Disability Insurance Plans: Trends in Employee Access and Employer Costs

Similar documents
Selected Characteristics of Savings and Thrift Plans for Private Industry Workers

Restaurants Help Feed Job Growth: How the Leisure and Hospitality Industry Fared After the Recent Employment Downturn

People Who Are Not in the Labor Force: Why Aren't They Working?

High-Income Household Spending And The Economic Recovery

What the Consumer Expenditure Survey Tells us about Mortgage Instruments Before and After the Housing Collapse

Household Healthcare Spending in 2014

A Profile of the Working Poor, 2011

BLS Spotlight on Statistics: International Labor Comparisons

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook

Early Identification of Short-Term Disability Claimants Who Exhaust Their Benefits and Transfer to Long-Term Disability Insurance

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook

Gender Pay Differences: Progress Made, but Women Remain Overrepresented Among Low- Wage Workers

Federal Employees: Pay and Pension Increases Since 1969

Federal Employees: Pension COLAs and Pay Adjustments Since 1969

BLS Spotlight on Statistics: BLS 125th Anniversary

Women in the Labor Force: A Databook

BLS Spotlight on Statistics: Self-Employment in the United States

A Profile of the Working Poor, 2000

A Profile of the Working Poor, 2001

The Taxation of Capital and Labor Through the Self-Employment Tax: Supplementary Data

The Economic Effects of Canceling Scheduled Changes to Overtime Regulations

Unemployment Insurance Provisions in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009

Federal Employees: Pay and Pension Increases Since 1969

Income of the Aged Chartbook, 2002

Pension Insurance Data Book 2007

Women and the Economy 2010: 25 Years of Progress But Challenges Remain

Health Savings Accounts: Participation Increased and Was More Common among Individuals with Higher Incomes

Restructuring Social Security: How Will Retirement Ages Respond?

Social Security: What Would Happen If the Trust Funds Ran Out?

Losing a Job During a Recession

Income of the Aged Chartbook, 2004

Outsourcing and Insourcing Jobs in the U.S. Economy: An Overview of Evidence Based on Foreign Investment Data

Economic Growth and the Unemployment Rate

Women in Management: Analysis of Female Managers' Representation, Characteristics, and Pay

Pension Insurance Data Book 2001

Unemployment Insurance: Consequences of Changes in State Unemployment Compensation Laws

Productivity and Wages

Pension Sponsorship and Participation: Summary of Recent Trends

Older Workers: Employment and Retirement Trends

A Profile of the Working Poor, 2009

Older Workers: Employment and Retirement Trends

Retirement Benefits for Members of Congress

Federal Minimum Wage, Tax-Transfer Earnings Supplements, and Poverty, 2016 Update: In Brief

David R. Mann and David C. Stapleton

Consumer Price Index Data Quality: How Accurate is the U.S. CPI?

Chartbook of International Labor Comparisons: The Americas, Asia/Pacific, Europe

Distribution of Household Wealth in the U.S.: 2000 to 2011

A Chartbook of International Labor Comparisons

Taxation of Unemployment Benefits

EMPLOYMENT AND EARNINGS

Strengthening Unemployment Insurance

Pension Sponsorship and Participation: Summary of Recent Trends

9DISABILITY INCOME AND LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE

Health Insurance Continuation Coverage Under COBRA

Columbia University. Department of Economics Discussion Paper Series

New Jersey Public-Private Sector Wage Differentials: 1970 to William M. Rodgers III. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development

Foreign Direct Investment in the United States: An Economic Analysis

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues

Unemployment and Economic Recovery

Understanding Disability Insurance. Unum Government Affairs

System Report, Minnesota Workers' Compensation. labor & industry. minnesota department of. Policy Development, Research and Statistics

A Chartbook of International Labor Comparisons: The Americas, Asia-Pacific, Europe (June 2007)

Worker Participation in Employer-Sponsored Pensions: A Fact Sheet

GAO LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE. Federal Program Has a Unique Profit Structure and Faced a Significant Marketing Challenge

Unemployment and Inflation. 1 of of 29

Health Insurance Exchanges: Health Insurance Navigators and In-Person Assistance

Pension Insurance Data Book 2006

BACKGROUNDER. Social Security s Disability Insurance (SSDI) program has existed. Improving Social Security Disability Insurance with a Flat Benefit

System Report, Minnesota Workers' Compensation. labor & industry. minnesota department of. Policy Development, Research and Statistics

Unions and Upward Mobility for Women Workers

Constructing the Reason-for-Nonparticipation Variable Using the Monthly CPS

HOW DOES 401(K) AUTO-ENROLLMENT RELATE TO THE EMPLOYER MATCH AND TOTAL COMPENSATION?

