This Is What Fact-Checking Ted Cruz Reveals
Republican
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, who was the public face of the Tea
Party-backed campaign to stop the implementation of the Affordable Care
Act, popularly known as Obamacare, has taken a great deal of criticism
for the manner in which he opposed the health care reform and insulted
his own party. However, the bigger problem may be that his numerous
public tirades against the law employed some dubious facts.
“Well, if you don’t believe ObamaCare is the biggest job
killer in the country, look to the facts. This year report after report
has rolled in about employers restricting work hours to less than 30
hours per week — the point where the mandate kicks in. The data also
points to record-low workweeks in low-wage industries.
“It is low-wage industries in particular because the people
who get hammered by this are not the CEOs. It is not the rich. The rich
have done just fine under President Obama. It is hard-working American
families, the people who are struggling. It is young people, Hispanics,
African Americans, and single moms. They are the ones who are losing
their jobs and being forced to work 29 hours a week.” Cruz, speaking on the Senate floor, September 24, 2013.
“The U.S. Senate is not concerned about all of the people
who are out of job, all the people with part-time work, all the people
whose health insurance premiums are skyrocketing, all the people who are
losing their health insurance. And that’s happening because of
Obamacare.” Cruz, interview with ABC News, Oct. 17, 2013.
“The deal that has been cut provides no relief to the
millions of Americans who are hurting because of Obamacare. People all
over this country are losing their health insurance. 15,000 UPS
employees got a notification in the mail that they were losing spousal
coverage, that their husbands and wives were all losing the health
insurance that they wanted and they liked. That is happening all over
the country.” Cruz, speaking to reporters, Oct. 16, 2013.
Cruz does highlight some important points — the rollout of
Obamacare is not progressing smoothly. Some Americans who have enrolled
in the health care law’s online marketplaces have seen their health
insurance premiums skyrocket, while others were unable to keep their
current health insurance plan as President Barack Obama had
promised. But the issue is that the Senator continually describes these
problems in hyperbolic terms, making it necessary to analyze his claims
that “millions of Americans are hurting” and Obamacare is “the biggest
job killer in the country” in order to make sense of his assessment.
Just as Cruz suggested in his speech on the Senate floor, it is time to
look at the facts.
1. “Millions of people are hurting because of Obamacare”
First, it is important to remember that less than three
weeks of the six month enrollment period for the online marketplaces
have elapsed, and while anecdotal information has trickled in about
increasing premiums, a full scale assessment of how the health care
reform has changed the individual market is months, if not years, away.
In the absence of that full scale assessment, projections made by the
Congressional Budget Office will have to suffice.
In May 2013, the nonpartisan federal agency calculated that by 2018,
at which time the law will be fully implemented, about 7 million people
will be dropped from their employer health plans, 5 million people will
shift out of private plans, and 24 million people will join the
insurance exchanges. In terms of percentages, those numbers work out to
coverage changes for 4 percent of all individuals with employer-based
insurance and 19 percent of all individuals with private insurance.
Comparatively, the CBO estimates that the number of Americans without
coverage will fall by 25 million, a decrease of more than 45 percent.
For reference, the population of the United States stands at 315
million.
The fact that more Americans will be helped by the
implementation of the Affordable Care Act is an important detail for any
argument, even if it is ultimately found that the law was poorly
designed and implemented, especially because a majority of those who
receive insurance from their employers will likely see little change in
their coverage. The specific example cited by Cruz — the “15,000 UPS
employees got a notification in the mail that they were losing spousal
coverage” — left out an important detail as well. According to the company memorandum, the policy change will only affect spouses who are eligible for insurance provided by their own employers.
2. Obamacare is “the biggest job killer in the country”
Again, there is not enough data to argue for or against
that statement. Cruz’s argument is that the employer mandate, the
Obamacare provision that requires businesses with 50 or more full-time
employees to provide those workers with a minimum level of health
insurance coverage or face tax penalties, will cause employers to shift
employees’ schedules so that they will no longer be considered full time
or layoff workers entirely. There is also the concern that employers will choose to hire more part-time workers rather than full-time workers.
While there is evidence to support the claim that the
Affordable Care will modestly affect employment in the United States,
the claim that the reform is a “job killer” is overblown. It is true
that a few nonpartisan economic analyses have estimated that a small
number of primarily low-wage positions will be cut as employers prepare
for the additional labor costs added by Obamacare’s employer mandate to
business’ balance sheets. But economists expect the impact will be
minimal.
