April 25, 2024

Economix Blog: Affordable Care Act Could Be Good for Entrepreneurship

CATHERINE RAMPELL

CATHERINE RAMPELL

Dollars to doughnuts.

The Affordable Care Act is expected to produce a sharp increase in entrepreneurship next year, according to a new report from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Urban Institute and Georgetown University’s Health Policy Institute. The number of self-employed people is expected to rise by 1.5 million — a relative increase of more than 11 percent — as a direct result of the health care overhaul.

One major barrier to entrepreneurship in the United States — beside the usual risks involved with starting a company — is that it has been difficult to get health insurance on the individual market. Those who do end up founding or joining a start-up are often able to do so because they have a spouse with employer-sponsored insurance, or because they are keeping a day job with a bigger company. (This was the case, for example, for most of the people involved with Leap2, a Kansas City start-up that I profiled last fall.)

Economists have looked at whether this insurance-related job lock is deterring self-employment and the formation of new businesses, and the data suggest it is. A Journal of Health Economics paper, for example, found that business ownership rates jumped sharply from just under age 65 to just over age 65, when people become newly eligible for Medicare. Using Current Population Survey data, the same paper also found that wage and salary workers are more likely to start businesses from one year to the next if they have a spouse with employer-based insurance.

A working paper from the Upjohn Institute looked at a change in the law in New Jersey that expanded access to individual health insurance. It found that the law seemed to increase self-employment, particularly among “unmarried, older, and observably less-healthy individuals.”

The report released Friday applies those findings to a model of what will happen in 2014, based on the Affordable Care Act’s provisions for “universal availability of non-group coverage, the financial assistance available for it, and other related market reforms.” The authors also adjusted their numbers depending on the access that residents of various states already have to individual health insurance. (Vermont, for example, already has a statute that allows the self-employed to obtain small group coverage.) Over all, they found, the ranks of the self-employed are likely to rise 11.5 percent, from about 13.1 million to 14.6 million. A table with their state-by-state estimates is below.

By the way, the paper does not mention this, but the same forces that will make it easier for workers to become self-employed may also make it easier for workers to retire early. I have heard anecdotally about people in their late 50s or early 60s who would like to retire but can’t do so because they’re basically uninsurable (for now) on the individual market; I wonder if we’ll notice a wave of retirements in this age group come 2014.

Article source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/05/31/affordable-care-act-could-be-good-for-entrepreneurship/?partner=rss&emc=rss

You’re the Boss: What ‘Bridesmaids’ Says About Losing a Business

Kristen Wiig (dark jacket) with the cast of Suzanne Hanover/Universal PicturesKristen Wiig (dark jacket) with the cast of “Bridesmaids.”
She Owns It

Over the weekend, I saw “Bridesmaids.” The movie, with its female-driven plot, is a welcome departure from the sappy fare typically marketed to women and the comedies that put them on the sidelines. But it’s also an exploration of the emotions that follow the failure of a small business.

As “Bridesmaids” begins, we learn that the main character, Annie (played by Kristen Wiig, who co-wrote the script), lost her bakery during the recession. All that’s left of the business, Cake Baby, is a shuttered storefront marked by a soon-to-be-desecrated sign. When Annie is forced to pass Cake Baby’s address, the sight of her dashed dream still stings.

Now $40,000 in debt, Annie is miserably working in retail, living with two revolting roommates, and driving a car that’s ready for the junkyard. And she can’t bear the thought of baking. She doesn’t even want to talk about it.

The movie got me thinking about the realities of business ownership. Entrepreneurs are often described as optimists. Like “Bridesmaids’” Annie, they dream of making a living doing what they love. But what happens when that becomes impossible? While I’d like to think there’s a Cake Baby II in Annie’s future, it’s clear she’s in no financial or emotional position to “get back on that horse.”

I’m wondering about the real Annies of the world. If you’ve lost a business, I’d like to hear how things worked out — or didn’t. What did you do to make ends meet? Has the experience soured you on the idea of entrepreneurship? Did you eventually find happiness working for someone else? I look forward to your comments, and recommend “Bridesmaids.”

You can follow Adriana Gardella on Twitter.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=6257ed5abe247b98741132c5edf431ac