Economic Effects of a New York Minimum Wage Increase: An Econometric Scoring of S6413

SOCIAL SECURITY OFFSETS. Improvements to Program Design Could Better Assist Older Student Loan Borrowers with Obtaining Permitted Relief

Partnership at Age 50

How Much Work Would a 50% Disability Insurance Benefit Offset Encourage?: An Analysis Using SSI and SSDI Incentives

Minnesota Workers' Compensation System Report, 2016

The Unemployment Trust Fund (UTF): State Insolvency and Federal Loans to States

Proportion of income 1 Hispanics may be of any race.

August 31, Adjustments to the Wage Floor

S Corporation ESOPs and Retirement Security

Marathon Central School District and Marathon Teachers Association, NYSUT, AFT, NEA, AFL- CIO

PRODUCTIVITY AND COSTS Fourth Quarter and Annual Averages 2017, Revised

Digitized for FRASER Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

New Jersey Temporary Disability Benefits Law TDB

Catalogue no XIE. Income in Canada

What has happened to the income of retired households in the UK over the past 40 years?

Tennessee Workers Compensation Data Calendar Years A Report of Statewide Data for the Tennessee Workers Compensation Advisory Council

Do Older SSDI Applicants Denied Benefits on the Basis of their Work Capacity Return to Work After Denial?

The Role of Unemployment in the Rise in Alternative Work Arrangements. Lawrence F. Katz and Alan B. Krueger* 1 December 31, 2016

Social Security Income Measurement in Two Surveys

Unemployment Insurance: Consequences of Changes in State Unemployment Compensation Laws

Public Health Expenditures on the Working Age Disabled: Assessing Medicare and Medicaid Utilization of SSDI and SSI Recipients*

Mega-Trends Influencing the Workers Compensation Insurance Industry

The Urgency of Reforming Entitlement Programs: The Case of Social Security Disability Insurance

2018 New York State Firefighter Cancer Benefit program. Protecting Those Who Protect Us

A Chartbook of International Labor Comparisons: The Americas, Asia, Europe, January 2007

Growing Slowly, Getting Older:*

SHARE OF WORKERS IN NONSTANDARD JOBS DECLINES Latest survey shows a narrowing yet still wide gap in pay and benefits.

Transcription:

Cornell University ILR School DigitalCommons@ILR Federal Publications Key Workplace Documents 2-2015 Disability Insurance Plans: Trends in Employee Access and Employer Costs Kristen Monaco Bureau of Labor Statistics Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/key_workplace Thank you for downloading an article from DigitalCommons@ILR. Support this valuable resource today! This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Key Workplace Documents at DigitalCommons@ILR. It has been accepted for inclusion in Federal Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@ILR. For more information, please contact hlmdigital@cornell.edu.

Disability Insurance Plans: Trends in Employee Access and Employer Costs Abstract [Excerpt] Short- and long-term disability insurance programs replace some of the wages lost by people who cannot work because of a disabling injury or illness that is not work-related. Short-term disability insurance typically covers periods lasting less than 6 months, and long-term disability insurance lasts for the length of the disability or until retirement. Those workers who are unable to work due to injury or illness and who do not have disability insurance coverage through their employers may seek benefits from Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). The number of SSDI claimants has grown over the past decade as younger workers and those in relatively lowskill, low-pay jobs have applied for benefits. This has prompted interest in the amount of coverage for workers in employer-provided disability insurance programs. This issue of Beyond the Numbers examines trends in employer- provided disability insurance coverage over time, explains the basic terms of coverage for typical plans, and estimates the costs to private employers. Keywords disability insurance programs, private sector, Social Security Disability Insurance, SSDI Comments Suggested Citation Monaco, K. (2015). Disability insurance plans: trends in employee access and employer costs. Beyond the Numbers, 4(4). Washington, DC: Bureau of Labor Statistics. This article is available at DigitalCommons@ILR: http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/key_workplace/1395

