Business Roundtable Expresses Strong Concerns About House Bill

* Reuters is not responsible for the content in this press release.

Thu Oct 29, 2009 12:17pm EDT

WASHINGTON--(Business Wire)--
"While we cannot support the version of the House health care reform bill that
Speaker Pelosi has brought to the floor, we`re still committed to working with
Congress and President Obama to create health care reform that will protect the
coverage American workers and their families enjoy today, while reducing costs
and significantly improving the delivery of medical care. 

"Our primary concern with the House bill is the inclusion of a public option,
which will simply shift - rather than reduce - costs and will stifle the
innovation that we need to continue improving our health care system. Instead of
a public option, we believe that there can be greater competition by expanding
the marketplace and getting more private plans to compete with new insurance
market rules. 

"We are also concerned about the employer mandate included in the bill. This
mandate limits employer flexibility, eroding ERISA. We must preserve ERISA,
which is the foundation for our employer based system that insures 177 million
Americans. 

"As we pursue reform, we should not undermine the valuable coverage that the
majority of Americans have. The public option and employer mandate in the House
bill would do just that. We remain committed to working with Congress and the
White House to get health care reform that expands access to coverage for all
Americans and achieves real and permanent cost cuts in the system," said John J.
Castellani, President of Business Roundtable. 

Business Roundtable is an association of chief executive officers of leading
U.S. companies with nearly $6 trillion in annual revenues and more than 12
million employees. Member companies comprise nearly a third of the total value
of the U.S. stock markets and pay more than 60 percent of all corporate income
taxes paid to the federal government. Annually, they return more than $167
billion in dividends to shareholders and the economy.

Business Roundtable companies give more than $7 billion a year in combined
charitable contributions, representing nearly 60 percent of total corporate
giving. They are technology innovation leaders, with more than $111 billion in
annual research and development spending - nearly half of all total private R&D
spending in the U.S.

Business Roundtable companies provide health care coverage to more than 35
million employees, retirees and their families.

Please visit us at www.businessroundtable.org, check us out on Facebook and
LinkedIn, and follow us on Twitter.

Business Roundtable
Kirk Monroe, 202-496-3269 



Copyright Business Wire 2009

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.