I found this article in the Insurance Journal….
Most Colorado employers will be looking at an average 3.4 percent increase in workers’ compensation insurance loss costs, increasing the overall premiums they pay for workers compensation insurance in 2011, the state Department of Regulatory Agencies Division of Insurance announced. Loss costs are the average cost of lost wages and medical payments of workers injured during the course of their employment.
“This is the first time in ten years that Colorado has ordered a ‘loss costs’ increase,” said Colorado’s Commissioner of Insurance, Marcy Morrison. “Although the frequency of claims went down, the cost of claims went up significantly. Part of the regulator’s job is to be sure the premiums charged will be adequate to cover claims, so we are ordering the increase this year.”
Until this year, Colorado has had no increases in workers compensation loss costs for more than a decade, with decreases in 2008 (7.5 percent decrease), 2009 (16 percent decrease) and 2010 (9.7 percent decrease). Factors which may increase workers compensation costs include: frequency (number of claims per number of workers), length of claim, number of treatments for each claim, severity of injury, increasing medical costs and overall costs to cover workers’ compensation claims.
The National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), a rating and advisory organization, collects annual data on workers compensation claims for the insurance industry, and publishes loss costs that form the basis for all workers compensation premium determinations. NCCI provides this information for approximately 38 of the states.
All insurers in Colorado use the NCCI loss costs as a base. Each insurer’s own expenses are added to the NCCI’s loss costs to arrive at the rates charged to employers. Loss costs are one factor used in establishing each employer’s actual workers compensation premium.
The projected loss cost figures for 2011 were presented by the NCCI at a hearing on September 17 at the Division of Insurance offices. Analysis by both the NCCI actuaries and the actuarial consultants was reviewed for all of the industrial classes in Colorado. These classes include manufacturing, office and clerical, contracting, and goods and services. The NCCI filing, the actuarial reviews and public comments are used by the Commissioner of Insurance to establish the loss costs used for the premium rates for the following year.
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