FEBRUARY 2015 VOLUME 4 / NUMBER 4 PAY AND BENEFITS Disability insurance plans: trends in employee access and employer costs By Kristen Monaco Short- and long-term disability insurance programs replace some of the wages lost by people who cannot work because of a disabling injury or illness that is not work-related. 1 Short-term disability insurance typically covers periods lasting less than 6 months, and long-term disability insurance lasts for the length of the disability or until retirement. Those workers who are unable to work due to injury or illness and who do not have disability insurance coverage through their employers may seek benefits from Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI). 2 The number of SSDI claimants has grown over the past decade as younger workers and those in relatively lowskill, low-pay jobs have applied for benefits. 3 This has prompted interest in the amount of coverage for workers in employer-provided disability insurance programs. This issue of Beyond the Numbers examines trends in employerprovided disability insurance coverage over time, explains the basic terms of coverage for typical plans, and estimates the costs to private employers. 4 Access to benefits The National Compensation Survey collects data on compensation, which includes wages and salaries and various benefits. Besides cost measures, the program collects data on access, participation, and features of benefits (called provisions), including short- and long-term disability insurance. Historically, participation rates for long-term disability insurance have been lower than short-term, as shown in chart 1. In 1999, 36 percent of private industry workers took part in short-term disability insurance and 25 percent took part in longterm disability insurance. In 2014, these numbers were 39 percent and 33 percent, respectively. Page 1

Chart 1 Table 1 shows access and participation by occupation group. 5 The 2014 estimates and patterns of access and participation did not change much from the 2007 and 2010 estimates. Workers in service occupations (such as waiters/waitresses, hair stylists, and dental hygienists) have the lowest access rates for both short- and long-term disability insurance. Access to short-term disability ranges from 20 percent for service workers to 54 percent for workers in management, professional, and related occupations. Access rates for long-term disability ranges from 10 percent for service workers to 59 percent for management, professional, and related occupations. This analysis focuses on access because most of the workers with access to these plans participate in them. As seen in table 1, the access and participation rates typically differ by only one or two percentage points, which is because these plans are free to most employees. Page 2

Table 1 Access to and participation in short- and long-term disability insurance, by occupation group, private industry workers, March 2014 Occupation group Short-term disability insurance Long-term disability insurance Access Participation Access Participation Management, professional, and related 54 53 59 57 Service 20 19 10 10 Sales and office 38 37 34 32 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance 40 39 27 26 Production, transportation, and material moving 47 46 31 30 Source: National Compensation Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Table 2 presents the share of workers who have access to disability insurance plans, by occupational groups. Workers with access to any disability insurance tend to have access to both short-term plans and long-term plans. Service workers, however, are not likely to have access to either disability insurance plan (76 percent) and only 6 percent have access to both. Page 3

Table 2 Access to disability benefit combinations, by occupation group, private industry workers, March 2014 Occupation group Percent with access to both short- and long-term disability insurance Percent with access to only short-term disability insurance Percent with access to only long-term disability insurance Percent with no access to insurance All workers 25 15 9 51 Management, professional, and related 42 12 17 29 Service 6 14 4 76 Sales and office 25 13 9 53 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Production, transportation, and material moving 21 18 6 55 25 22 7 47 Note: Costs calculated from Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (ECEC) published estimates. Source: National Compensation Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Costs to employees Most workers do not make contributions to their short- or long-term disability insurance plans. Across all workers, only 18 percent are required to contribute to short-term disability insurance and 6 percent to long-term. The required employee contribution for short-term disability insurance is significantly higher for service workers than for other occupational groups, as seen in table 3. Page 4

