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- <text id=93TT2180>
- <title>
- Sep. 06, 1993: Prognosis:Fewer Jobs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH CARE, Page 32
- Prognosis: Fewer Jobs
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton may not know it yet, but his advisers predict job losses
- from health-care reform
- </p>
- <p>By DICK THOMPSON/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Dan Goodgame/Washington
- </p>
- <p> While Bill Clinton relaxed on Martha's Vineyard last week,
- staff members were sweating and fretting back in Washington,
- studying computer models for answers to one of the most explosive
- questions facing his health-care-reform proposal. That question--the subject of a showdown meeting scheduled with the President
- this week--is, How many jobs will be lost during the long
- transition to reform?
- </p>
- <p> Clinton has publicly stated that health-care reform will "boost
- job creation," a claim that unnerves many of his advisers. What
- they know--and what some of them fear Clinton has not been
- told--is that the Administration's own preliminary computer-aided
- studies of the "employment effects" of health reform predict
- "significant" job losses.
- </p>
- <p> TIME has learned that according to one computer run, the plan
- would slow net employment growth by as many as 1 million jobs
- over the next five years. Other Administration forecasts--based on computer simulations of the U.S. economy at various
- government departments and the Urban Institute, a Washington
- think tank on contract to the White House--have produced lower
- estimates of job losses, sources said. But they do not support
- Clinton's claims of job gains.
- </p>
- <p> Sources caution that these forecasts resulted from a draft of
- the health-reform plan that is still being refined, and was
- tested on an econometric model that included "faulty assumptions"
- about the ways in which employers, workers and health-care providers
- are likely to respond to health-care reform. Still, these estimates--and others by independent economists who predict job losses
- in the 200,000-to-600,000 range--galvanized Clinton's health-reform
- advisers last week into a crash program to refine both their
- computer models and the health-care plan in order to minimize
- their forecast of unemployment. Says a worried official: "The
- jobs issue is probably the most sensitive one we face in health-care
- reform."
- </p>
- <p> Privately, several of the President's advisers contend that
- the current runaway spending on public and private health care
- is a growing burden on the economy, which, like a surgical patient
- who must feel worse before he can get better, might need to
- endure modestly higher unemployment for several years as the
- price of reform. Trouble is, Clinton has not prepared the public
- for any sacrifice. He and his top health-care strategist, Ira
- Magaziner, have been selling health-care reform as a four-course
- free lunch. Everyone will be covered. It won't require new taxes.
- It will immediately boost job creation. And it will immediately
- reduce the federal deficit. "Several of us," says a political
- adviser to Clinton, "are worried that we're creating expectations
- for health care that can't be met.''
- </p>
- <p> No business will be required to pay more than 7.6% of its total
- payroll for health insurance. For big companies, such as automakers,
- which now pay about 19%, the potential savings would provide
- an incentive to hire new workers. But for small firms that now
- provide no health insurance, the requirement will add to the
- cost of labor. Some of these firms will cover the cost by cutting
- profits, raising prices, withholding raises or extending overtime
- hours. But many firms will not have these options. Most vulnerable
- are enterprises like restaurants and farms, which employ many
- of the nation's 4.8 million minimum-wage workers and often operate
- with slim profit margins. For them, cutting jobs may be the
- only option. The National Federation of Independent Business
- has estimated that 1.6 million jobs will be lost over five years.
- A new study, financed by restaurant owners, forecasts losses
- of 3.1 million.
- </p>
- <p> The White House rejects these figures as flawed because they
- don't sufficiently account for jobs created in firms that save
- money through lower insurance costs and because they are based
- on false assumptions about the tightly guarded reform plan.
- The next computer runs, to be conducted on the Urban Institute's
- microsimulator (called TRIM, for Transfer Income Simulator),
- will include various "transition subsidies" designed to minimize
- job losses for small businesses and low-income employees. His
- advisers plan to present Clinton with four options this week
- for easing the transition, but one official said they were having
- trouble designing subsidies that were not "a nightmare to administer."
- </p>
- <p> Hillary Clinton, who heads the health-care-reform effort, is
- committed to a rapid phase-in, by January 1996, for universal
- coverage and a generous basic-benefits package--though few
- others believe this schedule is realistic. She has waved off
- warnings of job losses as the propaganda of greedy business
- interests. Her strong views and assiduous hunting of suspected
- leakers have exerted what one official describes as a "chilling
- effect" in sessions she attends. Nevertheless, at a recent meeting,
- her colleagues report that Laura Tyson, chair of the President's
- Council of Economic Advisers, cautioned that once the plan is
- released, respected outside economists will run it through standard
- econometric models, which will probably show job losses, "and
- some of those numbers might be big."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton health-care planners have tried to address the concerns
- raised by small business, which enjoys great influence in Congress.
- They emphasize that under the proposal, the smallest businesses
- will pay as little as 3.5% of their payroll for insurance, rather
- than the 7.6% top rate, with taxpayers subsidizing the rest.
- And the smallest businesses will be allowed a slower phase-in
- of the new expense. Insists Magaziner: "We think we can do this
- without having a negative employment effect." Magaziner, backed
- by Hillary Clinton, has so far insulated the President from
- internal assessments that might challenge his rosy scenario.
- But that, officials say, will change in the meeting scheduled
- this week.
- </p>
- <p> Many small-business owners who want to provide health coverage
- for their workers will back reform because the current situation
- inflicts large and growing burdens on them. Audrey Rinker, owner
- of a graphics shop in New Port Richey, Florida, has been denied
- coverage by three insurance companies because her workers have
- pre-existing illnesses. Says Rinker: "We need something done
- right now." Even when they can get insurance, small companies
- pay some of the highest rates. Barbara Silver Miller, co-owner
- of a vending-machine firm in Phoenix, Arizona, has seen premiums
- for her employees rise 20% to 30% a year.
- </p>
- <p> To reform this festering mess, some Clinton officials argue
- privately, the transitional loss of a few hundred thousand jobs
- is not a high price to pay. Certainly not in an economy that
- employs 120 million workers and creates 2 million jobs a year.
- Yet for the individuals involved, a single job lost on a Nebraska
- farm isn't really "a net wash" when a new job--requiring relocation
- and training--is created in a Detroit auto plant.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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