Title: Using Pricing to Motivate Workplace Safety
1Using Pricing to Motivate Workplace Safety
- International Forum on Disability Management
- October 2006
- Presenter Gregory Krohm
- IAIABC
- Research in collaboration with
- Mike Barth,
- Georgia Southern University
- Bob Klein,
- Georgia State University
2Overview
- Experience rating responds to philosophical and
practical values - The effectiveness of experience rating has been
in dispute - New statistical evidence shows that it works to
reduce claims! - But is the reduction in claims due to
- Claims management?
- Making work safer?
3Does it All Boil Down to Economics?
- Economic theory says
- Firms would be expected to invest in
safety up to point where marginal cost of safety
investment marginal benefits of safety - But are employers
- able to self assess their safety practices and
- do they rationally react to economic
incentives????
4Rate Making Generally
- Workers compensation has one of the most complex
and data intensive systems of rate making in any
insurance system - Particularly in Australia, USA and countries that
use private insurance systems - Public and private insurers track losses and
premiums for each covered employer - Ultimate incurred losses are very difficult to
estimate for rate making because it takes so long
for the ultimate costs of some claims to be known
- Rate making systems are very data/computer/reporti
ng intensive - Hence, they are not suitable for developing
countries or countries starting radical new forms
of insurance
5Theory of Experience Rating
- Class rates are imperfect measures of loss
expectations of an individual employer - An employers own loss experience should be used
to modify class rates - The weight given to an employers own experience
should be driven by statistical credibility - Only 5-25 of all employers are good candidates
for experience rating
6Methods and Basis for the Formula
- Worldwide, experience formulas are VERY diverse
in structure - The actuarial foundation is quite sophisticated
in the USA - A uniform model (based on National Council on
Compensation Insurance) is used in most states - A primary goal is to levelize loss ratios after
the application of experience rating - Not necessarily to induce safety
7Is the Actuarial Goal Met?
- In the USA, the modification factors do a
surprisingly good job of leveling out LR costs to
insurers across employers in the same industry - Before the application of the mod all employers
in the same class pay the same rate - After the mod, premiums produce a loss ratio
similar for all employers
8Do Employers Understand Experience Rating?
- Agents take pains to sell their expertise in
helping clients manage their X-mod - The most popular risk management software has
built in reports to help manage the mod factor - Industry oriented articles try to educate
employers about the importance of mod factors - The mod has become a common litmus test for the
quality/reliability of a potential subcontractor - Mods above 1 can disqualify firms from working
for a general contractor
9Popular Risk Management Software Allows Employers
to Track and Manage Mods
10How Do Savvy Employers Manage Their Mods?
- Positive Methods
- Identify sources of claims and engage in loss
control - Minimize lost time to WC by voluntarily paying
wage for time away from work - Using in-house medical treatment to minimize
- outside, reportable treatment, and
- Worsening of medical problems (infection,
swelling, etc)
- Artificial/Unhelpful Methods
- Summary denial of claim made by employee
- Non-reporting of recognized WC claims to
insurer/jurisdiction - Appealing claims to jurisdiction (legal contests)
- Inducing employee to file with non-WC payer
- Safety incentives that incent employees to not
file claims
11Good Example of Two Methods of Managing Claims
Source Camping Magazine, May 1994, Ed Schirick
12Research on Effectiveness of Experience Rates
- Empirical research findings consistent with
experience rating link to safety/claims but
relationship indirectly measured. - Distribution of Firm Characteristics (e.g., size)
claims experience trends. - Ruser (1985), Worrall Butler (1988)
- Regulation and Claims Experience
- Danzon Harrington (2001), Barkume Ruser (2001)
- Event Studies
- Employer opinion surveys
13Previous Statistical Research
- The outstanding defect of previous statistical
research is that it did not measure experience
rating with the actual experience of individual
employers - They used coarse approximations
- Losses for very dissimilar employers
- Capturing experience rating solely through
employer size - Nor did they consider the dynamics of how
employers react to changes in their mod factors
14New Findings
- We obtained individual experience data from the
rating bureaus in MN, PA, WI and a similar set
for CA - We estimated the individual employer reactions to
changes in their mod factors - Estimates were made with an improved statistical
technique - The model accounted for size of employer and
inherent riskiness of each industry class/group
15Econometric ResultsGood Theoretically and
Statistically
The only parameter less .99 confidence interval
16Statistical Interpretation
- As an employer grows in employment size, claims
grow more slowly than employment - Very large employers have fewer claims than
others - The mod factor itself is positively related to
average claim rate - Mod goes up, then average claims go up
- The change in mod is negatively related to
average claim rate - Mod goes from 1.5 to 2, then claims go down
- NOTE these are AVERAGE responses, not true for
every employer - Think of them as the odds of something happening,
all other things being equal
17Common Sense Explanation
- The change in premium gets the employers
attention more than a bill with the same premium
level - Looking at a changed bill, the employer will
discover any large change in the mod factor and
begin the process of asking why? - The discovery process will sort out fluke changes
(salesmans car was rear ended) from systematic
changes in safety practices (hiring a lot of new
workers) - Employer will either
- game the claims reporting
- ask how claims can be made lower
18Summary
- Class rates dont affect safety, only individual
experience rating matters - Econometric analysis strongly indicates that a
behavioral response from changes in mod factors - The change may be to game the system or to
improve safety - Larger employers seemed to understand X-Mods
- They have the knowledge and resources to respond
- Small employers have much less incentive and
ability to respond to X-Mods
19Thank You
- If you have questions, please contact me at
- gkrohm_at_iaiabc.org
- This presentation can be downloaded from the
IAIABC website - www.iaiabc.org then go to Library