Table 3 Employee contribution requirement for short-term disability insurance, by occupation group, private industry workers, March 2014 Occupation group Short-term disability insurance Management, professional, and related 13 Service 42 Sales and office 18 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance 16 Production, transportation, and material moving 15 Source: National Compensation Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Plan coverage Short-term disability plans are intended to replace lost wages for a short, fixed amount of time. Ninety-three percent of private industry workers are covered by a fixed-duration plan. The median length of coverage is 26 weeks. This is the same across occupational groups and has stayed mostly the same over time. The median salary replacement rate for short-term disability plans is 60 percent, a rate that has stayed roughly the same for many years. 6 Among workers covered by a short-term disability insurance plan, 75 percent have a plan with a maximum benefit amount; among those with maximum payout provisions in the plan, the median amount that a worker would be eligible to receive was $584 in March 2014. Long-term disability insurance plans also are typically a fixed percent of annual earnings. Among private industry workers covered by a long-term disability insurance plan, 95 percent had plans that cover a fixed percentage of annual earnings. The median amount covered by long-term plans is 60 percent of annual earnings. Most long-term plans (88 percent) have a maximum amount payable and the median maximum payout in 2014 was $8,000 per month. Connection between disability insurance and medical insurance It is useful to examine the share of workers who have access to both disability insurance and medical care benefits. Illnesses and injuries that prompt a worker to claim short- or long-term disability insurance benefits through employerprovided plans may also involve medical care. Rather than presenting data on all possible combinations of medical care and short- and long-term disability insurance, table 4 presents estimates of the two extremes: those who have access to all three through their employer and those who do not have access to insurance plans. Page 5

Table 4 Access to disability insurance and medical care, by occupation group, private industry workers, March 2014 Occupation group Percent with access to short-term and long-term disability insurance and medical care Percent without access to disability insurance and medical care All workers 25 27 Management, professional, and related 42 12 Service 6 55 Sales and office 25 26 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Production, transportation, and material moving 21 21 24 20 Source: National Compensation Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Across all private sector workers, 25 percent have access to all three benefits through their employers and 27 percent have access to none. Those in management, professional, and related occupations have high rates of access 42 percent have access to all three plans and 12 percent do not have access to any. Among service workers, only 6 percent have access to all three benefits, and 55 percent do not have access to the plans. Costs to employers How much does it cost employers to offer disability insurance to their workers? The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates this cost on the basis of data from the Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (ECEC) published estimates. 7 We start by presenting the estimates of the average hourly cost of wages and salaries for March 2014 in table 5. 8 This will provide some perspective on the amount by which employer costs would increase as a result of expanding access to disability insurance. Page 6

Table 5 Average hourly cost of wages and salaries, by occupation group, private industry workers, March 2014 Occupation group Cost All workers $20.96 Management, professional, and related $36.75 Service $10.67 Sales and office $16.47 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance $22.24 Production, transportation, and material moving $17.20 Note: Costs calculated from Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (ECEC) published estimates. Source: National Compensation Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Columns 2 and 5 of table 6 present the access rates for short- and long-term disability, respectively (these access rates are also presented in table 1). Columns 3 and 6 present the cost of the benefit from the ECEC and only include costs for those enrolled in the disability insurance programs. Across all private industry workers, the cost per hour for short-term disability insurance is $0.06 and the cost per hour for long-term disability is $0.05. Columns 4 and 7 contain estimates of the hourly cost if access to the insurance benefit were expanded to include all workers. This is calculated by dividing the ECEC cost by the access rate. Page 7

Table 6 Estimated cost of access to short- and long-term disability insurance, by occupation group, private industry workers, March 2014 Short-term disability insurance Long-term disability insurance Occupation group Percent with Access Benefit cost per hour worked Employer access cost per hour worked Percent with Access Benefit cost per hour worked Employer access cost per hour worked All workers 40 $0.06 $0.15 34 $0.05 $0.15 Management, professional, and related 54 $0.10 $0.19 59 $0.09 $0.15 Service 20 10 Sales and office 38 $0.04 $0.11 34 $0.03 $0.09 Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Production, transportation, and material moving 40 $0.09 $0.23 27 $0.03 $0.11 47 $0.06 $0.13 31 $0.06 $0.19 Note: Costs calculated from Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (ECEC) published estimates. Dash indicates data not available or applicable. Source: National Compensation Survey, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. As seen in table 6, the cost of access for short-term disability and long-term disability across all private industry workers is $0.30 per hour worked ($0.15 each). The estimate ranges from $0.11 for sales and office workers to $0.23 for natural resources, construction, and maintenance workers. There are no reliable estimates for service workers, which is not surprising given that few service workers have access to employer-provided disability insurance. As a whole, however, the cost of providing both short- and long-term disability insurance access to all private sector workers would be approximately 1.0 percent of total compensation cost ($0.30/$29.99). This would cost an employer $624 each year for a full-time (2,080 hour) worker. Conclusion The lowest paid occupational group service workers is also the group least likely to be covered by employer-provided short- or long-term disability plans. Low paid workers are also the group most likely to apply for Social Security disability insurance (SSDI), which has led to financial problems for the program. It is important to note that expanding access to employer-provided disability insurance would not necessarily relieve the burden on SSDI. The ability to access disability insurance does not affect a worker s eligibility for SSDI. People can receive SSDI benefits and long-term disability payments, but the private disability insurance payment is usually reduced by the amount of the SSDI payment. The mean SSDI payment was $1,145 per month in October 2014. 9 Increased access to employer-provided disability insurance programs would fill the gap in benefits for individuals who apply for SSDI. SSDI benefits are payable the 6th full month after the disability begins, but people usually do not receive benefits until several months later because of delays in applying and processing. Short- and long-term disability insurance provide income protection much faster. Page 8

