I'm not that fixated on profit - cash flow is what really matters. If your cash flow is negative for long enough, you're out of business. A company that is profitable can go out of business because the profits aren't pocketed, but required to be invested in plant equipment, real estate, or some other capitalizable expense.
I don't see employees as purely drains on profit. But I do know that work expands to fill all time available, and that an employee's work does not necessarily cover his fully loaded costs.
Most businesses do not just grow and grow and grow. Like the tire shop up the road from where I live. There's only so much demand for tires in a given pay period. They only have 3 or 4 of those garages in the back of the building to actually work on cars. It wouldn't make sense to hire more than 5 or 6 mechanics. There's not a whole lot of need of management and sales beyond a certain point that sustains the business at near full capacity.
When ObamaCare kicks in and that tire shop is facing a negative cash flow situation, they are going to let someone go. At least one person.
The real question is the tire shop better off with ObamaCare or is it better off with the additional employee(s).
Got to give you some imaginary rep for that answer, Denny. Clear, concise, on topic.
Ok, so I assume the tire shop doesn't currently provide the employees with healthcare, and will have to under Obamacare. Doing so would certainly increase their costs and negatively impact their cash flow, as you say. Maybe they would lay someone off in response if the business is marginal already. So that guy is unemployed now. Bad outcome.
However... demand for tires hasn't gone down. Assuming this guy wasn't a slacker, laying him off reduced the number of tires that shop can sell. But it hasn't reduced the overall demand for tires. The customers that that shop now loses are going to go buy tires somewhere else. Maybe there is another shop further up the road that gets that extra business and hires that laid-off tire worker to handle the additional load. Now our guy had to change employers, but he has health insurance.
Alternatively, the first shop might realize that most tire shops are in the same situation they are in, and everyone's expenses are going up a bit, so maybe tire prices need to go up a bit to cover. So they raise prices on tires incrementally, and keep the guy in his current job, but now with healthcare. Maybe his productivity even goes up, maybe he is healthier and misses work less often.
Another possibility is that the other tire shops aren't in the same position - they are already providing healthcare to their employees. Perhaps they are just better run companies and this marginal tire shop is simply being crushed by the forces of capitalism. Someone who was in favor of liquidating GM shouldn't take the position that a four man tire shop absolutely must be saved.
Truth is, the cost of Obamacare isn't going to cause layoffs at most businesses. Most will absorb the cost, or pass it on to their customers, or the cost will be negligible (as it is for my business, which already provides healthcare that exceeds the minimum standards). Of course there are businesses teetering on the brink which will be pushed over the edge by this, just as some will be pushed over the edge by a slight rise in fuel costs or a small decline in holiday sales or a Wal-Mart opening nearby, or whatever. And I suppose there are a few businesses like maxiep's that will lay people off due to owner temper tantrums.
barfo