NFIB report reveals a growing health insurance affordability crisis for CT small business owners
NFIB report reveals a growing health insurance affordability crisis for CT small business owners
March 25, 2025
NFIB Health Care Policy Paper Urges Lawmakers to Enact Relief for Main Street
> READ coverage of the report and comments by State Director Andy Markowski in the Hartford Business Journal HERE. <
HARTFORD, CT (March 25, 2025) – The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), Connecticut’s leading small business advocacy association with thousands of members across the state, released a new health care policy paper entitled, “Addressing the Health Insurance Affordability Crisis for Small Businesses.” The findings reveal a dire prognosis for the small-group insurance market as employer-provided health coverage is becoming unsustainable for millions of small businesses and their employees.
“Continuously rising health insurance costs are a significant burden for Connecticut’s small businesses,” said NFIB Connecticut State Director Andy Markowski. “For decades, health insurance costs have been the number one concern for small business owners. As this new paper shows, Connecticut’s small-group market is in crisis, premiums are unsustainable, and small businesses are being forced to make difficult choices among ever-waning options. For example, this legislative session we’ve already seen bills introduced that would make it even more difficult for small businesses to access and afford stop-loss insurance, as well as further expansion of certain coverage mandates. If Connecticut legislators continue to make it more expensive and more frustrating for small businesses to provide health insurance to their employees, Main Street businesses lose. Their employees lose. We all lose.”
Key findings from the report:
- The small-group market is in freefall, with enrollment plummeting from 15 million individuals in 2014 to just 8.5 million in 2023, a 44% drop.
- Average premiums for small businesses have skyrocketed: Average single plan premiums have gone up 120% in the last two decades, while average family plan premiums have increased by 129% for firms with 50 or fewer employees.
- Only 30% of small businesses still offer health insurance, down from nearly 50% in 2000.
- Ninety-eight percent of small businesses say they are concerned about whether they will be able to afford to continue offering health insurance in the next five years.
- Small businesses pay twice as much for health insurance as large businesses, firms with less than $600,000 in revenue spend nearly 12% of payroll on health benefits, compared to 7% for firms with over $2.4 million in revenue.
Legislative recommendations include:
- Protect Employer-Sponsored Insurance
- Protect Small Businesses’ Access to Affordable Stop-Loss Insurance
- Allow Employer Pooling Arrangements including Association Health Plans
- Support Small Businesses with Targeted Health Insurance Tax Credits
- Expand Individual Coverage Health Reimbursement Arrangements (ICHRAs)
- Encourage More Competitive Health Care and Insurance Markets
- Discourage Hospital Consolidation
View “Addressing the Health Insurance Affordability Crisis for Small Businesses” here.
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For 80 years, NFIB has been advocating on behalf of America’s small and independent business owners, both in Washington, D.C., and in all 50 state capitals. NFIB is nonprofit, nonpartisan, and member-driven. Since our founding in 1943, NFIB has been exclusively dedicated to small and independent businesses, and remains so today. For more information, please visit nfib.com.
NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.
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