This Beyond the Numbers summary was prepared by Kristen Monaco, economist in the Office of Compensation and Working Conditions, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Email: monaco.kristen@bls.gov. Telephone: (202) 691-7527. Information in this article will be made available to sensory-impaired individuals upon request. Voice phone: (202) 691-5200. Federal Relay Service: 1-800-877-8339. This article is in the public domain and may be reproduced without permission. NOTES 1 Workers compensation covers loss of income due to work-related injuries and illnesses. 2 See David Autor, Mark Duggan, Jonathan Gruber, and Catherine Maclean, How Does Access to Short-Term Disability Insurance Impact SSDI Claiming, NBER Disability Research Center Paper No. NB 13-09 (October 2013) for preliminary analysis of a negative relationship between private disability insurance and SSDI claims. 3 Till Von Wachter, Jae Song, and Joyce Manchester, Trends in Employment and Earnings of Allowed and Rejected Applicants to the Social Security Disability Insurance Program, American Economic Review 101, No. 7 (December 2011), pp. 3308 3329. 4 This study excludes government employers as well as the self-employed, farm workers, and private household workers. 5 Access measures whether an employer makes a plan available to their employees. Participation measures whether the employee enrolls in such a plan (or fails to opt out of plans in which they are automatically enrolled). Estimates of access, participation, and provisions of disability insurance plans for March 2014 can be found in the BLS publication, National Compensation Survey: Employee Benefits in the United States, March 2014, available at http://www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/. 6 Hilery Simpson, Short-term Disability Benefits, Compensation and Working Conditions (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Summer 1997); James N. Houff and William J. Wiatrowski, Analyzing Short-term Disability Benefits, Monthly Labor Review (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, June 1989). 7 The ECEC provides estimates of the average hourly cost of wages and salaries as well as various benefits, including disability insurance. The ECEC estimates of hourly costs are calculated for all workers, not just those receiving the benefit. We can, however, use the benefit access rate and the average cost to get an estimate of how much it would cost the employer to provide benefit access to all workers. For more detailed information on this approach for measuring total cost of access, see Thomas Moehrle, Thomas, John L. Bishow, and Anthony J. Barkume, Benefit Cost Concepts and the Limitations of ECEC Measurement, Compensation and Working Conditions, July 26, 2012; and Jason L. Ford, The New Health Participation and Access Data from the National Compensation Survey, Compensation and Working Conditions, October 26, 2009. 8 We also use March 2014 data to obtain the average cost per hour for short- and long-term disability insurance programs. Table 6 combines this information with the access rate to obtain an estimate of the employer s cost of providing access to this benefit. 9 Monthly Statistical Snapshot, November 2014 (Social Security Administration, 2014), http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/ quickfacts/stat_snapshot/. SUGGESTED CITATION Kristen Monaco, Disability insurance plans: trends in employee access and employer costs, Beyond the Numbers: Pay and Benefits, vol. 4, no. 4 (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, February 2015), http://www.bls.gov/opub/btn/volume-4/ disability-insurance-plans.htm Page 9

UPCOMING ARTICLES Wage inequality in the United States and by Metropolitan areas The prices of basic 'necessities' have risen at a slightly higher annual rate than general consumer inflation Visit our online archives to access past publications at http://www.bls.gov/opub/btn/archive/home.htm Page 10