Over the past year, California businesspeople have grown
increasingly infuriated over a variety of perceived economic
problems. High taxes. Politicians' indifference to corporate
issues. Deteriorating physical infrastructure. Ultimately, this
anger became so strong that it partially led to the termination of
Gov. Gray Davis and the installation of Governator Arnold
Schwarzenegger.
But despite companies' myriad complaints about the Golden
State, when Scott Hauge, president of CAL Insurance &
Associates Inc., a San Francisco insurance firm targeting the
small-business market, did a survey of roughly 1,200 Californian
entrepreneurs earlier this year, he found their biggest problem
wasn't taxes or roads-it was the skyrocketing cost of
workers' compensation. Workers' comp premiums in California
rose by more than 100 percent in the past two years alone, and
insurers paid out nearly $20 billion in comp claims in California
last year. "It's the number-one issue [for small
companies]," Hauge says.
California is a bellwether for the nation. In many states,
workers' comp premiums have soared in recent years. These costs
fall hardest on entrepreneurs, who have limited resources and often
don't have many insurance options. In some places, workers'
comp has become so expensive that it's putting small companies
out of business or prompting them to skirt the law. Others are
fighting back, trying to keep workers' comp costs down or
fighting for reform.
Content Continues Below
It Begins
Workers' compensation, a program begun in the early 1900s that
forced employers to give health insurance and cash benefits to
employees hurt on the job, has always been a significant expense
for entrepreneurs-particularly those in manufacturing, where
serious injuries are more common. According to the National Academy
of Social Insurance, a research organization, workers' comp is
the third-largest source of support for injured workers, surpassed
only by Medicare and Social Security.
| Online Exclusive |
| For a link to the workers'
compensation office in your state, click here. |
But over the past five years, workers' comp has become an
even bigger expense. Jack Hannan of the Workers'
Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau of California, a
nonpartisan research agency in San Francisco, says that before
recent legislative reforms in Sacramento, workers' comp
insurance premiums in California were likely to rise by about
another 12 percent in 2004. In Florida, workers' compensation
premiums rose by nearly 14 percent annually as of April 2003; while
in Missouri, premiums rose by about 15 percent annually. The
Insurance Information Institute, a research organization, estimates
the average cost of workers' comp nationwide has increased by
50 percent since 2000. "Rates are stratospheric," says
Richard Millman, 52, president of Millman Lumber, a 100-employee
lumber wholesaler in St. Louis.
Worse, in industries with higher accident rates, workers'
comp can become almost a second payroll. Michael Hamman, 56, a general
contractor in San Francisco with three employees, pays 54 cents in
workers' comp premiums for every salary dollar his carpenters
earn. "For roofers, you pay 99 cents," he says.
"I'm going broke."
A storm of factors is pushing workers' comp premiums through
the roof. "The driver of workers' comp is health-care
costs," says William S. Custer, an expert on workers'
compensation at Georgia State University in Atlanta. As health-care
costs have gone up, workers' comp costs have risen, he says.
And in the '90s, states like California and Missouri
deregulated the workers' comp market, allowing private insurers
to set their own rates. Competition for workers' comp business
became fierce. To win market share, many insurance companies tried
to undercut their rivals; several went out of business. With fewer
companies in the market, there is now less competition, higher
rates and less monitoring of workers' comp fraud. Fraud drives
premiums up because insurers have to increase their cost reserves
to cover potential fraud. In fact, in California, the number of
fraud cases prosecuted by district attorneys fell by more than 30
percent between 1999 and 2000, and again in 2001 and 2002.
Meanwhile, increased litigation has also impacted workers'
comp costs. Over the past decade, many states have loosened rules
on where lawyers can advertise. As a result, experts say, lawyers
can easily target people hurt on the job and take claims to court
rather than settling them out of court with the employer and
insurer, which is what workers' comp originally intended. These
are only a few of the factors creating a crisis in workers'
comp.
Page 1 |
2 |
3