So your argument is that businesses in America were being run extremely inefficiently, and the ACA alerted them to this. Uhmm, okay.
That's your argument, if you'd like to argue against it then be my guest.
Additionally, the average hours worked per week has actually gone up slightly, while average hours worked per week in the service industry (which should be most heavily affected by the ACA employer mandate), remain the same. Can you explain how this relates to your theory?
They're cutting people, the people that remain work more hours.
Except you posted wrong facts and then when confronted with this declared the reality irrelevant.
I didn't declare reality irrelevant, I said businesses reacted and they're probably not going to go back just because the administration punted. There's a mandate to have rear view cameras in all new cars in 2018, after they CAD the cars up and put in orders for wire harnesses and components do you suppose they're going to give consumers a bye if the administration decides to make it 2019 instead?
Of course not.
Can you see why the credibility of your analysis on a particular policy might be called into question when you literally didn't know that it didn't exist yet?
It does exist, they chose not to implement it. At this point you're the one ignoring reality and making stuff up.
Most polling on small businesses does not show regulatory uncertainty as their reason for not hiring, they usually say that insufficient demand is the reason.
Is that right?
What about
this survey from the US Chamber of Commerce?
Key Summary Points
I. Uncertainty Continues to be the Biggest Challenge for Small Businesses
...
What is the impact of regulation and the new health care law? Fewer jobs. 78% of small businesses surveyed report the taxation, regulation and legislation from Washington make it harder for their business to hire more employees. And, 74% say the recent health care law makes it harder for their business to hire more employees.
"But that was 2011!"
What about this
survey from the US Chamber of Commerce?
Key Findings
Health Care Law is Top Concern
- Concern about Obamacare has increased by 10-points since June 2011 and by 4 points since last quarter.
- 71% of small businesses say the health care law makes it harder to hire.
Here's some inspiring news, though, a
survey by CBIZ payroll services (whoever they are).
In the nationwide survey of 3,500 businesses with 300 or fewer employees, 26 percent said they were adding to their payrolls in March, while 20 percent were cutting
...
Overall, hiring in this group was up about 1 percent over the previous month--the first hiring increase of 2014.
...
Noftsinger reads the fairly typical increase last month as a sign that anxiety about
Obamacare is dissipating--at least for now.
...
"They keep pushing it off. Businesses that resisted hiring during late 2013 because of pending implementation, now see so much delay, and can't wait any longer to respond to increasing demand."
Remember, that's the anxiety you said didn't exist.
"But these sources are all not agreeing with me, it must be because they're wrong!"
Here's
media matters' explanation:
according to a majority of economists in a new Wall Street Journal survey.
...
In the survey, conducted July 8-13 and released Monday, 53 economists -- not all of whom answer every question -- were asked the main reason employers aren't hiring more readily. Of the 51 who responded to the question, 31 cited lack of demand (65%) and 14 (27%) cited uncertainty about government policy.
Wow. Much sample. Many business. Wow.
...and uncertainty was still number 2. Let's keep going and see what else shakes out.
Economist Bruce Bartlett: "It's The Aggregate Demand, Stupid."
The New York Time's new Paul Krugman is a Keynesian, who'd have thought! Of course it's the spending, it always is. Or maybe it isn't...
'Financialization' as a Cause of Economic Malaise
By Bruce Bartlett
Moreover, rising fees paid by nonfinancial corporations to financial markets have reduced internal funds available for investment, shortened their planning horizon and increased uncertainty.
Granted, this isn't regulatory uncertainty so much as letting the banks have their run of the place to ruinous effect. At least he recognizes that the real economy is impacted by uncertainty. Maybe the lack of "aggregate demand" has something to do with the financial sector rentseeking.
But wait, there's more!
National Bureau of Economic Research:
Our estimates suggest that the decline in aggregate demand driven by household balance sheet shocks accounts for almost 4 million of the lost jobs from 2007 to 2009
Now, I accept that Media Matters wrote this article in June of 2012, so obviously they wouldn't have more recent data, but look what I found:
Really Uncertain Business Cycles
NBER Working Paper No. 18245
We find that reasonably calibrated uncertainty shocks can explain drops and rebounds in GDP of around 3%. Moreover, we show that increased uncertainty alters the relative impact of government policies, making them initially less effective and then subsequently more effective.
I sure hope they're right about that effectiveness.
Link to the paper at Stanford.
The non-convexities together with time variation in uncertainty imply that firms become more cautions in investing and hiring when uncertainty increases.
...
Increased uncertainty makes it optimal for firms to wait, leading to significant falls in hiring, investment and output.
I feel as though I've made my case, I bookmarked more that I didn't care to transcribe. I'm eager to see the data that you base your opinions on.