Objective 3 - Employee Benefit Strategy Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of Employee Benefits

A

Broad Definition - Includes virtually any form of compensation other than direct wages including:

  1. The employer’s share of legally-required payments (such as Social Security)
  2. Payments for time not worked (such as paid sick leave, paid vacations, and holidays)
  3. The employer’s share of medical and medically-related payments
  4. The employer’s share of retirement and savings plan payments
  5. Miscellaneous benefits (such as employee discounts, severance pay, and educational expenditures)

More limited Definition - excludes legally-mandated benefits

Rosenbloom, Chapter 1, Page 4

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2
Q

Reasons for the growth of employee benefit plans

A
  1. Business Reasons - good benefit plans help the employer attract and retain capable employees, and can improve employee morale and productivity
  2. Collective bargaining - the Taft-Hartley Act required good-faith bargaining over conditions of employment (including benefit plans)
  3. Favorable tax legislation - many plans are designed to maximize available tax benefits
  4. Efficiency of the employee benefits approach - marketing of benefits through the employer is a cost-effective and administratively efficient distribution channel
  5. Wage increase limits - wage increase limits during World War II and the Korean War led to an expansion of employee benefits as a way in which employers could increase the employees’ total compensation
  6. Legislative actions - the government has encouraged employee benefit plans through various legislative actions

Rosenbloom, Chapter 1, Page 5

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3
Q

Characteristics of the group technique of providing employee benefits

A

(all but the last one are meant to minimize adverse selection)

  1. Only certain groups are eligible - groups formed solely for the purpose of obtaining insurance should not be offered coverage
  2. Steady flow of lives through the group - to maintain a fairly health group
  3. Minimum number of persons in a group - to prevent less-healthy lives from being a major part of the group
  4. A minimum portion of the group must participate - such as 75% of employees must be covered in plans where the employee must pay a portion of the premium
  5. Eligibility requirements and waiting periods are imposed
  6. Maximum limits for any one person - to prevent the possibility of excessive amounts of coverage for any particular unhealthy individual
  7. Automatic determination of benefits - some benefits may be determined based on formula (such as a multiple of salary) to prevent unhealthy lives from obtaining large benefit amounts
  8. A central and efficient administrative agency - to minimize expenses and handle the mechanics of the benefit plan

Rosenbloom, Chapter 1, Page 8

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4
Q

Questions to ask in evaluating employee benefit plans

A
  1. (Goals) What are the objectives of the employer and employees
  2. What (Benefits) should be provided?
  3. (Persons) Who should be covered under the benefit plan? Retirees, dependents, etc…
  4. Should employees have benefit (Options)?
  5. How should the benefit plan be (Financed)?
  6. How should the benefit plan be (Administered)?
  7. How should the benefit plan be (Communicated)?

Mnemonic - Good Benefit Plans Fail At Communicating Options

Rosenbloom, Chapter 1, Page 10

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5
Q

Reasons for using the functional approach for designing and evaluating employee benefits

A
  1. Benefits must be (Organized) to be as effective as possible in meeting employee needs
  2. Avoiding waste in benefits can be an important (Cost-control) measure for employers
  3. A (systematic) approach is needed to keep benefits current, (cost effective), and in (compliance) with regulations
  4. A (systematic) approach is needed ensure that the various benefits can be (integrated) with each other

Mnemonic - Functional = Organized -> Systematic (Integrated, Compliant, Cost Effective)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 2, Page 14

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6
Q

Steps in applying the functional approach for employee benefit plan design and evaluation

A
  1. Classify employee and dependent needs or objectives into logical functional categories (see separate list of common loss exposures)
  2. Classify the categories of persons the employer may want or need to protect (see separate list)
  3. Analyze current benefits with respect to employee needs and the categories of covered persons (see separate list)
  4. Determine any gaps in benefits or overlapping benefits in the current plan
  5. Consider recommendations for plan changes to meet any gaps in benefits and to correct any overlapping benefits
  6. Estimate the costs or savings from each of the recommendations made
  7. Evaluate alternative methods of financing or securing the benefits
  8. Consider other cost-savings or cost-containment techniques for both current and recommended benefits
  9. Decide upon the appropriate benefits, methods of financing, and sources of benefits, by using the preceding analysis
  10. Implement the changes
  11. Communicate benefit changes to employees
  12. Periodically reevaluate the employee benefit plan

Rosenbloom, Chapter 2, Page 19

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7
Q

Common Loss Exposures covered by employee benefit plans

A
  1. Medical expenses for employees (active and retired) and their dependents
  2. Losses due to employees’ disability (short-term and long-term)
  3. Losses due to the death of active employees, their dependents, and retired employees
  4. Retirement needs of employees and their dependents
  5. Capital accumulation needs or goals
  6. Needs arising from unemployment or from temporary termination or suspension of employment
  7. Needs for financial counseling, retirement counseling, and other counseling services
  8. Losses resulting from property and liability exposures
  9. Needs for dependent care assistance (e.g., child-care or elder-care services)
  10. Needs for educational assistance for employees and their dependents
  11. Needs for LTC for employees (active and retired) and their dependents
  12. Other employee benefit needs or goals (such as incentive programs)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 2, Page 20

