And government encroachment in private business.
http://mobile.reuters.com/article/id...30826?irpc=932
And government encroachment in private business.
http://mobile.reuters.com/article/id...30826?irpc=932
I wouldn't say his actions or statements say he likes socialism or government encroachment. He was doing some of these things voluntarily before but that doesn't mean he wants them to be mandatory.
Thats perfectly his right, its his jobs to do with as he sees fit. I dont begrudge him for eating that cost.
But obviously that is not the norm.
Likeing or disliking Obamacare is irrelevant, the cost to businesses is what matters. Overwhelmingly its causing businesses to react.
Its funny , you act like SB is the same as every other business. Im sure their profit and loss model is not the same as say.......costco.................Home Depot.........UPS...............
not every business is created equal.
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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Also, healthcare costs for him are prob negligible considering he employs $9-11 hr low wage workers.
Here you go:
So of course it doesnt matter, he already offers them HC. The real issue will be when the benefits change , which WILL HAPPEN.The 2010 healthcare reform law, often called Obamacare, requires companies with more than 50 employees to offer health insurance for employees who work 30 hours a week or more. Starbucks currently provides healthcare to part-timers who work 20 hours a week or more.
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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Again every business is different. you are assuming way too much and making terrible generalizations.
2 businesses who pay their employees LOW wages vs companies who have much higher costs.
The issue really isnt with providing healthcare , its more in the loss of benefits that will happen.
Companies that are on the "bubble" will be forced to make a decision. Companies that pay employees $9 hr might be able to get away with offering HC now. but companies that paid their workers ........12$/hr might end up lowering wages to give them HC, because the trade off was the companies were paying their labor force MORE MONEY than competitors.
this is what is happening.
Everyones profit model is different. If they can afford to eat the added cost, theyll offer HC. but that is NOT the norm.
I suppose youd be happy with everyone working for papa johns and SB for a living lol
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Also, you miss a key piece of this article:
He is noble, but when stores and layoffs happen , Ill be sure to say "i told you so"Over the years, Schultz's commitment to employee benefits has been unwavering. Even when Starbucks took cost-cutting measures like shutting down stores and laying off employees, health care benefits -- which also include dental and vision -- have remained intact.
Ill stand by my OG prediction, youll have a choice, JOB, or HC. Starbucks sounds great, and if he keeps all his employees and keeps growing while eating this cost, good for him! But , if I hear that he is closing 100-200 stores, to keep benefits, you cant act like the 2 arent related.
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Store closures and layoffs are something we can examine numerically. So if it happens we'll know exactly what it is, instead of assuming its because he wanted to take care of his employees.
Of course, Starbucks has remained a solvent multibillion dollar company all this time paying their employees more than the mandatory minimum wages and benefits. Wonder why....
Takingf care of employees by laying off employees ...............makes sense.
because they have really high profit margins, they pay AVERAGE hourly baristas $7-8 /hr, go look it up. He also closes stores an lays people off when profits tumble.Of course, Starbucks has remained a solvent multibillion dollar company all this time paying their employees more than the mandatory minimum wages and benefits. Wonder why....
Your article is a dumb attempt to say "LOOK SB ISNT GOING TO CUT HOURS! SO ALL THE OTHER COMPANIES SAYING THEY HAVE TO BECAUSE OF OC ARE LIEING!"
its quite funny
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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Blank doesnt understand that all businesses are different. He doesnt understand that some companies will be able to afford it, other wont. Some are volume sellers with low margins, some are not.
The other main point he misses is that he only looks at 1 part of the equation. What Shultz said is meaningless because he already offers some type of HC to employees. (Id love to know what kind it is and compare it to other companies). What is not being presented in the article is he could make this statement about keeing HC, but if he closes 500 stores to keep the current HC, this article is incredibly dumb and misleading.
ALL BUSINESSES ARE NOT CREATED THE SAME
NEITHER IS HC.
THe other funny thing is, that if all these companies had such great HC being offered already, why are we requiring them to offer what the govt wants them to offer? I mean these companies were already offering care ON THEIR OWN DIME, why the mandate ?
http://www.moneycrashers.com/part-ti...ance-benefits/
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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I dont think you do. Youre trying to insinuate that because Company "X" does something, then all other companies have the ability to do what company X is doing.
