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Ask HN: Why is health insurance bound to employers in the US?

3 points by hguhghuff 7 years ago · 3 comments · 1 min read

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It appears that health insurance in the US is tightly bound to the employer in some way.

Why is this? Doesn't seem to make sense at any level.

sarcasmic 7 years ago

See the history of the Stabilization Act of 1942 [1] and Executive Order 9250. Wages were frozen by law, but not benefits, so companies began offering benefits, including health insurance [2] The next year the IRS decided these were nontaxable, until it changed its mind in 1953, only to be overruled by Congress in 1954 [3].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stabilization_Act_of_1942 [2] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/05/upshot/the-real-reason-th... [3] https://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/30/the-question-o...

howard941 7 years ago

The conventional explanation blames WW2 wage controls for creating the benefit as a differentiator.

The more cynical among us suffer it as cost of satisfying capital by way of employee job lock, particularly when coupled with the soon-to-return preexisting condition exclusions, and even though the locks disincentivize entrepreneurship and other sorts of beneficial risk tasking.

  • hguhghuffOP 7 years ago

    So actually it doesn't make sense but some company benefits so it's locked in forever that way?

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