Few employers say they expect to pay a penalty rather than provide group health coverage in 2014, when "employer responsibility" provisions of the Affordable Care Act are set to take effect.
Mercer, New York, a unit of of Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc., New York (NYSE:MMC), has published that finding in a summary of results from a recent survey of about 2,800 employer-sponsored health plans with 10 or more enrollees.
The drafters of the Affordable Care Act, the legislative package that includes the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), tried to discourage large and midsize employers from letting employees go uninsured by imposing a penalty on employers that fail to provide group health coverage.
For many employers, the penalty payment could cost less than group health coverage, Mercer says.