Author, Sam Clayton, Vice President, Construction Group, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.
Earlier this month, the Workers’ Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau (WCIRB) recommended a nominal .9% increase in the advisory pure premium rates. The reason given, increased loss development for medical costs and higher claims adjustment expenses. This recommendation is now sent to the California’s Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara for approval. If approved, the increase in rates then take effect September 1, 2024.
Recognizing that a .9% increase is not very significant and in 2023 the WCIRB requested a similar increase which ultimately was denied by Commissioner Lara, the message remains clear that workers’ compensation rates have probably bottomed out.
This does not mean every business will see an increase. There will still be reductions in some class codes pure premium rates and pricing will be more tied to Experience Modification Rate (EMR) decreases and an individual company’s claims experience. For distressed accounts, companies whose EMR is increasing and have had poor claim experience, will likely see an increase in their rates.
In order to stay ahead of this, we recommend companies review their key performance indicators (KPIs) that measure and compare a company’s frequency and severity of claims to their peers within the same governing class code. These metrics allow a company to identify trends, design programs that will address specific training needs, and project claims costs that will ultimately impact their EMR.
In addition, we recommend working closely with your claim advocate to assist in monitoring open workers’ compensation claims, and identify any open claims under your company’s primary threshold that could be closed prior to your unit stat filing that can impact your EMR.
If you would like to learn more about the pure premium rate’s impact by class code or evaluate your specific KPIs, I can be reached at (619) 937-0167 or via email at sclayton@ranchomesa.com.