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8
Q

Categories of persons the employer may want to or be required to provide benefits for

A
  1. Active, full-time employees
  2. Dependents of active full-time employees
  3. Retired former employees
  4. Dependents of retired former employees
  5. Disabled employees and their dependents
  6. Surviving dependents of deceased employees
  7. Terminated employees and their dependents
  8. Employees (and dependents) on temporary leaves of absence (such as for military duty)
  9. Active employees who are not full time (such as part-time employees and directors)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 2, Page 25

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9
Q

Considerations for analyzing current benefits in the employee benefit plan

A
  1. (Types) of benefits - a common approach is to prepare an outline or table showing how the different types of benefits mee the various employee needs
  2. (Levels) of benefits - the analysis should also show the amount of those benefits that is currently provided under various scenarios
  3. (Probationary) periods - analyze any periods during which newly-hired employees are not yet eligible to receive benefits, to determine whether they are appropriate
  4. (Eligibility) requirements - various requirements should be analyzed. For example, should survivors of deceased employees continue to be covered, for what benefits, and for how long?
  5. Employee (Contribution) requirements - determine how much employees will be required to contribute to the cost, and whether the plans will be mandatory or voluntary
  6. (Flexibility) available to employees - determine the choices that will be given to employees in selecting their benefits
  7. Actual employee (Participation) in benefit plans - determine what percentage of employees enroll in each benefit, which may indicate whether the benefit meets employee needs

Mnemonic - Typical Lawyers Pursue Eager Crooks For Pleasure

Rosenbloom, Chapter 2, Page 27

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10
Q

Typical Elements of CDHPs

A
  1. A high-deductible health plan (HDHP)
  2. An individual health account to pay for expenses not covered by HDHP
  3. Information and tools to provide health education and help find the highest-quality providers at the lowest cost
  4. A communications program to encourage consumerism and healthy behaviors
  5. A health coach or consultant to help individuals use available information and provide guidance on use of health care providers
  6. For serious chronic conditions, a proactive medical professional to coordinate care for the patient

Rosenbloom, Chapter 7, Page 176

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11
Q

Basic plan structures of CDHPs

A
  1. First-dollar coverage provided through a health care account.
  2. Employee is responsible between the difference between the account amount and the deductible
  3. After the deductible, the plan coinsurance and copayments apply
  4. Deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments differ for single versus family coverage and in-network vs. out-of-network services

Rosenbloom, Chapter 7, Page 177

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12
Q

Types of Health Care Accounts

A
  1. HSA
    a) Must accompany a high-deductible health plan with a minimum deductible ($1,200 individual, $2,400 family) and maximum out-of-pocket limit ($5,950 individual, $11,900 family) (year 2011 amounts, indexed for inflation)
    b) Can be used to pay for qualified medical expenses, health insurance premiums in limited circumstances, LTC premiums, and LTC services
    c) Owned by the employee, who gets to keep the unused balance upon terminating employment
  2. HRA - can be used to pay for qualified medical expenses, health insurance premiums, and LTC premiums
  3. FSA
    a) Can be used to pay for qualified medical expenses
    b) the contribution amount must be specified at the beginning of the period, and the employee can use the full amount at any time in the coverage period
    c) Funds not used by the end of the period are forfeited
    (some of the FSA information is from Rosenbloom Ch. 25)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 7, Page 178

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13
Q

Comparison of Key Features of Health Care Accounts

A

Who Can Set Up Account:
HSA - Individuals and employees covered by HDHP and no other health insurance
HRA - Only employees
FSA - Only employees

Who Can Contribute:
HSA - Employers and employees
HRA - only Employers
FSA - Employers and Employees

Contribution Limits
HSA - $3,050 for individuals and $6,150 for families (year 2011)
HRA - No federal tax limit. Employers usually set limits.
FSA - Through 2012: No limit. 2013: $2,500 (indexed)

Carryover of unused balances:
HSA - Yes
HRA - Yes, subject to employer limits
FSA - No

Portability
HSA - Yes
HRA - No
FSA - No

Rosenbloom, Chapter 7, Page 182

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14
Q

Tax Treatment of Health Care Accounts

A

Employer Contributions:
HSA/HRA/FSA - Contributions excluded from gross income and not subject to FICA; funding limits for HSA and FSA.

