Brief How Have Workers Fared Under the ACA?
Anuj Gangopadhyaya, Bowen Garrett, Stan Dorn
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Whether the coverage provisions under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) would lead to adverse labor market consequences in the form of reduced employment, hours worked, or earnings has been the subject of substantial debate and analysis. This brief assesses whether coverage gains from 2010 to 2016 were associated with changes in labor market outcomes across occupations. Using data from the American Community Survey and the Current Population Survey, we show how employment, hours worked per week, and weekly earnings changed, by occupation group, and how these changes differed for occupations experiencing larger and smaller coverage gains under the ACA. We also examine whether occupations experiencing increased coverage through nonemployment sources (i.e., through Medicaid or individual plans purchased on the ACA’s Marketplace exchanges) also experienced offsetting declines in ESI coverage. We find that predictions that the coverage provisions of the ACA would lead to reduced employment, work hours, and earnings did not materialize, nor did predictions that employer-based coverage rates would fall as employers dropped coverage.

Research and Evidence Health Policy Work, Education, and Labor Family and Financial Well-Being Tax and Income Supports Upward Mobility
Expertise Upward Mobility and Inequality Families Wealth and Financial Well-Being Higher Education Workforce Development Labor Markets Modeling Federal and State Health System Reform Social Safety Net Aging and Retirement
Tags Economic well-being Federal health care reform Employment and income data Labor force Beyond high school: Education and training Families with low incomes