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MICHIGAN
WORKERS' COMPENSATION COSTS PER CLAIM GREW SLOWLY,
REFLECTING OFFSETTING RECESSIONARY PRESSURES, SAYS STUDY
CAMBRIDGE, MA, January
3, 2012 –
The deep recession in Michigan is impacting the workers’
compensation system there as some costs per claim rose
slowly, according to a new study, CompScope™ Benchmarks
for Michigan, 12th Edition, by the Workers
Compensation Research Institute (WCRI).
Amid recessionary pressures, indemnity costs
per claim—payments for lost wages— grew modestly between
2008 and 2009, rising 3.4 percent. This was less than the
typical six percent increase of the 16 states in the
national study.
WCRI said this slow growth reflects two
offsetting recessionary factors. On one hand, the study
found an increase in the average duration of temporary
disability, up 6.7 percent, or about six days, between 2008
and 2009. On the other hand, WCRI observed a decline in the
average weekly wage of 2.9 percent during the period.
The study pointed out that between 2004 and
2009 the average weekly wage in Michigan increased only
three percent, the smallest increase of all study states,
consistent with the persistent effects of the depressed
state economy that has not recovered since the 2001-2002
recession.
Overall, total costs per workers’
compensation claim in Michigan increased at a slower rate
than identified in other study states, growing 31 percent
between 2004 and 2005, or about five percent per year. This
was slightly lower than the change of 39 percent observed in
the typical study state.
The study pointed out that the rate of growth
in total workers’ compensation costs per claim rose in the
last two years of the study as the annual growth rate
increased from 3.4 percent between 2005 and 2007 to 5.5
between 2007 and 2009. This recent rise in annual costs per
claim, however, was lower compared to many other study states.
ABOUT WCRI:
The Workers Compensation Research Institute
(WCRI) is an independent, not-for-profit research
organization based in Cambridge, MA. Since 1983, WCRI has
been a catalyst for significant improvements in workers'
compensation systems around the world with its objective,
credible, and high-quality research. WCRI's members
include
employers; insurers; governmental entities;
managed care
companies; health care providers;
insurance
regulators; state labor organizations; and state
administrative agencies in the U.S., Canada, Australia and
New Zealand.
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