House Panel, HHS Look at Health Reform and Small Businesses

House Panel, HHS Look at Health Reform and Small Businesses

A House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing looked at the hurdles small businesses encounter offering health insurance benefits to workers, and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius released a report explaining what the administration expects health care reform proposals to do for small firms.

Democrats in Washington, D.C., were speaking with the same voice on at least one issue in the health care reform debate in recent days, as a House committee and HHS both narrowed in on health insurance and small businesses.

On Oct. 20, California Democrat Henry Waxman held a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Committee to examine the challenges small businesses encounter in providing health insurance benefits to their workers.

In his opening statement, Waxman discussed findings from previous committee investigations, showing that a number of insurers have more than doubled premiums for small-business customers in a single year.  Pointing out that small businesses lack the market power to negotiate lower premiums for their workers, Waxman argued in favor of a provision of health care reform legislation that would create an insurance exchange to help small businesses win better deals on health insurance.

In testimony prepared for the hearing, Linda Blumberg, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, cited statistics indicating that firms with fewer than 10 employees were 10.1% less likely to offer health insurance benefits in 2008 than 2000, while ventures with 10 to 99 workers were 4% less likely to offer health insurance to workers in 2008 than they were in 2000.

Like Waxman, Blumberg said an insurance exchange would help small businesses get lower rates for health care benefits.  She also said that changes to health insurance underwriting regulations and subsidies for insurance coverage included in the House reform bill would help boost coverage among small-business workers.

Blumberg said her remarks reflected her own views, not the positions of the Urban Institute.

Off the Hill, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius released a report underscoring what the administration sees as threats to the employer-sponsored coverage system, especially for small businesses. 

The report states that workers at small firms account for 25% of uninsured Americans and cites survey results indicating that three-quarters of small businesses that didn’t offer health care benefits to workers attributed the decision to high insurance premiums.

Also, the report states that health care reform proposals would tackle the problem by strengthening the employer-sponsored coverage system and making coverage more affordable, accessible and portable.

For the past several months, the Obama administration has used similar reports to explain what health care reform proposals would do for targeted groups — small businesses are the latest addition to the list. Previous reports laid out the implications of health care reform for seniors, people with cancer and young Americans. 

Meanwhile, the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research took a look at the common elements of the three major reform plans under consideration in Congress and concluded that the proposals would expand coverage to about four million Californians.  The proposed changes would result in about 93% of nonelderly Californians having access to health insurance, according to UCLA’s fact sheet.

For more on the push for health care reform, keep reading.

Administration’s Message

Timeline

Senate

Dollars and Cents

Targeting Insurers

Shaping the Debate

What’s in the Bills

Poll

Exit mobile version