TY - JOUR
T1 - Employers’ changing economic incentives to offer health insurance under the affordable care act
AU - Abraham, Jean M.
AU - Feldman, Roger
AU - Graven, Peter
PY - 2016/8/1
Y1 - 2016/8/1
N2 - The employer’s decision to offer health insurance depends on how much workers value insurance relative to wages, and that value is likely to vary, given the composition of the establishment’s workforce and economic incentives such as the preferential tax treatment of premiums for employer-sponsored insurance (ESI). Using the 2008-10 MEPS Insurance Component augmented with information from other sources, we generate new estimates of employers’ price-sensitivity of offering insurance. Our results suggest that small and medium-size employers are sensitive to changes in the tax price of insurance, with small employers exhibiting the largest price-sensitivity. Workforce composition and local labor market conditions also influence employer offers. With these model estimates, we predict how provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA)—including the employer shared-responsibility requirement, premiumtax credits for exchange-based coverage, and the individual mandate—affect the probability of offering ESI. Findings from this study can inform policy discussions about the implications of ACA provisions as well as subsequent reforms focused on the tax-exempt status of ESI premiums.
AB - The employer’s decision to offer health insurance depends on how much workers value insurance relative to wages, and that value is likely to vary, given the composition of the establishment’s workforce and economic incentives such as the preferential tax treatment of premiums for employer-sponsored insurance (ESI). Using the 2008-10 MEPS Insurance Component augmented with information from other sources, we generate new estimates of employers’ price-sensitivity of offering insurance. Our results suggest that small and medium-size employers are sensitive to changes in the tax price of insurance, with small employers exhibiting the largest price-sensitivity. Workforce composition and local labor market conditions also influence employer offers. With these model estimates, we predict how provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA)—including the employer shared-responsibility requirement, premiumtax credits for exchange-based coverage, and the individual mandate—affect the probability of offering ESI. Findings from this study can inform policy discussions about the implications of ACA provisions as well as subsequent reforms focused on the tax-exempt status of ESI premiums.
KW - Affordable Care Act
KW - Employer decision-making
KW - Employer-sponsored health insurance
KW - Price-sensitivity
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U2 - 10.1162/ajhe_a_00045
DO - 10.1162/ajhe_a_00045
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85032437460
VL - 2
SP - 273
EP - 299
JO - American Journal of Health Economics
JF - American Journal of Health Economics
SN - 2332-3493
IS - 3
ER -