Here is my op-ed with Linda Christiansen. (It inspired this blurb and then, this essay which cited a list of [at least] 122 colleges impacted by the ACA-- a nice bit of investigative reporting...)
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This is a story about four college students who have similar family
situations. Whatever the intention of politicians, all four were harmed
by the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as "ObamaCare."
Student No. 1
is a young graduate student still fully covered by both parents'
health-insurance plans. He works as a graduate assistant (five hours per
week for a small tuition discount and a little more than the minimum
wage). He also is enrolled in the university's health insurance with no
premium payments. He now has redundant insurance coverage from three
plans. Surely, the university sees those premiums as part of his
compensation. He derives no benefit from their health plan, however, and
does not have the option to be paid more money instead. This is a
lose-lose situation since the employer is paying an expense that the
employee would prefer as cash.
Student No. 2 is an
undergraduate putting himself through college and covered by his
father's health insurance. He works as a resident's assistant (RA)
helping in the dorms to pay his room and board. He was also working in
the campus Internet Technology (IT) department. This is his major so it
offered both compensation and relevant work experience. But because of
ObamaCare's requirement to provide health insurance for those working
more than 30 hours per week, the university forced him to choose between
the two jobs. Since his RA job was so important to his current living
costs, he dropped his IT job despite its value for his future.
Student No. 3
also is an RA with health insurance through both parents. The
university requires RAs to report their work hours each week — to stay
under the ObamaCare mandate on hours worked. Yet, during the weeks
before classes she is "required" to work long days with no off days for
training or student move-in — even though those hours are not counted
for the purposes of ObamaCare.
Student No. 4 attended
college for a while but decided to work and take time to think about
what he would like to do in the future. He works part-time for a grocery
chain and wants to work full-time. Although management thinks he is an
excellent employee and might have a fine career with the company, they
could not offer him more hours since the company can only afford a few
full-time employees. In the meantime, he is covered by his parents'
insurance.
All of these are perverse and largely-ignored
consequences of ObamaCare. None of these students needs health insurance
but all of them have been penalized by the legislation.
We see
the same sort of outcomes throughout the economy. Three surveys by the
Federal Reserve branches in Philadelphia, New York and Atlanta indicated
remarkably consistent results: About 20 percent of firms are cutting
jobs; 20-30 percent are shifting jobs to part-time; and about 20 percent
are shifting higher insurance costs to employees.
From the
employee's perspective, a recent National Bureau of Economic Research
(NBER) paper by Casey Mulligan indicates that 6 million-11 million
workers can increase their disposable incomes by reducing their work
hours.
Thanks to ObamaCare, there are many more contexts in which
working less — and hiring people to work fewer hours — has become
financially attractive. Aside from the amazingly slow pace of the
economic recovery by historical standards, all of this also explains why
we've had so much growth in part-time work and so little in full-time
work.
The government has been heavily manipulating the markets for
health care and health insurance for decades — subsidizing insurance
through the workplace, restricting health care and health-insurance
options, giving away a lot of "free" health care and so on.
ObamaCare
did nothing to reduce the problems created earlier by the government.
Instead, in its attempt to help some people, it extended those problems
and added new ones — by multiplying and complicating the links between
health insurance, work and family.
When we use unwieldy federal
legislation to manipulate a complex, messed-up system, it's not
surprising that the results are a very mixed bag.
Linda
Christiansen is a professor of business at Indiana University Southeast
in New Albany; D. Eric Schansberg is a professor of economics there and
an adjunct scholar for the Indiana Policy Review Foundation.
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