The departure of HHS SecretaryKathleen Sebelius won't stop our Obamacare chronicles, as new developments continue to beset theunpopular health law. Today's Wall Street Journal explores the deleterious impact Democrats' signature overhaul is having on workers -- often low wage -- who work "variable hour" professions. The report focuses on employees of food services monolith Sodexho, but notes that similarly-situated companies are likely to follow suit in the coming months and years. Obamacare is all about fighting for the little guy, supporters will be quick to inform you. Except when it's not, which turns out to be often (via YG Network):
Er, isn't the new employer mandate compliance deadline January 1, 2016 now? In any case, Sodexho says it's made as many adjustments as it can to mitigate the damage, but the law is the law -- and it has consequences:
The "Affordable" Care Act's repercussions are reverberating at a small business in Maryland, where the owner of a family-owned grocer has made the difficult decision to stop hiring full-time workers (via the Free Beacon):
Independent of their intentions, policy decisions don't happen in a vacuum. Supporters of the president's proposed minimum wage hike should take note. In February, Kathleen Sebelius stated that no evidence exists that Obamacare is negatively impacting employment. "There is absolutely no evidence -- and every economist will tell you this -- that there is any job loss related to the Affordable Care Act...I know that's a popular myth that continues to be repeated, but it just is not accurate," she told an Orlando audience. Setting aside the piles of anecdotalevidence to the contrary, including the reports cited above, Sebelius' statement is patently false on a statistical basis, too. The nonpartisan CBO determined that the ACA will reduce the US workforce by the equivalent of 2.5 million full-time workers over the coming years. The report also stated that Obamacare has stifled economic and job growth. That buzzworthy analysis was released before Sebelius made her comments, which makes them even less credible. President Obama offered similar false assurances last year, which were contradicted at the time byseveral pieces of empirical evidence. I'll leave you with this quote from an angry New Yorker:
Those details are part of a New York Times story portraying the state's Obamacare exchange as a great success. Unlike most states, New York's average premiums have dropped under Obamacare -- and all it took was severely curtailed networks and options for consumers (many of whom lose their existing coverage under the law). All Americans were unequivocally promised that they could keep their preferred plans and doctors.
http://townhall.com/tipsheet/guybenson/2014/04/15/report-variable-hour-workers-losing-benefits-under-obamacare-n1824244
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