‘Obamacare’ Bends for Big Business… Again

Critics blast Obama’s decision to delay mandated employer health insurance in Affordable Care Act that was already a concession to private industry

By Sarah Lazare for Common Dreams

The one-year delay of what Obama touted as a 'key provision' to his plan will apply to businesses that employ 50 or more full-time workers. The change was announced by the Treasury Department as a concession to big business after employer complaints over the rule's complexity, it said.

Critics charge that this latest delay exposes an underlying truth: Obamacare has been a concession to big business all along, aimed at deepening the privatization of the U.S. health care industry that is responsible for the current crisis.

"The whole bill is built around the needs of the insurance and pharmaceutical industries," Ida Hellander, director of health policy and programs for Physicians for a National Health Program, told Common Dreams. "The delay is just a symptom of this bill being too complicated and too burdensome for the many people who will be uninsured or under-insured under Obamacare."

Single-payer healthcare advocates blast the bill that will leave many without insurance, or with inadequate insurance, while fattening the coffers of the private insurance industry responsible for the current healthcare crisis that has ranked the U.S. lowest in life expectancy among the world's 'wealthiest' nations.

"This is is one more piece of evidence that we will have to replace the current healthcare system with HR 676—the improved and extended medicare for all, single payer bill that provides coverage for everyone," Don Bechler, chair of Single Payer Now, told Common Dreams.

Furthermore, critics charge that Obamacare's complex web of publicly and privately funded insurance plans are complicated, fragmented, and simply leave many people out of the equation. A recent Health Affairs study finds that approximately 30 million in the U.S. will remain uninsured under Obamacare.

"What we are seeing is a tremendous fragmentation of our health system," says Hellander. "This is the natural result of centralizing the private healthcare industry. We have already had a 50-year experiment with private healthcare. It has been a failure."

2 Comments

  1. Stuart on July 19, 2013 at 12:44 am

    It’s pretty simple what’s happening…. BIG payoffs by the insurance industry keeps this insane system alive… Our politicians are NOT LEADERS there self serving people enjoying the perks given by big business… We the people know what’s going on and WE THE PEOPLE deserve better… It’s a sad thing knowing people are dying for the sake of profit in health care… HR676 is the answer and it’s gonna be a tough fight because these politicians are just hell bent on keeping there cozy little perks… EVEN if it means people DIE!! Shame on them!!!!!!!!!!! It’s gonna take lobbyists in Washington FOR HR676 so let’s get some big players involved!! Money is all that seems to matter to these politicians… Life sure doesn’t..



  2. Ronald on August 25, 2013 at 10:30 am

    This article did not even mention that union-negotiated health plans must pay the feds $63.00 for each covered member (worker). Many smaller companies may then want to get out from under their negotiated health plans with workers who settled for healthcare over salary increases. How fare is that?