hornswoggled into thinking that.

Shami-Amourae
23rd March 2015, 12:21 PM
Apparently they've got you hornswoggled into thinking that.

What are the other options?

Cebu_4_2
23rd March 2015, 12:39 PM
What are the other options?

Food stamps and medicare.

Shami-Amourae
23rd March 2015, 12:41 PM
Food stamps and medicare.

So how many of you guys on the forums are parasites and not producers?

Sure it may be a great way to "get back at the system", but I think people who do that will get bitten in the ass eventually. Then again I'm probably wrong since we do live in an Ineptocracy.

https://images.encyclopediadramatica.se/e/e6/Shieet_nigga.jpg

Glass
23rd March 2015, 01:33 PM
it certainly seems designed to strangle private enterprise and stop it being able to grow. Less competition for the corporates that way. how do they get on with this insurance mess? Are they exempt?

ximmy
23rd March 2015, 01:59 PM
it certainly seems designed to strangle private enterprise and stop it being able to grow. Less competition for the corporates that way. how do they get on with this insurance mess? Are they exempt?

They designed it this way. In their minds-eye future, A few mom & pop stores will be floating around to make things seem normal. Big business absorbs the rest. And the sheeple are left to buy their products & services only.

The Chart below did not happen by chance.
http://mentalfloss.com/sites/default/files/food-brands-map.png

Twisted Titan
23rd March 2015, 05:40 PM
The tax credit is temporary but the mandate is forever, so the financial advantage is very small over the long run. It's certainly not enough to offset the higher costs and the administrative headaches that the law imposes on small business owners."



And THAT was the plan all along.....

Cebu_4_2
23rd March 2015, 06:04 PM
The tax credit is temporary but the mandate is forever, so the financial advantage is very small over the long run. It's certainly not enough to offset the higher costs and the administrative headaches that the law imposes on small business owners."



And THAT was the plan all along.....

Exactly why I now have no employees. Just me but I don't make shyt right now.

Besides when the company did good I made the same amount of money just didn't have to work, just babysit the little parasites doing the work. Depending on people working for money absolutely sucks. There wasn't a day gone by when I didn't wonder if there would be anyone showing up.

midnight rambler
23rd March 2015, 06:08 PM
What are the other options?

The thing is, there ARE options. Free your mind and go find those remedies for yourself.

Cebu_4_2
23rd March 2015, 06:16 PM
The thing is, there ARE options. Free your mind and go find those remedies for yourself.

Wages and Income are a good start.