According to a new study by the American Health Policy Institute, the excise tax is already forcing American employers to revisit the health care they provide to employees. Almost 90% of large employers surveyed by AHPI reported taking steps to prevent their company from having a plan that triggers the excise tax in 2018.Are you going to pay for ObamaCare through a diminished pay check? It appears so.
Nineteen percent of those surveyed—top human-resource officers at companies with more than 1,000 employees—said they were already curtailing or eliminating employee contributions to flexible-spending accounts to avoid triggering the tax. Nearly 13% were already curtailing or eliminating employee contributions to health savings accounts. Both FSAs and HSAs are popular ways for employees to cope with the increasing number of high-deductible health plans, as they allow workers to save for growing out-of-pocket health costs.
When employers respond to the tax by shrinking the value of employee health plans, that amounts to a reduction in the overall compensation package employees are getting. Supporters of the tax theorize that workers will get wage increases to offset the fact that their benefit package has been reduced. In reality, 71% of large employers surveyed by the American Health Policy Institute said they probably wouldn’t increase wages to offset their reduction in health benefits. Among the 16% of employers who said they would increase wages, their workers are not necessarily better off: Unlike the lost benefits, wage increases will be subject to income tax.
Monday, October 12, 2015
The ‘Cadillac Tax’ Makes Everyone Sick. An ObamaCare levy made to limit workplace health insurance means maybe you can’t keep your plan either.
The Wall Street Journal reports: