Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Frequency and Posting

A funny thing happened in my travels yesterday.

It was reported that California claim frequency in the last measurement largely ameliorated and started reversing trend, albeit still growing compared to the rest of the nation.

The Workers' Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau's Actuarial Committee, the folks that crunch carrier supplied data to figure out things like recommended rates and for prognostications, said that claim frequency in the first nine months of 2014 grew at an annual rate of 0.9%, compared with an increase of 3.9% last year.

The greater Los Angeles area continues to fuel frequency, which is insurance geek terminology for the amount of claims.

“If you (take Los Angeles) out of the picture, California actually looks pretty close to the national numbers,” WCIRB Actuary and Vice President Tony Milano said in a presentation last Wednesday.

Milano said the committee didn’t identify any one industrial sector in the Los Angeles area pushing claim frequency, but that the trend appears to be coming from all sides.


The WCIRB said part of the increase is the recovery of the construction industry - a high hazard occupational group - as house building and the economy improved.

Also going up are the agriculture, mining, entertainment, hospitality and manufacturing sectors.

No other state has such a diverse economy and accounts for as many risks.

That entertainment and hospitality claims are increasing may be a signal, again, of a positive economy, though of course this doesn't exactly explain why the Los Angeles area bucks national trends.

According to reports, there is a corresponding increase in cumulative trauma injury claims, and carriers are denying those more aggressively.

Which also might explain the increase in attorney involvement in California claims - as I wrote yesterday, the usual reason a claimant seeks legal help is because someone on the other end of the claim said, "no."

The WCIRB reported that employers and insurers denied the compensability of injuries to all claimed body parts in 66% of cumulative cases last year, compared with 57% in 2012, 41% of which were from terminated workers, compared with 38% in 2012.

In fact, the Workers Compensation Research Institute found in 2012 that about a third of all California applicants hire legal representation.

The WCIRB Actuarial Committee showed that 81% of cumulative injury applicants used lawyers in their cases.

And the how and when data is gathered, crunched and then reported as statistics distorts the picture a little bit. As Dave Bellusci, Chief Actuarial for the WCIRB, said, "These are often added late, they’re typically litigated, they’re just a different animal and they’re a big issue in California."

The pessimist will note that claims frequency still grew while the rest of the nation continued trending downward. The optimist will note that while there was frequency growth, it was very small compared to the past couple of years (see chart).

In the final analysis, though, my travels (see beginning) had nothing to do with the WCIRB report or my consumption of the news. It was just an easy way to open this post.

Which is another way to say that the news isn't terribly disconcerting because, other than the Los Angeles area, California trends just like the rest of the nation.

Why Los Angeles is so special is likely fodder for another study, another report and another post.

1 comment:

  1. David,

    Someone (or perhaps off of us) should call up the WCIRB and say, ‘Thank you for that blinding glimpse of the obvious’ (Ross Johnson – CEO, Reynolds Tobacco, ‘Barbarians at the Gate’).

    Or, perhaps we should repeat to ourselves, ‘There is no Boogey Man, there is no Boogey Man’.

    The economy is growing for Christ’s Sake! We’re hiring more people! Even if these were the most professional and accomplished people available, they are in new and different work environments. Add to that – the production schedules have been moved up by a factor of two or more. The high-risk trades are coming back – construction and manufacturing.

    Here’s an example: Last year, my biggest client had sales growth of almost 30%. The work force expanded from 230 to 350 (around 50%). Workplace injuries increased by more than 50%.

    Here’s my response to the WCIRB, ‘Duh?’ – to rephrase that another way, ‘Duh?’

    Lastly, lest we forget, the WCIRB has never met a number that it wouldn’t gladly report with absolute conviction as ‘fact’ today and revise it every reporting cycle for the next decade.

    By the way, every penny the employers pay in premium is based on the ‘facts’ the WCIRB reports.

    In my everyday life, I’m better believing what a teenager says when I ask, ‘Did you do your homework?’. Their answer, though a bit biased, will be more accurate than the WCIRB.

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