State of Workers Comp in California Part 1 of 3:
CALIFORNIA WORKERS COMPENSATION GROUP
The workers' compensation market has entered an increasingly tumultuous period marked by pricing pressure and a general hardening of rates. Liberty Mutual, the nation's biggest workers' compensation insurer, stated in its annual report that profits from all of its domestic insurance businesses were down 40%. Liberty Mutual lost money for the second year in a row in workers' compensation. In addition, according to President Edmund Kelly, the company looks for no more than a break-even year in 1999. The workers? compensation insurance business has not heard that the underwriting cycles in the property and casualty insurance business are a thing of the past. In the 1980s, a number of companies abandoned the workers? compensation market because they were losing so much money. After many states, including California, passed major workers' compensation reform laws in the early 1990s, conditions and profits improved. The return to profitability attracted new competitors. In addition, the old players cut prices in order to gain market share. This set off a rate war that is still being waged. There were too many companies writing business and a lot of them were losing money. Some of the new players didn't really understand the workers' compensation business and may not have fully appreciated how badly they were doing. And, a lot of those are gone now. And so, the rate war waged on and workers' compensation went into another down cycle. At this same time, there was a rapid upsurge in the economy. According to a CIGNA study, this is a bad thing for workers' compensation. CIGNA undertook its study so that its risk managers could recognize how changes in the labor market affect work-related injuries. Researchers examined the interaction of 22 economic variables and said that they found eight of them that combined to produce a statistical model that could explain 84% of the variation in the work-related lost workday injury and illness incidence rate. According to the CIGNA model, when there are rapid increases in the number of people employed, the work-related injury and illness incidence rate increases. For example, a 1% increase in the number of employed workers contributes to a 4.1 % increase in the lost workday incidence rate. Conversely, the study found that in a downturn of the economy, when there are layoffs or cutbacks, the employees who remain are often the most experienced, most qualified, best trained and, therefore, the least likely to have work-related injuries and illnesses. Among some of the other findings was the fact that a 1% increase in average hours worked creates job-related fatigue and stress and results in a 3.4 % increase in the lost time incidence rate. The Workers' Compensation Research Institute did a Massachusetts study and they found similar results for an overheated job market. Executive Director Richard Victor said: "We know that those on the job less than a year have a higher propensity for injury," adding that tighter labor markets make employers more willing to hire less experienced workers. The workers? compensation business is under pressure because of highly competitive conditions in the California market and difficult pricing in the rest of the U.S. Also fueling competition is the inadequately priced reinsurance that is available on this business. The health of the business is also deteriorating due to an increase in medical cost inflation, a slower growing economy, and the aging of the workforce. NCCI STATES The National Council of Compensation Insurers governs workers' compensation insurance rates, forms, regulations, and statistical reporting, in almost all states except California. NCCI states are predominately a no-fault system with a few states offering employers the right to option-out of the no-fault system. A few of the states operate under a minimum rate basis. However, an increasing number of states offer either a suggested loss cost in an open rated environment, a deviation from a mandated loss cost, a minimum rate with schedule rating or some combination of a deviated and schedule rating plan. There is no cost limitation established for most benefits, however each state establishes payment thresholds for indemnity reimbursement and medical procedures. CALIFORNIA The workers' compensation laws in effect in California differ from those of the NCCI states. In California, rates and statistical reporting are governed by the Workers' Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau, and forms and regulations are governed by the California Department of Labor Division of Workers' Compensation. OTHER STATES Some states have monopolistic workers' compensation insurance funds administered by the state governments. THE CALIFORNIA MARKETPLACE The California workers' compensation market is commodity-oriented, highly fragmented, and reflective of intense price competition. Nevertheless, because each risk is unique in terms of insurance exposure, different insurers can develop widely divergent estimates of prospective losses. Most insurers attempt to segment classes within markets so that they target the more profitable sub-classes with lower, although adequate, rates given the estimated profitability of the segment. In some cases, no statistics are available for the sub-classes involved, and the insurer implements discounted rate structures based solely on theoretical judgment. Finally, different insurers have widely divergent internal expense positions, due to distribution methods, economies of scale, and efficiency of operations. Therefore, although workers' compensation insurance is a commodity, the price of insurance does not necessarily reflect commodity pricing. California is the country's largest workers' compensation insurance market, with total direct written premium of $5.2 billion in 1997. The California market is composed of: the State Fund, companies that write workers' compensation insurance in California but have significant writings in other lines of business and/or in other states, and
private sector companies that write exclusively workers' compensation insurance specifically focused in California. The State Fund is obligated to write workers' compensation insurance for any applicant, including those turned down by the private sector carriers. It is the largest underwriter of workers' compensation insurance in California, accounting for approximately 19.8% of the direct written premium in California in 1997. Because the State Fund must accept all risks, its combined ratios have historically been much higher than those of the private sector carriers. Despite these results, the State Fund has consistently achieved profitability through the investment income earned on its large invested asset portfolio. As of December 31, 1998, the State Fund had invested assets of $7.2 billion and statutory capital and surplus of $1.6 billion. CALIFORNIA PRICING Prior to January 1, 1995, the California Department of Insurance set minimum premium rates for workers' compensation insurance to provide a stable environment for the pricing of such insurance. On January 1, 1995, the State of California formally converted to a system of "open rating" for workers' compensation insurance written within the state. Insurance companies now file and use their own actuarially defensible rates. Following the introduction of open rating, total direct written premium in the California market decreased from $9.0 billion in 1993 to $5.2 billion in 1997 as many carriers engaged in price competition. Under California's "open rating" rate regulation system, the DOI sets "pure premium" (effectively, the estimated claim and allocated claim adjustment expense) rates for each employment classification. Insurance companies then apply their own "multipliers" to the pure premium rate to adjust for that company's anticipated unallocated claim adjustment and underwriting expenses. These rates are then subject to further adjustment for each policyholder to account for the policyholder's historical loss experience, the presence of stricter safety programs, dividend and commission plans, and other factors. In practice, however, workers' compensation insurance companies in California are not subject to meaningful rate regulation. In California, where the landscape is dominated by companies offering only workers? compensation (including the state?s quasi-competitive fund) tough conditions persist following a wave of deregulation, which featured the repeal of the minimum rate law. Somewhat of a free-for-all followed, with smaller companies slashing rates by as much as 50% to gain market share. Overall premium growth has been low now for about four years, and it was negative for 1998. The price pressures produce large increases in loss ratios for some companies. The resulting declining operating earnings came in at a dramatic minus 12% in 1998. The California Workers' Compensation return on equity for 1998 came in at an anemic 7%. Its stock prices fell off, and the falloff has accelerated in the early part of 1999. The stocks now trade at very low levels. |