Tag Archives: workers compensation

The nurseryman’s solution

Via Kevin Drum, a consultant’s tale of workers comp risk management. I pass along it reluctantly, for the same reason the storyteller is remorseful: Back in the late 90s, my team was hired by a large nursery to help them get their workers compensation claims under control. For those that have never worked in the [...]

Claim of the Week: Comp fraud, Vol. Whatever

Ohio Man Caught on Camera Roofing While on Workers’ Comp. Common enough news story, except the video also showed him . . . . . . leaving the worksite to attend a hearing on his workers’ comp case, and later returning to finish the job.  

Comp frequency rises 3% – first increase since ’97

Via Business Insurance, NCCI this week announced that workers comp claim frequency rose 3% last year, the first increase since 1997 and the biggest increase in more than two decades. The previous 19 years, frequency had fallen 56%. Here’s a chart from the full report (pdf): Why the increase: With the Great Recession, frequency fell [...]

In comp, the good gets better; the bad gets worse

Guy Carpenter had an interesting idea buried in its recent post, Workers Compensation Reserve Risk Development: The Cat That May Be Lurking in Your Balance Sheet. GC notes that companies have a hard time getting their comp reserves right. If they are inadequate, said inadequacy may hurt earnings as much as a catastrophe would. Thus, [...]

WC experience rating passes test

Wonky, but this is a blog for actuaries: In 2009, California approved new ballast weights (B and W) for workers compensation to improve the rating plan. So far it seems to be working. I’d describe the study more, but Insurance Journal, channeling the Workers Compensation Insurance Rating Board, does just fine: [A WCIRB analysis] shows [...]

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