'Blue Dog' prescription
is bad business
Higher costs could mean higher prices or more
closings
By Terry Neese | Friday, July 31, 2009
Washington TimesRecently, a 1,018-page
health care proposal was introduced in the House of
Representatives that would cost nearly $1 billion
per page and still wouldn't solve the problem of
providing coverage to all Americans. In fact,
according to the Congressional Budget Office, under
the House bill, the number of Americans without
health insurance would increase over the next three
years.
The House proposal would expand
Medicaid, raise taxes, create a new
government-controlled insurance market, and just in
case these provsiions aren't comprehensive enough it
also creates a government-run public option.
However, the current proposal would still fail to
provide insurance for more than 35 percent of the
currently uninsured.
Who is going to pay for increased
coverage? Small business for one -- big time! And
small business owners are now paying attention and
they are upset!
To pay for new spending, the House
Democrats are proposing a surtax on those persons
who make $280,000 or more. (The tax would range from
1 percent to 5.4 percent.) The tax would continue to
rise the more money you make. The proposal doesn't
include any exemptions for S corporations or other
small businesses, many of which file as individuals
for tax purposes. In fact, half of all small
businesses with 20 to 249 employees are likely to
have their income affected by the surtax. The new
Blue Dog "deal" struck with moderate Democrats still
would impose new taxes and mandates on small
employers with 17 or more employees. Based on the
U.S. Small Business Administration numbers, the
small businesses that are affected by the "deal"
employ 70 percent of all small business workers, or
42.3 million workers. Finally, this "deal" still
imposes the full 8 percent payroll tax on small
businesses with only 32 employees. This is not a
"deal"!
The bad news doesn't stop there. If the
surtax doesn't generate enough revenue to cover the
costs of the bill by 2013, the surtax automatically
would double. For business owners, that is like
charging your customers double for a product because
you can't meet your numbers for the year.
It gets worse still. Employers whose
payroll exceeds $400,000 and who cannot provide
coverage to their employees would be hit with a
penalty equal to 8 percent of workers' wages.
According to the National Federation of Independent
Businesses, this new mandate would result in the
loss of more than 1.6 million jobs over five years,
1 million of those from small businesses.
Surtaxes and mandates only hurt our
small businesses, which are struggling to keep their
doors open and the lights on in this difficult
economy. This is no time to tell small businesses
they have a choice between paying a new tax or being
mandated to buy expensive health plans for their
employees, especially when our small businesses
account for about two-thirds of new jobs created.
Let me give you a real-life example. A
businesswoman who owns a small private investigation
and security company in Queens, N.Y., employs 124
people and hopes to grow her business to 300 people
later this year. She can't afford these new
mandates.
Last year, her gross payroll was $3.9
million, and her net payroll was $2.8 million, which
means her payroll taxes alone were just shy of $1
million. Adding an 8 percent penalty on workers'
wages would mean her revenue would go down another
$320,000 a year. That is real money when you are
trying to grow and expand your business.
She provides health care to some of her
employees but isn't able to do so for everyone in
the company, mainly because she is paying
higher-than-average wages. Forcing her to provide
health insurance for all her employees would drive
her to raise her prices, lay off people or shut her
doors.
Stories like this can be found all
across America. Most small businesses are struggling
with rising costs and smaller margins and simply are
unable to pay for new taxes or mandates. Instead of
forcing them to provide health care coverage, our
policymakers should look at innovative ways to
provide health care that give owners more choices.
Ideas like expanding health savings accounts or
allowing the owners of small businesses to band
together across state lines to pool their resources
for health care coverage are better alternatives
than new taxes and more mandates.
Congress needs to take its time to get
it right. Small business owners are ready to give
voice to their elected officials when the lawmakers
are back in their districts in August. Their message
will be one of "protect small businesses from tax
increases and expensive mandates. The current
proposals will eliminate jobs, cut private insurance
carriers out of the market and destroy
enterpreneurship as we know it."
Terry Neese is a successful
entrepreneur and a distinguished fellow at the
National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA), where
she heads the organization's Family Policy Center.