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The smallest businesses—those with fewer than 20 employees—created 80% of small business jobs from 1999 to 2004.

Small business Profile

Steven Brier

Steven Brier
Little Dolphin School
Westbrook, ME

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Statistics

Small business and the healthcare crisis

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Small business owners pay more for health benefits than large firms.

The small business economy includes 6 million businesses and 21.7 million self-employed people. Both groups are at a disadvantage in the healthcare marketplace—small firms can't get the same health plan discounts as can large firms. And the self-employed are stuck in the individual insurance market with its higher costs and restrictions on applicants with any history of illness.

The data show that small businesses pay more than large ones:

Small business health insurance premiums have risen 113% over nine years, a growth rate of nearly 9% annually, according to Kaiser Family Foundation surveys.

 

Many uninsured people work for a small employer.

These higher costs make it harder for small firms to provide insurance, which is why the smaller the firm, the less likely it is to provide health insurance.

These trends mean that many of the uninsured are employed but work for small companies that don't offer coverage:

 

The economy relies on small businesses' vibrancy.