Employers May Start Paying You to Buy Health Insurance
What if employers started
giving workers a chunk of cash to buy health insurance on their own instead of
offering them a chance to buy into the company plan? Are workers ready to
manage their own health insurance like they do a 401(k)?
The idea that employers might
drop their health plans and replace them with a "defined
contribution" for employees has been around for years. It's one way for
employers to control their expenses in the face of the relentlessly rising
costs of health care.
Now
that the Affordable Care Act has made non-company plans more accessible and
affordable by creating online marketplaces where
people can shop for coverage, the idea is gaining traction.
"The
technology has caught up to the concept," says Paul Fronstin,
director of the health research and education program at the Employee Benefit
Research Institute.
Some
analysts anticipate a major shift to these plans in coming years. A recent study by
S&P Capital IQ predicted that 90 percent of workers who now get their
health insurance through a job will be moved to health insurance exchanges by
2020.
But a
wholesale shift away from employer-sponsored coverage is unlikely. For one
thing, under the health law employers with 50 or more workers that don't offer
health insurance will likely face a penalty of
$2,000 per worker (minus the first 30 workers), beginning in 2015.
If employees do drop
coverage, it could be a huge change from the way things are now. The
employer-paid subsidies to monthly premiums that employees get for
employer-sponsored group coverage currently aren't taxed as income to the
worker.
If an employer dropped group
coverage and instead offered employees $5,000 to buy an individual plan on an
exchange, workers would owe income tax on that amount. Employees earning less
than 400 percent of the federal poverty level (right now that's $45,960 for an
individual or $94,200 for a family of four) could qualify for tax credits to
reduce the cost of their monthly insurance premium, but workers who earn more
than that wouldn't benefit.
Rather than abandoning group
coverage altogether, some analysts expect employers to move more assertively
into a slightly different health insurance benefit setup: private health
insurance exchanges.
These online marketplaces,
which got their start several years ago as a way to transition retirees from
company plans to Medicare, are increasingly being offered to active employees.
Benefits consultants including Mercer, AonHewitt and Towers Watson run private
exchanges for a growing roster of companies like Walgreens, Arby's restaurants
and Petco.
Once employers have selected
a private exchange for their workers, they typically give employees a set
dollar amount to shop among sometimes dozens of health plans offered by
different insurers. The employer may limit the plan choices available to
employees. Since the employer is sponsoring the coverage for the group, workers
don't owe income tax on the contributions they receive.
"Employees
get a much broader choice of plans and a choice of insurance company,"
including access to multiple insurance company provider networks, says Ken Sperling,
national exchanges strategy leader at AonHewitt. Typically people would have a
choice of five plan levels and three to five insurers, up to 25 options in all,
he says.
Employers,
meanwhile, get what they want: predictable health care costs. With a defined
contribution arrangement, "the employer can increase or decrease the
amount over time depending on business needs," says Eric Grossman,
a senior partner at Mercer.
While giving employees more
plan choices could be a plus for some workers, it could also encourage them to
buy less expensive, less comprehensive coverage than they would otherwise have
gotten through their employer.
"This
idea that people are overinsured — somewhere along the way this became the
conventional wisdom," says Karen Pollitz, a senior
fellow at the Kaiser Family Foundation. People are only over insured if they
don't get sick, she adds. Continued cost shifting to employees means that
"we've gone way beyond skin in the game. Now people have vital organs in
the game."
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2014/05/13/312142207/employers-may-start-paying-you-to-buy-health-insurance
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