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Small business owners are a pivotal constituency in the fall congressional elections, and Democrats are battling to win them over. Major benefits of the health care law
-- competitive insurance markets, more stable premiums and a ban on denying coverage to those in poor health
-- don't take effect until 2014. But the health care credit is available starting this year. It can be a boon for smaller companies paying lower wages. Betsy Burton, owner of The King's English Bookshop in Salt Lake City, estimates that she will get a credit of roughly $21,000 against premiums of about $67,800. She has 11 full-time equivalent employees averaging $26,100. "What it means is that I can afford to carry this insurance and insure people's families," said Burton. "I was afraid that we were fast approaching a time when I would have to choose between insuring my employees and closing my doors." Burton believes offering health insurance is the right thing for an employer to do
-- and also makes good business sense because it helps her retain valued employees. Except at the beginning, she has provided coverage for most of the 33 years the bookstore has been in business. Slightly more than a third of companies with fewer than 10 employees offered coverage in 2008, down about 10 percent since the start of the decade, according to an Urban Institute analysis. Hoffman, the furniture store owner whose business missed out on the credit, says he understands that lawmakers writing the health care legislation had a limited amount of money to work with. But his company's premiums rose 15 percent this year, and it's a struggle to keep paying. To get the most out of the new federal credit, Hoffman said he'd have to cut his work force to 10 employees and slash their wages. "That seems like a strange outcome, given we've got 10 percent unemployment," he said. ___ On the Net: House Energy and Commerce calculator: http://tinyurl.com/2ewbsju
[Associated
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