Simply not true.
Your thread title suggests that anyone who embraces OBamaCare (OC) is a socialist, as a sort of tongue in cheek to the hundreds of businesses who are citing that specific legislation as a reason for them cutting workers hours, and their own individual labor force.
So you make this thread saying "look, I guess Starbucks loves socialism because despite the rising costs of HC, hes going to continue doing what hes doing anyway".
It makes no sense, and its a dumb conclusion because its only 50% of the equation, and assumes all businesses have resources available to them that SB has.
you also, validate the other companies concerns because even Shultz himself admits that there will be millions in costs added to his bottom line from the OC law. I thought OC was supposed to lower costs?
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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Of course Blank doesnt understand. He's an obtuse moron. His company example is a novelty coffee shop with probably a 500% profit margin. I'm sure Obamacare wont hurt Ferrari, Lamborghini or Gucci either! ZOMG!!!! Obamacare good for business!!!!
The solution is so simple, every business just raise their prices to the highest price people are willing to pay....
again, you misunderstand business at its core.
SB has a quarterly profit margin of 11%ish, they make around 40-50% per coffee cup doe. More on other products.
Starbucks Profit Margin Quarterly (SBUX)
2 totally different numbers
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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theyre not, they make much more. Theyre normal coffee they pay $1.83 per lb, it averages out to be about $10-12 when they sell it back to you. However, gotta factor in $7/hr barista, over head, etc. Plus SB sells more than jsut coffee, CDs, food, merchandise, etc.
The point is, the article proves that a business decided that , for now, it will absorb the cost of Obamacare. Thats great, doesnt mean you can ignore the other 100s of companies who say it will hurt them.
See to drive by people, the uneducated voter, the low info person they read this and go HA, SEE, COMPANIES CUTTING LABOR FORCES BECAUSE OF OC ARE LIEING! SB CAN DO IT WHY CANT THEY?
It because quite frankly people arent smart enough to understand
Company doesnt = Company
and
HC doesnt = HC
BTW, 42% of SB employees , according to a recent study, dont have HC. So theres more to this story than what is being published
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
-www.usedbarcode.net
I don't care what per item profit margins are. Per-item profit margins on a single item is only a fraction of the story. They might make 50% on a cup of coffee, they might lose 5% on a Danish, they might make 8% on a can of their energy drink. They might make 20% on a bag of coffee. I could then just as easily say Starbucks profit margins are -5% and be just as right and just as wrong as you were saying their margins are more than 11%. I don't understand how anyone who has any business sense would use a single item to describe a whole companies profitability.
Not seeing where I was wrong either, as that is definitely part of their quarterly earnings statements they release every quarter to their shareholders.
I can afford to wipe my ass with a $100 bill each week, doesnt mean i should. I love how we're having a conversation about a business being able to endure the costs of Obamacare as if that is a positive for Obamacare. This is the typical liberal mindset shared by all Obamacrats like Blankcd, "those who can pay more, should". So our goal now is to endure Obama's mistakes? What is the benefit of it? and if the benefits are so great, why the mandate? Why are liberal policies so good that they have to be forced on everyone????
Starbucks is not an example of the typical business model. They sell a cheap product at a very high markup. Not every business can operate under the same model as starbucks and some are not even allowed to. I work for a company that employs nearly 1000 people. Immediately after the election, we had meetings to discuss cutbacks needed to accommodate healthcare. While obviously they didnt come out and say "Obama sucks" which is how most people interpreted it, they did say things like "pending the results of the election, we're going to have to make some changes". A lot of people got laid off, a lot of people got their hours cut back, a lot of people lost their job...... this is how the "typical" business is dealing with Obamacare. I guess if we just set our price at 3-4-500% what it costs us, like Starbucks, everything would be fine and we would be able to endure Obama. You know, because that's the american way, enduring the mistakes made by our politicians.
What starbucks says they will or wont do is meaningless. I look a companies like Delta who say Obamacare will cost them 100M a year at todays rates. I'm guessing it will probably be double that or more in 5 years.