The original source of the concern for job loss was a 2010
report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which said the
Affordable Care Act would have a small effect on employment, “primarily by reducing the amount of labor that workers choose to supply.”
That fact, which the Republican party translated into a loss of actual
jobs, was actually meant to imply that individuals may choose to work
fewer hours if they receive subsidies to help buy insurance or retire
early if close to retirement because insurance will be less of a
financial burden. This decrease in the amount of labor in the economy
would amount to one-half of 1 percent, according to the report.
CBO also said that the employer requirements “will probably
cause some employers to respond by hiring fewer low-wage workers,” but
companies may hire more part-time or seasonal workers instead. Hard
evidence shows that employers are turning to part-time workers because
of the economic situation, not necessarily Obamacare.
Duke University/CFO Magazine Global Business Outlook Survey
polled 530 chief financial officers of United States-based companies
last month, and found that 59 percent of the respondents said that they
have increased the proportion of their workforce made up by temporary
and part-time workers or shifted toward outside advisors and
consultants. Of those, 38 percent attributed the shift to the
implementation of the Affordable Care Act, while another 44 percent said
it was because of extreme economic uncertainty.
But it is important to remember that companies that do not
now provide insurance, but will soon be required to, probably employ
around one percent of American workers.
“You’ve got 5.7 million firms in the U.S.,” Mark Duggan, who served as
the top health economist at White House’s Council of Economic Advisers
from 2009 to 2010, told the Washington Post. “Only 210,000 have
more than 50 employees. So 96 percent of firms aren’t affected. Then if
you look among those firms with 50 or more employees, something on the
order of 95 percent offer health insurance. So it’s basically 10,000 or
so employers who have more than 50 employees and don’t offer coverage.”
3. “Health insurance premiums are skyrocketing”
Similarly, Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky during
his brief cameo in Cruz’s Senate Speech: “We went through this whole
debacle of giving people Obamacare and it is going to be expensive.
Everybody is going to pay more. Many people still will not have
insurance. The ones who do have insurance are going to pay more.” How
much an individual’s insurance costs will change because of Obamacare
depends on a whole host of factors. It depends on age, current health
status, state of residence, and of course, whether the individual (or
family) was insured before purchasing a policy via the
Obamacare-mandated insurance exchanges.
For example, those who are uninsured and have a preexisting
condition will likely pay less for coverage than they would in the
current private market. Without accounting for subsidies, those who are
uninsured but young and healthy will likely pay more; those who are
insured through their employers will likely experience few changes; and
some 13 million Americans
who are currently uninsured will pay little to nothing because they
will become eligible for Medicaid. Plus, a vast majority of those buying
plans on the individual exchange — 80 percent, according to the
Congressional Budget Office, will receive subsidies of varying amounts
to make insurance more affordable.
In general, exchange premiums also reflect insurers’
estimates of the cost of offering the new benefits to people: the plans
offered on the exchanges must meet certain regulatory requirements,
surcharges based on health status will be eliminated, premium variations
based on age will be limited, and the three-year long, $10-billion
reinsurance pool will theoretically insulate insurance costs from the
shock of offering coverage to those previously uninsured customers or
those who were enrolled in high risk plans.
As for states, premium increases can vary not only because
each exchange has attracted a different number of insurers, but because
states have regulated the insurance market for more than one hundred
years and have developed different standards. For example, insurers
operating in New York were not allowed to sell so-called bare bones
plans, meaning that to adjust these plans to comply with Obamacare
standards, which require insurance to cover a minimum set of benefits
like maternity leave and mental health, insurers had fewer changes and
fewer costs to add.
Plans are no longer able to charge more based on health
status or gender, but they can vary based on geography, tobacco use, and
age. Still, Obamacare regulations prohibit insurers from charging an
adult 64 or older more than three times the premium charged a
21-year-old for the same coverage. Younger adults, who are less risky to
insure, will likely see the greatest increases because their premiums
are meant to balance out the medical costs of those older and sicker
insurance consumers who are more likely to use their benefits.
An August 2013 RAND study,
sponsored by the Department of Health and Human Services and the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, calculated that there
would be “no widespread trend toward sharply higher prices in the
individual market.” Rather, rates would likely vary from state to state
and based on individual circumstances.
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