Colorado Orders 16% Decrease in Workers’ Comp Loss Costs

October 20, 2008

Colorado employers may be paying lower premiums for workers’ compensation insurance in 2009, because a significant component of workers’ compensation premiums, known as loss costs, will drop 16 percent, the Colorado Division of Insurance announced.

Loss costs are the average cost of lost wages and medical payments of workers injured during the course of their employment.

“The drop in loss costs will push many workers’ compensation premiums down,” said Colorado Insurance Commissioner Marcy Morrison. “If every insurer implemented the decrease without other adjustments, the overall savings to Colorado consumers would be as much as $152 million.”

It is expected that the ultimate savings to consumers will be significant, but smaller than the maximum projection because rate filings will be made by individual insurers before the loss cost reduction goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2009, the DOI said. However, many employers will realize a savings in their workers’ compensation premiums compared to last year. The loss cost reduction is based on a continuing decrease in the number of claims filed in 2007, the DOI indicated.

“Workers compensation insurance rates have declined 43.4 percent since 2000,” Morrison said, pointing out this year’s reduction is not a fluke, but part of a continuing trend. “This is the seventh decrease during the past eight years. This is good news on several fronts. It means that workers are having fewer injuries and fewer claims are being filed, which can be attributed to a safer work environment and the efforts of employers to provide safe working conditions. It also shows that the Colorado market is stable.”

The National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), a rating and advisory organization, collects annual data on workers’ compensation claims for the insurance industry and publishes loss costs that form the basis for all workers’ compensation premium determinations. All insurers in Colorado use the NCCI loss costs as a base. Each insurer’s own expenses are added to the NCCI’s loss costs to arrive at the rates charged to employers.

Loss costs are a significant factor, although not the only factor, used in establishing each employer’s actual workers’ compensation premium. Each employer’s deductible selection and actual loss experience can also have an impact on workers’ compensation premium.

The projected loss cost figures for 2009 were presented by the NCCI at a hearing on Sept. 11, 2008, at the Division of Insurance offices. Analysis by the NCCI actuaries and actuarial consultants was reviewed for all of the industrial classes in Colorado. These classes include manufacturing, office and clerical, contracting, and goods and services. Although workers’ comp claims are regulated by the Division of Workers’ Compensation in the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment, rates for workers’ comp premiums are regulated by the DOI Department of Regulatory Agencies.

The NCCI filing, the actuarial reviews and public comments are used by the Commissioner to recommend premium rates to insurance carriers for the following year. For information, visit www.dora.state.co.us/insurance/.

Topics Trends Profit Loss Workers' Compensation Colorado

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