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December 18, 2006
Contact: Tony Wyche (314) 361-4774 or tonywyche@soapbox-pr.com
New Study Highlights Major Disparities
in Employer-Sponsored Insurance
"Free-Rider" effect costing companies
providing health care to employees' spouses an additional
$46 billion nationally, $891 million in Missouri
St. Louis -A
new study released today by the Missouri Foundation for Health
(MFH) shows that companies providing health insurance to the
spouses of their employees are assuming additional health
care costs of more than $46 billion nationally, $891 million
for companies in the state of Missouri.
"This study not only identifies major disparities
in our system of employer-sponsored health insurance coverage,
but it also shows us that there are real consequences if these
disparities continue unaddressed," said Leslie Reed,
MFH Vice President for Health Policy. "Smaller firms
are having more and more difficulty providing insurance to
their employees due to its increasing cost. Correspondingly,
businesses able to provide insurance to their employees and
their employees' spouses face significant challenges. As health
insurance costs increase and the number of people absorbed
into their plans grows, these employers may be forced to cut
jobs or cut back on the health insurance benefits they are
currently able to offer.
"Under either scenario, these inequities
in the ESI system will continue to add to the number of uninsured
or underinsured Americans and continue the spiral of increased
cost and decreased coverage."
ESI Coverage and Disparities
The study, titled "Health Insurance Coverage of Dual-Income
Families: The Free-Rider Effect and the Cost to Employers,"
examines the distribution of costs associated with employer-sponsored
insurance (ESI) among dual-income families and provides information
for the United States as well as the state of Missouri. It
includes new 2006 data and builds on existing knowledge to
offer significant new insights into ESI coverage, including:
- The decline in the percentage of individuals
covered by ESI has continued over the last five years, falling
from 59 percent to just 53 percent.
- Large employers are carrying extra health
insurance costs because many small employers have either
been priced out of the health insurance system, or cannot
offer coverage at similarly affordable rates as large employers.
- In 2006, employers providing health insurance
to their employees' working spouses are assuming additional
health care costs of more than $46 billion nationally and
$891 million in Missouri.
The "Free-Rider" Effect
Employers that do not provide insurance to their own workers
have been characterized as "free-riders" because
their workers are receiving health insurance through their
spouses' employers. The study examines this "free-rider"
effect in detail, looking at its financial impact as well
as delving into which industries contain the greatest concentration
of free-riders. The relation between company size and prevalence
of free-riding is also examined. Among the findings about
the "free-rider" effect:
- Nationally, there were nearly 31 million
families (61.7 million adults) where both adults were employed
during the year. In Missouri, almost 682,000 families were
dual-income.
- Of these families, 55 percent in the U.S.
(34.1 million workers in 17.1 million families) and 51 percent
in Missouri (more than 692,000 workers in 346,000 families)
have ESI coverage through one spouse's policy.
- The incremental cost to employers covering
a worker from a "free-riding" firm is $2,713 per
employee in the U.S. and $2,564 in Missouri when both employers
are covered under one spouse's policy.
- Looked at another way, for each employee
covered by their spouse's policy, the "free-riding"
U.S. employer would have spent $2,886 in 2006 had they provided
health insurance to their own workers. In Missouri "free-riding"
employers saved $2,764 per employee by not contributing
to the coverage employees received through their spouse's
insurance policy.
- Both nationally and in Missouri, the retail,
agricultural, fishing, and forestry industries have the
highest concentration of "free-riders."
- Both nationally and in Missouri, "free-riding"
employers are most prevalent among the smallest firms -
those with fewer than 10 employees. In fact, the concentration
of "free-riding" employers generally decreases
as firm size increases.
"This study points to the need for a more
equitable method for distributing costs and benefits within
the employer-sponsored insurance system," said Reed.
"We hope that this study prompts businesses, legislators,
and policy makers to recognize these disparities and work
to develop broader system solutions to eliminate them."
The study was conducted by Dr. Ken Thorpe of
the Emory University School of Public Health. The full report
and the summary are available on the MFH web site at http://www.mffh.org/policy_showme.html.
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