California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has issued an order that cuts the average advisory workers’ compensation benchmark rate across all classes by 2.6%, starting Sept. 1.
After holding a public hearing in June, Lara rejected the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau’s recommendation that the benchmark rate increase 0.3%.
The difference between the WCIRB-proposed rate and the rate approved by the California Department of Insurance (CDI) is due to different assumptions regarding loss development, claim frequency and claim severity trends, according to the Rating Bureau.
The benchmark rate, also known as the pure premium rate, is a baseline that covers just the cost of claims and claims adjusting, but not other overhead like rents, underwriting costs and provisions for profit. The rate is an average across all class codes, with some industries seeing higher increases and some seeing rate decreases.
The rate is advisory, meaning that insurers can use it as a guidepost for pricing their individual policies. Insurers’ own pure premium rates have been averaging about 5% less than the WCIRB’s published rates.
Individual premiums that employers pay will depend on a number of factors, including the pure premium rate, the carrier’s own pricing methodology, and the employer’s claims and claims cost history, location and industry.
The last two rate filings for 2022 and 2021 included provisions for COVID-19 workers’ compensation claims costs, but the number of those claims has fallen so dramatically that the Rating Bureau decided not to include it in this filing.
Why the rate is falling
The insurance commissioner’s decision will cut the average published pure premium rate to $1.46 per every $100 of payroll, compared to the current $1.50. Despite the average rate decrease of 2.6%, individual class codes may see swings as much as plus or minus 25%.
Several factors are driving the lower rate decision:
- Slowing claims cost inflation
- Falling frequency of claims
- Lower overall claims costs
- Stable medical costs
- Fewer COVID-19 claims
- Lower claims-adjusting costs.
The only cost that increased was wage inflation, which the Rating Bureau estimates at 3.3%.
One other reason rates continue to decline is that workplaces are generally safer than ever.
The number of workers’ compensation claims hit a low of 13 per 1,000 workers last year. That’s a historical low thanks to decades of falling claims frequency. For perspective, in 1991 there were 49 claims per 1,000 workers.
What insurers are doing
As mentioned, the pure premium rate is advisory and insurers can charge what they want. However, they are typically charging more than the published rates.
The most recently available industry average level of pure premium rates filed by insurers with the CDI is $1.71 per $100 of payroll as of Jan. 1, 2023, which is about 14.6% higher than the current published rate of $1.50. In 2022, carriers were charging $1.68 on average.
While the workers’ compensation market remains competitive and rates continue hovering around record lows, the final rate any employer will pay will depend on several factors beyond the pure premium rate. Some employers may see rate increases instead.
Factors that can influence the prices include the employer’s:
- Industry
- Geographical location (employers in Southern California, for example, face a unique claims environment that results in a surcharge).
- Individual claims experience.