Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Target is dropping insurance for some because of Obamacare. That could be good news for workers.

Welcome to Health Reform Watch, Sarah Kliff's regular look at how the Affordable Care Act is changing the American health-care system — and being changed by it. You can reach Sarah with questions, comments and suggestions here. Check back every Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoon for the latest edition or sign up here to receive it straight from your inbox. Read previous columns here.

FILE - In this Dec. 19, 2013, file photo, a passer-by walks near an entrance to a Target retail store in Watertown, Mass. The security breach that hit Target Corp. during the crucial holiday season seemed to be part of a broader and highly sophisticated scam that affected several retailers, says a report published by a global cyber intelligence firm that works with the U.S. Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security, Thursday, Jan. 16, 2014. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

(AP Photo/Steven Senne)

Target made a very big announcement this week ---one that, for the first time in awhile, had nothing to do with credit card breaches.

The Fortune 500 company said Tuesday that it would stop providing health-care benefits to its part-time workers, instead directing them to purchase coverage through the health law's exchange. This adds Target to a growing list of companies that have dropped health benefits for part-time workers --including Home Depot and Trader Joe's -- pointing a finger squarely at Obamacare.

Like companies before it, Target has framed the change, which begins April 1, as not so bad for employees, arguing that the decision could instead prove advantageous.

"The launch of Health Insurance Marketplaces provides new options for health-care coverage that we believe our part-time team members may prefer," a Target blog post says. "In fact, by offering them insurance, we could actually disqualify many of them from being eligible for newly available subsidies that could reduce their overall health insurance expense."

Is this window-dressing on a bad decision for workers? Or is it actually, as Target suggests, an improvement for part-time employees? That depends a lot on each individual employee. Some probably will find themselves in a better situation, with access to more affordable health care. Others will likely be furious that their benefits from Target are ending.

The best place to start is with how the Affordable Care Act treats workers. And there are two important things to know on this front. First, the health-care law does not require employers to provide insurance to anyone who works less than 30 hours a week. Employers will not be penalized if they leave these people uncovered, as they will be if they do not offer insurance to full-time employees next year.

Second, an affordable employer offer of insurance bars a worker from using the health law's new insurance subsidies. Affordable is defined here as an insurance plan that costs less than 9.5 percent of an individual's income. The idea here is to encourage workers who do get insurance through their employer to stick with that plan, rather than have the federal government kick in a contribution.

That is what Target means when it says that its offer of insurance can have a negative impact, by "disqualifying" workers from federal insurance subsidies.

The glass-half-empty reading of Target dropping coverage is that workers are losing access to an employer-sponsored insurance. The half-full interpretation is that many are gaining access to government-subsidized insurance.

A hypothetical 25-year-old Target sales floor leader, for example, who earns $15 an hour and works 29 hours per week would qualify f0r a monthly health-care subsidy of $96 if Target does not offer insurance. The worker could not access that subsidy if Target did offer coverage -- but the worker would then, of course, have access to that employer plan. Generally speaking, those who will get the best deal here are the workers with the lowest salaries because, for the first time, their premium will be directly tethered to the amount of money they earn.

Part of Target's argument for this move is that few of its part-time employees actually take up health benefits. The retailer's executive vice president of human resources, Jodee Kozlak, estimates that 10 percent of part-time workers enroll in company health benefits. That's low compared with other companies, where separate research suggests that about half of all part-timers take up benefits.

Target obviously has a financial interest in not offering insurance coverage. Premium prices keep rising, and many executives cite benefits as an area where they need to cut costs. 

But there's a compelling human interest here, too. If Target keeps offering insurance to all its part-time workers, the 10 percent who do take up the offer remain relatively happy. The other 90 percent, however, get shut out of the health law's subsidies. Those subsidies might make insurance coverage affordable for those workers in a way that Target's wasn't.

The health-care law is definitely changing how employers offer coverage, Target included. But whether those changes are good or bad depends on who you are, how much you earn and whether you're getting benefits right now. Like many other parts of the health-care law, its complicated -- and varies a lot from person to person.

KLIFF NOTES: Top health policy reads from around the Web.

Latino enrollment in California's exchange remains low. "California keeps signing up people for Obamacare policies at a rapid clip, but the state's struggle to reach uninsured Latinos is drawing more criticism. The Covered California exchange said Tuesday that more than 625,000 people have enrolled statewide in health plans through Jan. 15 as part of the Affordable Care Act. Even though enrollment opened in October, more than 500,000 of those enrollees signed up in just the last six weeks."  Chad Terhune in the Los Angeles Times.

Arkansas' Medicaid expansion is in jeopardy. "The head of Arkansas' Department of Human Services on Tuesday said he doesn't have a backup budget if lawmakers block funding for the state's "private option," despite growing signs that the compromise Medicaid expansion plan is at risk when the Legislature convenes next month. A Democratic lawmaker questioned the odds of the private option continuing after an opponent of it won a state Senate seat in a special election last week and a key supporter announced she no longer backed the plan. Lawmakers approved the private option last year as an alternative to expanding Medicaid's enrollment under the federal health care law." Andrew DeMillo in the Associated Press. 

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