Investors.com
The
Supreme
Court’s Ruling Is As Damaging As It Is Historic By Tom
Stemberg June 28
This week
the Supreme Court delivered one of the most consequential and highly
anticipated
rulings in history — it upheld President Obama’s health care law. In
doing so,
the court — and this administration — dealt a critical blow to free
enterprise
and ensured that taxes will go up for middle class working families and
small
businesses everywhere.
This dims
prospects for economic growth, while leaving in place the barriers to
hiring
imposed by the law, like costly, burdensome regulations and pervasive
uncertainty.
I’ve always
believed that President Obama’s health care law was and is bad politics
and bad
policy — mainly because the law fails to deliver what we so desperately
need:
true reform that will actually lower the cost of health insurance and
fix a
broken system.
Pursuing a
drastic overhaul of our nation’s health care system — one-sixth of our
economy
— was bad politics. With over 5 million long-term unemployed, the top
priority
for this administration should have been getting the American people
back to
work. Instead, the policies coming out of Washington have been nothing
more
than a regulatory onslaught on small businesses, the engine of the
American
economy, making it more difficult and costly for them to survive.
Conventional
wisdom holds that it will be extremely difficult for Obama to win
re-election
with unemployment rates persisting above 8%. To lower that number by
Election
Day would require creating 200,000 jobs per month between now and then,
making
the president’s lack of focus on a pro-growth jobs policy all the more
confusing.
But more
important than the political implications, the law itself is bad
policy.
Through a top-down, bureaucrat-centered approach based on bigger and
more
intrusive government, this ill-fated attempt at reform will most
adversely
affect small businesses.
In fact,
the law is already having a profound impact on small business
confidence,
optimism and hiring. According to the Chamber of Commerce, 73% of small
businesses consider ObamaCare a hurdle to hiring, as health care costs
continue
to rise and many employers see their health coverage terminated.
This law is
and will continue to be a massive government expansion to the detriment
of
private-sector growth. The fact is that we simply cannot afford higher
taxes,
more regulations or bigger government.
Job
Creators Alliance believes there are patient-centered solutions that
could
contain costs and increase access to health insurance without
discouraging
economic growth. A few common sense, modern reforms, like expanding
health
savings accounts, making health insurance portable or allowing health
insurance
to be bought across state lines, would be important steps in the right
direction.
This week’s
ruling was as disappointing and damaging as it was historic. Yet the
real need
for reform remains. More importantly, the need to free our nation’s
businesses
from the crippling grip of increasing government control remains with
no relief
in sight.
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