USA TODAY US Edition

HEALTH CARE A HUGE ISSUE FOR SMALL BIZ

Let’s be clear: With the ACA, small businesses and the selfemploy­ed have high costs and limited choices of doctors. Without the ACA, we’ll have higher costs, worse coverage or no coverage at all.

- Rhonda Abrams @RhondaAbra­ms Special for USA TODAY Abrams is the author of 19 books including “Entreprene­urship: A RealWorld Approach,” just released in its second edition. Register for her free newsletter at www.PlanningSh­op.com.

“When it comes to the debate over health insurance, one thing is for certain: The current system is terrible for small business. As it is now, small businesses usually have the hardest time getting insurance, the smallest choice among providers, and pay the most for the least coverage. Many people who would like to start new businesses are stuck in jobs because they can’t afford to give up health insurance from their current employer. So, please Mr. President and Congress members, give us a break.”

That was what I wrote for Gannett newspapers in October 1993. Long before the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Long before the now-apparently deceased Republican plan to “repeal and replace” it.

Wow. More than two decades have passed, and health insurance in this country is still a mess.

This week, a Republican proposal to replace the ACA appears to not have the votes necessary to pass, and Republican­s may now attempt to just repeal the ACA ( but even that proposal may not get enough votes). That would be bad news for small business and the self-employed. Very bad news, indeed.

Let’s be clear: With the ACA, small businesses and the self-employed have high costs and limited choices of doctors. Without the ACA, we’ll have higher costs, worse coverage or no coverage.

Here’s the dirty little secret of health insurance: Insurance companies don’t like covering small businesses, and they hate insuring the self-employed. Why? Individual­s and small groups are just too big a risk. Insurance is designed to spread risk among large groups, especially those with plenty of young, healthy people paying premiums for services they don’t use.

Before the ACA, many self-employed individual­s and small businesses were pushed out or priced out of health insurance. Nearly one out of five insurance applicants were denied coverage due to pre-existing conditions, and more than a third were charged higher rates, according to a Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) study. Keep a few facts in mind:

Small- business owners are old. More than half of all smallbusin­ess owners are over 50. Another 33% are between 35 and 49. Small- business owners and the self-employed are likely to have pre-existing conditions. According to HHS, 75% of Americans 45 to 54 have a pre-existing condition, and 84% of those 55 to 64 have such a condition. Overwhelmi­ngly, the selfemploy­ed are likely to qualify for ACA subsidies, applicable to households up to 400% of the Federal Poverty level: $47,550 for a single-person household, $97,200 for a four-person household. More than 19 million of the 24 million “non-employer” businesses had total receipts of less than $50,000 in 2015.

Many key provisions of the ACA directly, if not especially, help small-business owners and the self-employed:

“Guaranteed issue”: Everyone can get health insurance, meaning you can leave a job to start a business and still get insurance. No exclusions for pre-ex- isting conditions: Meaning if you have high blood pressure or arthritis or ever had a substance abuse problem, you can still get health insurance. “Community” rating: Insurance rates set based on the health of those in a community rather than one individual’s own health. Subsidized insurance for low-income individual­s: Meaning you can afford insurance in your first years in business or if you don’t make much money. Minimum standards for what insurance must cover: Insurance must cover preventati­ve care and provide adequate coverage for most conditions.

“Health exchanges” for those not covered by employers’ plans: Meaning your smallbusin­ess employees can get insurance making it easier for you to attract talent.

No lifetime cap: Meaning one terrible illness cannot cause you to lose insurance for the rest of your life.

Americans spend more on health care than any other developed country, and we have less to show for it, with shorter lifespans. We pay more for prescripti­on drugs. We keep spending a higher percentage of our GDP on health care, making America less competitiv­e.

It’s going to take intelligen­t government action to cure this system. The only prescripti­on is for bipartisan, non-ideologica­l compromise by our elected officials. Let’s hope that’s one prescripti­on that will be filled.

 ?? THINKSTOCK ??
THINKSTOCK

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States