Race, Ethnicity and Health Coverage During the Recession
EBRI Fast Facts May 12, 2011 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts May 12, 2011 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts May 5, 2011 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts April 27, 2011 1 pages
In yet another measure of damage from the recent economic recession, new data from EBRI show that 2009 marked both the sharpest one-year decline in employment-based health coverage for working-age Americans, and also the first time in recent history that less than 60 percent of individuals under age 65 had health benefits through their job. EBRI Issue Brief Apr 27, 2011 20 pages
Health Benefits: The future of employment-based health programs in the wake of the 2010 November election and the enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) was just one of the topics addressed by human resource and health policy experts at EBRI’s 67th Fall policy forum last December.
Future Eligibility in DC Plans: New research from the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) shows that being eligible to participate in a defined contribution retirement plan at work is a key factor in whether workers will have enough money to afford basic expenses and cover uninsured medical care in retirement.
EBRI Notes Apr 21, 2011 20 pagesEBRI Fast Facts April 4, 2011 1 pages
EBRI Fast Facts March 30, 2011 1 pages
EBRI Testimony March 30, 2011 10 pages
Retirement Plan Tax Treatment: New research by EBRI finds that lower-income workers are more likely than upper-income workers to say they would reduce their savings if the tax exclusion for employee contributions to retirement savings plans was lowered or eliminated.
Account-based Health Plans: Contributions from employers to workers’ account-based health plans declined for the second year in a row in 2010, according to new findings by EBRI. However, workers with employee-only coverage responded to the decrease from employers by increasing their own personal contributions; workers with family coverage did not increase their contributions.
EBRI Notes Mar 24, 2011 20 pagesEBRI Fast Facts March 21, 2011 1 pages
In a sign that Americans are recognizing the realities they face about their chances for a comfortable retirement, the 2011 Retirement Confidence Survey (RCS) finds workers are more pessimistic than at any time in the two decades the RCS has been conducted: More than a quarter (27 percent) of workers now say they are “not at all confident” about retirement, up 5 percentage points from the level measured just one year ago. Reinforcing that trend, the percentage of workers saying they are “very confident” of a comfortable retirement ties with 2009 at 13 percent—the lowest rate ever measured by the RCS. EBRI Issue Brief Mar 15, 2011 40 pages
EBRI Fast Facts March 8, 2011 1 pages
Women, younger individuals, and individuals who experienced an increase in either premiums or cost sharing are more likely to seek information on health care costs, quality, and access in order to make informed decisions, according to new findings by EBRI. Additionally, people with a higher level of education are also more likely than those with less education to research information. Press release Labor Force Participation: Elderly workers increasingly are participating in the labor force. Press Release EBRI Notes Feb 15, 2011 20 pages
EBRI Fast Facts Feb 10, 2011 1 pages
Depending largely on age and income, between 4–14 percent of Americans who otherwise would have had adequate income to cover basic expenses in retirement became “at risk” of running short because of the housing and financial crisis of 2008–2009, according to a new report by EBRI. EBRI Issue Brief Feb 1, 2011 28 pages