Workers Compensation: The Journal of
Workers Compensation: The Journal of
Workers Compensation: The Journal of
of
Workers Compensation
A quarterly review of risk management and cost containment strategies
PREMIUM DISPUTES
WHAT THEY INVOLVE AND THE CASE FOR AN ALTERNATIVE
◆
MARKET SWINGS
PICKING THE RIGHT INSURER UNDER
THE BEST AND WORST OF TIMES
◆
ABSENCE MANAGEMENT
THE RISK MANAGER’S ROLE
◆
INTERNET TECHNOLOGY
WORKERS COMPENSATION JOINS THE BUSINESS BLOG WORLD
COLUMNS
www.spcpub.com
MAKING SENSE OF
WORKERS COMPENSATION
MARKET SWINGS
J. BRUCE COCHRANE
P
ractically every business has cycles, and the workers compensation
market is no exception to this rule. Unfortunately, aside from those
who make their livings in this market, very few “users” are in a
position to identify the workers compensation cycles, to adjust to them,
or, more importantly, to take advantage of the opportunities they afford.
Often, the changes in the cycle are so subtle that even the trained observer
is unprepared. One thing is certain: The workers compensation market
cycle does exist, and significant opportunities await those who can react
to and take advantage of its changes.
3
The Journal of Workers Compensation
the environment, the easier it is to observe and even predict a cycle change
because the swings can be rather abrupt.
A great example of this principle can be seen by studying the events
in the Massachusetts marketplace between 1985 and 2000. The workers
compensation system had not been adjusted since 1913, the year the workers
compensation law was first enacted in the Commonwealth. Profound societal
and technological changes occurring over eight decades finally caught up
with the archaic workers compensation system in the early 1980s. The result
was paralysis. The system was rendered incapable of responding to changes
in the environment. Costs began to escalate wildly, running out of control.
Rates could not keep pace with costs, so they became woefully inadequate,
forcing most insurers out of the market and the majority of employers into
the residual market, also known as the market of last resort.
Workers compensation ratemaking is retrospective in nature, using actual
costs and exposures two and three years in arrears from the dates when
rates are actually promulgated. As market forces soared out of control in
Massachusetts during the 1980s, it became increasingly more impossible for
the ratemaking system to predict the skyrocketing trend in cost escalation.
Between 1986 and 1991, rates more than doubled, yet there remained no
end in sight to this insidious parallel upward spiral of costs and rates. This
condition got so bad that an economic crisis ensued. Major employers ac-
tively investigated the option of leaving Massachusetts and relocating in
states with lower employment costs. Thousands of jobs were at risk.
5
The Journal of Workers Compensation
EXHIBIT 1
AVERAGE CLAIM SIZE — WHY DOES IT CHANGE OVER TIME?
250.00
200.00
Rate Relativity
150.00
100.00
50.00
0
1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
Calendar Years
6
Making Sense of Workers Compensation Market Swings
For this reason, many employers choose their workers compensation insurers
with the purpose of forging long-term relationships to bring consistency
and continuity to the management of their workers compensation risk.
To the employer, market subtleties are generally academic. The shift
from a buyer’s market to a seller’s market remains a mysterious process.
Few understand insurance dynamics thoroughly enough to recognize that a
cheap-pricing feast generally portends a famine. The rapid transition from
being courted to being spurned seems capricious, with insurers entering and
exiting the market via a revolving door. The employer desperately seeks
some predictability in availability, in pricing, and in service.
To minimize market fluctuations and the frustrations and expense of
being buffeted around by market forces, employers need to choose their
workers compensation insurers wisely. Here are some criteria that should
guide selection:
• Stability in the market: Look for insurers who have consistently been a
presence in your market. Insurers who are present even in the tough
times usually have been able to weather the storm due to their ability
to overachieve when rates are low.
• Feet on the ground — local presence: Insurers who outsource vital ser-
vices to third parties tend to lose control of the workers compensa-
tion variables. Likewise, insurers who try to “centralize” key workers
7
The Journal of Workers Compensation
SUMMARY
Workers compensation market cycles provide buyers with a roadmap to
making sound insurer choices. The natural shakeout in insurers following
a decline in rates weeds out the weak players. This is an opportune time to
discern the overachievers among the remaining players; it is these insurers
who are best equipped to help employers manage their workers compensation
risk over the long haul, through up cycles, down cycles, and in between.