A already pointed out, I would like to see SB's health care plan before I really judge. I would also like it re-examined in 3 years when the employer mandate kicks in. Until we do get some context into how SB's plan stacks up, I can only see this article as a snipe piece.
I put these two statements side by side because they are really the same thing. They both speak to how much impact the policy will have on business which is that some will be affected greatly and others not so much. That is an important factor but it certainly isn't the sole criteria we should judge the policy on. If the impact on jobs is your main concern, you also have to account for the jobs that will be created in the healthcare industry.
You do recognize the existence of tragedy of the commons issues where good policies must be enforced for everyone even if they are good policies. We wouldn't need a mandate if everyone who didn't have insurance actually paid for all their medical treatment but that is simply not reality.
its kind of a conundrum ,
Businesses are being forced to cut back benefits because ..........a law is supposed to give people benefits?
Doesnt make much sense does it?
it goes back to my OG argument over this, this law is a broad generalization to fix a problem for less than 8% of the population. HC was NOT broken in the USA, it just wasnt a priority for most people. There were better ways to improve the system.
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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the people who dont pay their medical bills = 8% of the population who get bills their care doesnt cover or they dont have coverage. Its really a SMALL miniscule problem to the overall HC industry.
No the reason why your premiums rise is because of
Lack of competition
Too much Govt Intervention (mC/MC)
Lack of transparency on actual costs of care.
its partly insurance companies, the other part is consumers dont shop for HC
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
-www.usedbarcode.net
Except aren't those 8% usually the ones with huge medical bills which is why they can't pay. I bet those 8% of people are responsible for much more than 8% of HC billing.
That is also true but that is a separate issue from why the mandate is necessary.
I don't see how the solution makes the tragedy of the commons aspect worse. I think if anything, it fixes that aspect. Now cost is a separate issue and I think Obamacare does address some of the reasons for cost but certainly it doesn't address many others.
Show me a study that that 8% is responsible for the lions share of premiums rising. You wont find it because its not true.
Numbers fluctuate, but any given monthly snapshot shows that 40-50 million adults were without HC. Of taht 40-50 million
were using and passing through the system, to another job.
8-12 million illegal immigrants
People legitimately without coverage
People who choose NOT to have coverage
What it all comes down to is 20-25 million people without coverage. 10% of the total population and under.
Some people are under insured , but thats not what we are talking about.
Of the 50 million people without coverage, Id love to see a study that suggest they are solely responsible for rising premiums. I dont think thats true. The studies I have seen comes down to the BILLING and rates for re-imbursement that directly affect cost.
Enterprise Data Resources- Ecommerce Project Manager
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I was quoting you talking about cost. What reasons does Obamacare address? There is not yet a single shred of proof that a significant number of uninsured healthy people will sign up for coverage over paying the fine. There is a boatload of proof that the previously uninsurable will sign up, this will cause rates to rise for everyone. There is nothing in the bill to force medicare to pay market value for services, forcing rates on private insurance to rise. There are significant increases in mandated coverages, these will cause rates to rise. We already have doctor shortages and its going to get much worse over the next decade. Reduced resources and increased demand will cause rates to rise. Where are the provisions that will cause rates to drop?
You are misunderstanding what I am saying. I am not talking about costs, I am talking about participation. There is a tragedy of the commons problem where some people get medical services but don't pay. Not because the rules say they don't have to pay but because they are circumventing the rules. Everyone was already paying for the medical bill defaulters before, and we still will be after Obamacare. So that doesn't change much. The difference is we are controlling how those cost are passed around and forcing everyone to have some skin in the game (via the mandate), rather than letting each individual decide if they want to pay their bill or not.
But if currently uninsured people pay the fine, that is greater than the 0 dollars they contribute now. The previously uninsurable will raise premiums if those people weren't actually getting medical care before. The problem was that many uninsured people were still getting the care, often through the most expensive avenues like ERs, and just not paying for it. Your statement that demand will rise assumes that people without insurance weren't already demanding care but they were. So the provisions that would lower rates include the use of electronic records and increased access to checkups/preventative medicine which has been shown to decrease costs. Now, keep in mind, I am not saying that in aggregate the rates will go down. They most certainly will continue to go up as they have been for years now. I'm just saying that some provisions will act as a cost lowering force while others will act as a cost raising force.