AOL takes 'blame Obamacare' to a new level
By Michael Hiltzik
9:57 AM PST, February 7, 2014 - Los Angeles Times
As we observed back in December, one of the solid benefits the Affordable
Care Act has brought to business leaders is to give them a convenient scapegoat for their own management problems.
AOL's chairman and CEO, Tim Armstrong, this week raised that practice to an art
form. In the process he blamed a couple of the company's employees, bizarrely,
for their high medical costs.
Armstrong announced changes to AOL's retirement benefits that may save the
company millions a year, at a commensurate cost to its more than 5,000
employees. The reason? "Obamacare is an additional
$7.1-million expense for us as a company," he told CNBC.
So something had to give, he said, and what gave was AOL's match of up to 3%
of its workers' 401(k) contributions. Employees will still get it, but it will
be paid at the end of each year only to employees then still on the payroll.
That's a change from the previous rule at AOL, which was to pay out the match
with every paycheck. Not only does it cost employees who leave during the year,
but it deprives all workers of potential market gains on the company match
during the year.
Armstrong, whose company owns the Huffington Post among other properties,
also described the benefit change as a response to the hot rivalry for talent in
the online business. "We're in the most intensive talent space in the world, and
so we have to look at our benefits program very seriously," he told CNBC.
You might think that would mean AOL should improve its benefits, not cut
them. But what he seems to be saying is that AOL's most talented employees get
poached, so why not make it a tad harder for them to leave?
As for AOL's Obamacare-related costs, what is Armstrong talking about?
He didn't specify, which is reason itself to believe he's blowing smoke. As a
large employer, AOL doesn't face any new healthcare mandates under the
Affordable Care Act, except to allow employees to keep children on their health
plans up to age 26.
But that's an incremental cost, extremely unlikely to come to $7.1
million--the old ceiling was age 19 or through college; and young people are
relatively cheap to cover. There's a $63 per plan enrollee fee that kicks in
this year, but even if every AOL employee enrolled three family members, that
would come to about $1.3 million. The next possible bump in costs is a tax on
high-value "Cadillac" health plans, but that doesn't begin until 2018.
Armstrong doubled down on the obfuscation during a meeting with employees, at
which he cited coverage expenses to "two AOL-ers that had distressed babies." Their medical
expenses came to $1 million each, he said.
Health insurance experts are scratching their heads at this. As a large
employer, AOL may be self-insured, but it's also big enough to take advantage of
all the tools available to large-group insureds, such as reinsurance, to
moderate the impact of such isolated costs. Here's a primer on how large pools work from Richard Mayhew, an
insurance expert who blogs pseudonymously at Balloon-juice.com.
The most likely conclusion to draw from all this is that Armstrong is trying
to shift blame to the Affordable Care Act for a cheeseparing benefit change he
instituted--especially since the change was announced in conjunction with AOL's quarterly fianancial
report. Quarterly revenue looked strong, but to the extent it flowed down to
profits, the reason was stringent cost-cutting at AOL. Looks like that trend, at
least, will continue.