Having assumed full control of Congress this week, Republicans are trying to seem less “scary.”
One of the first items on their agenda in January is President Obama’s signature health care legislation. But Republican’s won’t be pushing for a full repeal of Obamacare. They’re not even pushing for partial repeal. Instead, they’re angling for a seemingly incremental change: to be counted as full-time, workers should need to rack up 40 hours a week, not 30 hours.
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The rule is part of Obamacare’s employer mandate, which requires firms with 50 or more full-time employees to provide health coverage and begins to take effect this year. Weakening the mandate is one of the first legislative priorities for the new GOP-controlled Congress, which is betting that Democrats will help them bring the proposed change to the president’s desk.
“They think there’s a good chance they’ll get a lot of Democratic votes for this. When you have a new majority coming, Republicans will be looking for a few things that will be easy for them to pass,” said Stephen Nothrup, a lobbyist and former Senate GOP staffer on health policy. “They want to put some early points on the board.”
President Obama has already indicated that he would veto the measure, but business groups argue it’s a commonsense change that isn’t intended to undermine the central pillars of the Affordable Care Act. “We maintain this is not a campaign to repeal and replace the ACA. It’s a return to the traditional definition of 40 hours,” said Stephen Caldeira, president of the International Franchise Association. The employer mandate predominantly affects restaurant, retail, agriculture and other low-wage industries that tend to have part-time employees working closer to the 30-hour threshold.
But the GOP’s proposed change is hardly a minor tweak to Obamacare—and not all conservatives agree it’s the best way forward.
It would effectively gut the employer mandate, reducing employer-sponsored coverage by 1 million people and costing $53 billion over the next ten years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. But it would also make it even more likely that the Affordable Care Act will have negative consequences for ordinary Americans, according to Larry Levitt of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
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“A change in the definition of full-time work to 40 hours per week would essentially eviscerate the requirement that employers offer coverage to their employees, while still providing an economic incentive for employers to reduce hours for uninsured workers,” he said.
The reason that the architects of Obamacare set the definition of full-time work at 30 hours in the first place was to minimize the disruption to the labor market. Far more employees work close to 40 hours a week than 30 hours a week, so if the threshold were raised, more employers could be tempted to reduce hours to avoid complying with the mandate.
“It would make it easier for employers to reduce hours for workers who don’t now have health insurance on the job, since 39 hours is still basically a full-time work week and there would be little disruption for employers moving many of their workers to just below the 40 hour threshold,” Levitt said.
That’s why some conservative critics of Obamacare believe that changing the threshold would be worse than doing nothing at all.
“Even if you just look at workers not now offered employer coverage, this difference means that putting the cut-off for the employer mandate at 40 hours would likely put far, far more people at risk of having their hours cut than leaving it at 30 hours. That would make for a worse effect on workers and on the economy,” National Review’s Yuval Levin wrote in November. “So by setting the definition lower, Obamacare’s architects were trying to mitigate the damaging effects of the employer mandate some, and by setting it higher Republicans would be worsening those effects.”
Levin is no fan of the current employer mandate, either. But he believes that Republicans should push for full repeal of the provision instead.
Republicans are still betting that a handful of Democrats will join their efforts to roll back the employer mandate. Eighteen Democrats joined the GOP last year in changing the threshold to 40 hours, though many of them were moderates who’ve since lost their seats to Republicans. They’re also likely to argue that the $53 billion price tag for making the change masks the real cost of the status quo.









