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Health Insurance Reform and Small Business

The healthcare status quo is crushing Nevada’s small businesses. In fact, a recent Small Business Majority study found that small businesses stand to lose close to $52.1 billion in profits if nothing is done.

We see the effects of this in Nevada. While 70% of our state’s businesses are small firms, only 49% can offer health insurance to their employees.

This is severely limiting the ability of small business – the driving force behind job creation – to hire new workers, a critical component to our state’s economic recovery.

Senator Reid understands this.

That’s why he ensured that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act makes small businesses a priority.

The legislation not only provides much needed relief to struggling firms but gives them the breathing room to compete in the global marketplace. This will help the small business sector save $29.2 billion in profits, according to the Small Business Majority, and close to 80,000 jobs by 2019, according to MIT Health Economist Jonathan Gruber.

How can this be achieved?

Lowers Costs to Allow Job Creation. Under the current system, the added cost of offering employees health insurance is impeding the ability for small businesses to hire new workers and create job opportunities.

In fact, last June the President’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) disclosed that if healthcare costs could be curbed by merely 1.5% per year, the unemployment rate would be drop by 0.24 percent and nearly 500,000 jobs would be created.

The fiscally responsible Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act achieves this goal by reigning in costs, slowing healthcare spending, and bending the cost curve.

Falling Premiums for Small Business Employer-Based Coverage. The Senate health insurance reform legislation will, in fact, slash premiums for small businesses that offer coverage to their employees by as much as 3%, according to a November 30, 2009 report by the Congressional Budget Office.

This will relieve a lot of the pressure and remove a key obstacle delaying many of Nevada’s small firms from hiring new employees. Additionally, this newfound flexibility will allow small business owners to use further savings to invest back into their businesses to help them grow.

Providing Stability for Small Businesses. With the often times erratic price changes to health insurance premiums, small businesses have difficulty planning ahead from year-to-year. The Senate health legislation will inject some much needed stability into the process by instituting a premium rate review process that keeps insurance companies honest by setting standards for how much insurance companies can spend on administrative costs as well as minimizing wild fluctuations in costs each year.

Saving Money for Small Businesses. Thousands of small businesses throughout the state will be eligible for relief under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. It’s estimated that approximately 24,000 Nevada small firms could receive tax credits to make premiums more affordable.

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