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Drop in California's Cash Spending Lowers U.S. Workers' Compensation Benefit Spending in 2006

Posted : Tue, 26 Aug 2008 12:04:12 GMT
Author : National Academy of Social Insurance
Category : Press Release
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WASHINGTON, Aug. 26 NASI-workers-comp
WASHINGTON, Aug. 26 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- U.S. workers' compensation payments for medical care and cash benefits for workers disabled by workplace injuries or diseases declined in 2006, according to a study released today (http://www.nasi.org/publications2763/publications_show.htm?doc_id=702308) by the National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI). The drop in payments in 2006 (the most recent year with complete data) reflects large declines in California payments for workers' compensation cash benefits as reforms enacted in 2003 and 2004 took effect.

Nationally, workers' compensation payments for injured workers fell by 1.5 percent to $54.7 billion in 2006. The payments include $26.5 billion to providers of medical care and $28.2 billion in cash wage replacement benefits for injured workers.

California payments fell by 7.2 percent, due mainly to a 13.4 percent drop in payments for cash benefits. California medical spending changed little in 2006, after recording a 16.0 percent drop in 2005. "The reduced spending for cash benefits in 2006 and for both medical care and cash benefits in 2005 reflect the cost containment measures that were put in place in 2003 and 2004 reforms to the California workers' compensation system," according to NASI member Christine Baker, who directs the California Commission on Health and Safety and Workers' Compensation, a nonpartisan labor-management group that advises state policymakers. For more on the California reforms see NASI Brief, Workers' Compensation in California and in the Nation: Benefit and Employer Cost Trends, 1989-2005 (http://www.nasi.org/publications2763/publications_show.htm?doc_id=691524).

Because it is a large state -- accounting for 18.6 percent of national benefit payments in 2006 -- California altered national trends. Outside California, total workers' compensation payments were almost unchanged in 2006 ($44.5) compared to the prior year ($44.6).

The costs to employers for workers' compensation are what they pay each year. For employers who buy insurance, costs are premiums they pay to insurance companies plus benefits they pay under deductible arrangements in their insurance policies. For employers who insure their own workers, costs are the benefits they pay plus administrative costs. In 2006, employers paid a total of $87.6 billion nationwide for workers' compensation. A sharp drop in California employers' costs (of 16.6 percent) led to a small drop for the nation (1.5 percent). Outside California, employer costs for workers' compensation rose by 3.0 percent.

The new report tracks trends since 1989 in workers' compensation benefits and employer costs relative to total wages of workers covered by the program. Relative to wages, total payments for cash and medical care were the lowest in 18 years ($0.99 per $100 of wages). Employer costs also declined relative to wages in 2006 -- to $1.58 per 100 of covered wages.

Strong wage growth in 2006 helped account for the decline in benefits and costs as a share of wages. Covered wage growth was 6.3 percent in 2006, the highest since 2000.

The new report compares the trend in workers' compensation cash benefits and Social Security disability insurance benefits, each as a share of payrolls covered by each program. Trends in the two programs have moved in opposite directions since 1980. When workers' compensation cash payments rose in the 1980s, Social Security disability benefits declined as a share of payroll. After 1990, workers' compensation cash payments to workers declined and Social Security disability insurance payments rose as a share of payroll. According to John F. Burton, Jr., chair of the panel that oversees the study, "The difference in the trends in workers' compensation and Social Security disability insurance payments suggest that retrenchment in one program may cause injured workers to turn to the other program for benefits to replace their lost wages.

The new report, Workers' Compensation: Benefits, Coverage and Costs, 2006, is the eleventh in a NASI series that provides the only comprehensive national data covering all types of employers. The study provides estimates of workers' compensation cash and medical payments for each state, the District of Colombia, and federal programs.

   Workers' Compensation Spending, 2006

Type of spending Billions Percent
ofchange
  dollars

   United States
Total benefits paid   $54.7-1.5
   Medical payments26.5 0.7
   Cash benefits   28.2-3.5
Employer costs 87.6-1.5

California
Total benefits paid   $10.1-7.2
   Medical payments 5.1-0.1
   Cash benefits5.0   -13.4
Employer costs 17.0   -16.6

  United States outside California
Total benefits paid   $44.5-0.1
Medical payments   21.4 1.0
Cash benefits  23.2-1.0
Employer costs 70.5 3.0

Source: National Academy of Social Insurance, 2008.

The National Academy of Social Insurance is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization made up of the nation's leading experts on social insurance. Its mission is to promote understanding of how social insurance contributes to economic security and a vibrant economy.

CONTACT:
Jill Braunstein
(202) 452-8097 or jillbraun@nasi.org

NATIONAL EXPERTS TO CONTACT:

Ishita Sengupta
National Academy of Social Insurance
(202) 452-8097
isengupta@nasi.org


Virginia Reno
National Academy of Social
Insurance
(202) 452-8097
vreno@nasi.org

CALIFORNIA EXPERTS TO CONTACT:

Christine Baker
California Commission on Health and Safety and Workers' Compensation
(510) 622-3964
cbaker@dir.ca.gov

Tom Rankin
(labor view)
Worksafe
(510) 499-8284
trankin@worksafe-cosh.org

Scott Hauge
(business view)
Small Business California
(415) 680-2188
shauge@cal-insure.com





SOURCE National Academy of Social Insurance

Copyright © 2008 PR Newswire. All rights reserved.




Article : Drop in California's Cash Spending Lowers U.S. Workers' Compensation Benefit Spending in 2006
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