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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
JUDY WOODRUFF: Next understanding the health care reform law.
Tonight, we are looking at the changes that start taking effect when new online insurance marketplaces known as public exchanges open next month.
One big question how employers may respond.
Just today, Walgreens announced that it will move 160,000 of its employees into a private exchange where they can choose an insurance plan, but with company subsidies1.
Executives cited generally rising health care costs as one reason, but said expenses associated with the new law were a factor as well.
Time Warner, Sears and Trader Joe's have announced similar moves.
That brings us to our series in which we try to answer some of your more frequently asked questions.
And to Ray Suarez.
But there are still many concerns and questions about what it may mean for employer-sponsored coverage andwhether some businesses may change what they offer as the law takes full effect.
The workplace is our focus tonight.
And, as you know, Susan, we have been going out into the world and basically saying to people, what questions do you still have as the final phase-in of the law begins? And we spoke4 to one business owner who was visiting Washington, D.C.
JIM TRIMBLE, small business wwner: My name is Jim Trimble. And this is my wife, Janet. We're from Kentucky. And we own a small business there.
And we furnish our own health insurance, somewhere around $800 a month.
And we're just unsure how this Obamacare may affect our insurance.
RAY SUAREZ: Now, Jim buys his own insurance for he and his wife.
He doesn't provide it for his six employees.
So this new law is now coming into full effect.
What does it mean for Jim Trimble?
SUSAN DENTZER: If he's only buying it for himself and his wife, it won't mean a whole lot.
For employers to be covered -- required to provide coverage under the so-called employer mandate5, which, by the way, will not take effect now until 2015, you have to be a business with 50 -- at least 50 employees.
And so, clearly, that will not change -- that will not be applicable in his case.
It is the case where that if you are a very small business and have 25 or fewer employees at an average wage of $50,000, you can apply for and receive tax credits to help buy insurance.
But, again, given what he describes, that's probably not applicable in his case.
In essence, the big change for him will be that there will be a new small business health insurance exchange in Kentucky, as in the other states, where small businesses can also go to buy coverage.
And this will mean in many states that there are more options available for small businesses than ever before.
In some instances, those plans will probably be more reasonably priced, because in effect what is happening now is that we're putting all the small business workers and many states into larger groups, in effect, of people who are going to be buying coverage on the marketplace.
RAY SUAREZ: Is Kentucky one of the states that is cooperating with the federal government in rolling out the Affordable6 Care Act?
SUSAN DENTZER: Kentucky is in fact running its own state-based insurance exchange, so both for the individual exchange and the so-called shop exchange, the small business exchange, those are being run by the state.
RAY SUAREZ: We have also been getting through e-mail and other forms of communication, social media, other people's questions.
Irma Flieger from Lumberton, New Jersey7, writes: "My employer found a loophole where they can drop employees from their benefits coverage.
So, come January, I will be out of coverage.
For me to get it on the exchange, I need to come up with at least $250 a month, which I don't have.
I don't qualify for the subsidized price because my wife and I supposedly make too much."SUSAN DENTZER: Well, not knowing entirely9 his circumstances, it sounds as if he may be working less than a full-time10 job, in which this case his employer felt that it wasn't necessary to provide coverage.
Possibly, it could be the case that his employer intends to move to something called a defined contribution plan, where eventually the employer will simply give an employee money to go to an individual insurance exchange to buy coverage.
I'm not sure about the subsidies in his case. It is the case that the subsidies are available to families -- say, a family of four with income up around $94,000 a year, four times the federal poverty level.
So the subsidies are rather generous in most instances.
RAY SUAREZ: Stories have been hitting the news from time to time of employers changing what they provide in the wake of the law.
Are there any either incentives12 or disincentives for employers to change what they do when it comes to providing health care options for their workers?
SUSAN DENTZER: Well, it certainly is the case that the United States has been an outlier in the sense that we have tied so much health insurance coverage to employment or your employment status or the status ofyour parents or others.
So we are an outlier in that respect, and we are moving gradually to a system where people can be assured of coverage even if they're not working.
So we're attenuating13 this tie to employment over time. And I think in general we expect over time more andmore workers will want to be buying coverage on an exchange by themselves, will want the access to more insurance options than typically many people have through an employer.
And I think over time we will see more of the coverage move to people buying it on their own through exchanges, probably with assistance financially from their employers, as well as, of course, from the government for those with low enough incomes.
RAY SUAREZ: In a case like that Fliegers, they might have been told to buy COBRA before. Is that still going to exist in the same way for people who are losing their health care from their employer?
SUSAN DENTZER: Yes, COBRA will exist, so that if you lose a job,you will have the ability to retain youremployment-based coverage for the COBRA premium14.
However -- this is another aspect of the law that I think for many people will represent a positive.
You will have more choices if you're unemployed15 in the future, because you will be able most likely to buycoverage through the marketplace and to avail yourself of subsidies if your income is low enough.
RAY SUAREZ: Susan Dentzer, thanks for making it seem so simple.
SUSAN DENTZER: Great to be with you, Ray.
点击收听单词发音
1 subsidies | |
n.补贴,津贴,补助金( subsidy的名词复数 ) | |
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2 coverage | |
n.报导,保险范围,保险额,范围,覆盖 | |
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3 analyst | |
n.分析家,化验员;心理分析学家 | |
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4 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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5 mandate | |
n.托管地;命令,指示 | |
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6 affordable | |
adj.支付得起的,不太昂贵的 | |
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7 jersey | |
n.运动衫 | |
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8 mandated | |
adj. 委托统治的 | |
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9 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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10 full-time | |
adj.满工作日的或工作周的,全时间的 | |
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11 subsidy | |
n.补助金,津贴 | |
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12 incentives | |
激励某人做某事的事物( incentive的名词复数 ); 刺激; 诱因; 动机 | |
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13 attenuating | |
v.(使)变细( attenuate的现在分词 );(使)变薄;(使)变小;减弱 | |
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14 premium | |
n.加付款;赠品;adj.高级的;售价高的 | |
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15 unemployed | |
adj.失业的,没有工作的;未动用的,闲置的 | |
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