Many Employers Not Looking Forward to Health Reform
A news release said 86% of the 160 employers
involved in the September 2009 surveythink the health-care proposals being considered
would weaken the role employer-sponsored plans play in
providing health-care coverage.
“Both Congress and the White House have said repeatedly
that health-care reform should build on the
employer-sponsored system,” said Ted Nussbaum, North
America director of group and health-care consulting at
Watson Wyatt, in the news release. “However, most
employers are apprehensive that the outcome will be quite
different.”
The poll also found little employer support for proposals
that would tax benefits or mandate employer coverage:
Fewer than three in 10 would support a tax on high-income
employees with high-cost plans, while fewer than one in
five would support a tax on insurers of high-cost plans.
An even smaller percentage, 11 percent, would support
taxing employer contributions to health-care as income.
On expanding access, the poll found that only 10% of
respondents would support an employer mandate, while half
(50%) would support an individual mandate. Ten percent
would support both, and 30% would not support either.