- Jan 12, 2005
- 9,500
- 6
- 81
Oh, gee, another right-wing, anti-Obamacare talking point determined to be BS.
http://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/reports/2014/rwjf415284
But - just like the Second Coming - I'm sure the right will tell us to wait, wait, wait. Someday, the part-timing of America will happen. You just gotta believe.
http://www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/reports/reports/2014/rwjf415284
Little Evidence of the ACA Increasing Part-Time Work So Far
There has been considerable public policy debate and media attention over the employment effects of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and one of the most contentious issues has been whether the ACA has, or will, increase part-time work at the expense of full-time employment. This brief provides new evidence on the question using the latest available data from the Current Population Survey (CPS).
We find no evidence that the ACA had already started increasing part-time work before 2014. We find a small increase in part-time work in 2014 beyond what would be expected at this point in the economic recovery based on prior experience since 2000. This increase in part-time work is fully attributable to an increase in involuntary part-time work. The increase in involuntary part-time work, however, is not specific to the category of part-time work defined by the ACA (i.e., less than 30 hours per week), but applies to part-time work more broadly (also between 30 and 34 hours per week). Moreover, transitions between full-time and part-time work in 2014 are in line with historic patterns. These findings suggest that the increase in part-time work in 2014 is not ACA related, but more likely due to a slower than normal recovery of full-time jobs following the Great Recession.
.
.
.
The CBO addressed the issue directly by undertaking a systematic analysis of the evidence, announcing in February of this year that: In CBOs judgment, there is no compelling evidence that part-time work has increased as a result of the ACA. The CBO also acknowledged that the current lack of direct evidence may not be very informative about the ultimate effects of the ACA.
Similarly, previous studies have found little evidence of a shift toward part-time work in aggregate data. A study from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco examined CPS data since 1976 and showed that the recent trend in part-time work and its current level are not unusual relative to past experience. The study concluded that the effect of the ACA on part-time work (up to June 2013) had been small and would likely remain small in the future.
But - just like the Second Coming - I'm sure the right will tell us to wait, wait, wait. Someday, the part-timing of America will happen. You just gotta believe.
