Lodi News-Sentinel

Big employers embrace health plan status quo

- By Jay Hancock

The shrinking unemployme­nt rate has been a healthy turn for people with job-based benefits.

Eager to attract help in a tight labor market and unsure of Obamacare’s future, large employers are newly committed to maintainin­g coverage for workers and often their families, according to new research and interviews with analysts.

Two surveys of large employers released this month — one by consultanc­y Willis Towers Watson and the other from the National Business Group on Health — show companies continue to try to control costs while backing away from shrinking or dropping health benefits. NBGH is a coalition of large employers.

“The extent of uncertaint­y in Washington has made people reluctant to make changes to their benefit programs without knowing what’s happening,” said Julie Stone, a senior benefits consultant with Willis Towers Watson. “They’re taking a wait-andsee attitude.”

That’s a marked change from three years ago, when many big employers — those with 1,000 employees or more — contemplat­ed ending medical benefits and shifting workers to the Affordable Care Act’s marketplac­es.

In 2014, only 25 percent of big companies were “very confident” they would have a job-based health plan for employees in 10 years, according to the Willis Towers Watson survey.

This year, 65 percent expected to offer health benefits in a decade. And 92 percent said they were very confident a company-based health plan would exist in five years.

Many managers once eyed Obamacare marketplac­es as workable coverage alternativ­es despite the law’s requiremen­t that employers offer health insurance, analysts said.

But problems with marketplac­e plans, including fewer offerings, rising premiums and shrinking medical networks, have made employers think twice, they said.

Another big reason to maintain rich coverage is “the strength of the economy,” said Paul Fronstin, director of health research at the Employee Benefit Research Institute, an industry group. “Employers are doing what they have to do to get the right workers.”

Unemployme­nt has fallen from 9.9 percent when Obamacare became law in 2010 to 4.3 percent last month, which equaled a 16-year low reached in May.

With such a steep decline, he added, “employers are thinking, ‘We need to offer this benefit for recruitmen­t and retention.’”

Companies are even rethinking the long-standing expedient of shifting a portion of rising medical costs to employees through high-deductible plans and a greater share of the premium bill, other research shows.

“Employers are beginning to recognize that cost sharing has its limits,” said a June report from PwC, a multinatio­nal profession­al services network. Low unemployme­nt and competitio­n for workers mean “employers have less appetite for scaling back benefits and continuing with a plan design that has proven largely unpopular.”

At Fidelity Investment­s, a Boston-based financial firm with more than 45,000 employees, worker contributi­ons have grown to about 30 percent of total health costs.

Jennifer Hanson, the company’s benefits chief who sits on NBGH’s board, doesn’t see that continuing.

As costs grow, “if you continue to shift more of a bigger number to employees, health care becomes unaffordab­le,” she said in an interview. “As employers, we really do need to pay attention less to who’s paying for what and more to how much everything costs.”

More than half of Americans with job-based insurance face deductible­s — outof-pocket costs for most care before insurance kicks in — of more than $1,000 for single-person coverage. Family deductible­s can be much higher.

Big employers’ planned changes for next year focus on controllin­g drug costs and improving health results through telemedici­ne and steering patients to efficient, high-quality hospitals, noted the Willis Towers Watson report and the NBGH survey.

Employer health costs continue to rise, but not at the double-digit clip seen for many plans sold to individual­s and families through the ACA marketplac­es.

Employers expect health costs to increase 5.5 percent next year, up from 4.6 percent in 2017, according to the Willis Towers Watson report.

Companies in the NBGH survey predicted health costs will rise 5 percent next year, up from an average 4.1 percent increase for 2016.

That’s still far faster than inflation, which is less than 3 percent, and overall wage growth. By many accounts, soaring costs for specialty pharmaceut­icals used to treat cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, hemophilia and other complex conditions are the biggest factor.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Big employers are vowing to continue to offer health insurance.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Big employers are vowing to continue to offer health insurance.

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