Individual Contributions:
HSA - Funding limits; contributions are deductible
HRA - Employees cannot contribute
FSA - Generally pretax and not subject to FICA

Earnings on accounts:
HSA - Generally not taxable
HRA/FSA - Accounts are generally notional, so there are no earnings

Distributions:
HSA - Permissible reimbursements are not taxed; otherwise 20% penalty (some exceptions)
HRA/FSA - Distributions only allowed for qualified medical expenses

Rosenbloom, Chapter 7, Page 183

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15
Q

Plan Design Considerations for CDHPs

A
  1. Establishing the parameters of the HDHP
  2. Selecting a type of health care account
  3. Level of preventive care coverage
    a) Most offer an initial health screening or physical at no, or very low, cost
    b) Also included are immunizations, routine annual physicals, and well-mother and well-baby visits
  4. Whether the CDHP will be a full replacement plan or one of multiple options. A full replacement plan will minimize adverse selection and maximize cost savings, but may face employee resistance.
  5. Employer contribution strategy
    a) Must decide how much to contribute to the employees’ accounts
    b) CDHP contributions are often set to compare favorably with other options
  6. For HRA plans, whether to permit carryover of unused balances

Rosenbloom, Chapter 7, Page 185

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16
Q

Advantages of voluntary benefits

A

Voluntary benefits are offered by the employer but employees purchase them on their own

Employer Advantages:

  1. More benefits can be offered without significant added cost
  2. Can supplement or replace employer-sponsored benefits that have been reduced or eliminated
  3. Can act as an employee recruitment or retention tool
  4. Can offer to employees that meet performance targets

Employee Advantages:

  1. Can get the employer’s group discount
  2. In some cases, can purchase with pretax dollars
  3. Convenience of obtaining benefits through the workplace (not having to show around) and during work time
  4. They are often portable (employees can keep them upon changing jobs)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 18, Page 491

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17
Q

Types of Voluntary Benefits

A
  1. Group Term Life
  2. Dependent Life Insurance
  3. Supplemental Life Insurance
  4. Long-term and/or Short-term Disability Income Insurance
  5. Dental Insurance
  6. LTC Coverage
  7. Adoption Assistance
  8. Accidental Death and Dismemberment Insurance
  9. Automobile Insurance
  10. Homeowners Insurance
  11. Benefits under a legal Services Plan
  12. Vision Benefits Coverage
  13. Critical Care Insurance
  14. Cancer Insurance
  15. Group Homeowners and Automobile Insurance
  16. Hospital Indemnity Insurance
  17. Travel Accident Insurance
  18. Student Medical Insurance

Rosenbloom, Chapter 18, Page 492

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18
Q

Common Functions for administering employee benefits

A

(all plan sponsors must perform these core activities, and the benefits director must be proficient at these)

  1. Benefits Plan Design - Create a benefit program that addresses the needs of the organization and can be effectively administered and communicated
  2. Benefits Delivery Plan - Involves serving plan participants through various activities (separate list). Must meet legal standards for quality service (e.g. complying with ERISA and COBRA standards).
  3. Benefits Policy Formulation - management must make decisions on questions and issues that arise. These decisions must be codified into policies.
  4. Communications - must effectively communicate benefit programs and plan provisions, which is challenging due to workforce diversity and plan complexity. Legal standards require certain communications (e.g., summary plan descriptions, benefit statements, and statement of COBRA rights).
  5. Applying technology - involves setting up a database containing information on all the employer’s different benefit plans. This information should be secure and easily accessible to the employer and its employees.
  6. Cost Management and Resource Controls - Benefits directors must evaluate proposals from insurers and develop the firm’s risk-management approach
  7. Management reporting - information systems are needed to monitor financial results, utilization, and compliance. Reports are needed in order to:
    a) Compare to the competition (see separate list of comparison methods)
    b) Measure achievement of human resources objectives (through industry surveys, employee surveys, and focus groups)
    c) Assess and manage program risks
  8. Legal and regulatory compliance - must comply with fiduciary, funding, and other requirements as prescribed by law. Many standards were codified as part of ERISA.
  9. Monitoring the external environment - involves monitoring various factors that impact benefit management activities (see separate list)

(NEEDS A MNEMONIC)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 24, Page 636

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19
Q

Activities Required for Serving Plan Participants

A
  1. New employee Benefits Orientation
  2. Policy Clarification on benefits eligibility, coverage, and applicability of plan provisions
  3. Dealing with exceptional circumstances and unusual cases
  4. Collection and processing of enrollment data, claims information, and requests for plan distributions
  5. Benefits counseling and response to employee inquiries for active employees
  6. Benefits counselling for employees who are terminating, retiring, disabled, or on leave

Rosenbloom, Chapter 24, Page 639

20
Q

Technological Tools used by benefits directors to support customer-driven processes

A
  1. Executive information systems - Provide management information in summary format. Helps identify utilization patterns and cost factors.
  2. Imaging and optical storage - eliminates paper records and allows sharing of documents over a network
  3. Access to information over the internet - facilitates paper-less communication from the plan sponsor to insurance carriers, investment custodians, and third-party administrators.
  4. Client-server technology - integrates networked applications with desktop and mobile tools, allowing decentralized management and supporting self-sufficient plan participants.
  5. Employee self-service - allows customer-driven benefits modeling, retirement planning, and updating of personal data

Rosenbloom, Chapter 24, Page 650

21
Q

Methods for comparing benefit programs to the copmetition

A
  1. Compare the benefits payable to representative employees under different circumstances
  2. Compare actual costs to the employer for different benefit plans
  3. Calculate relative values of the different benefits based on uniform actuarial methods and assumptions
  4. Compare benefit plans feature by feature to isolate specific provisions that may be appealing to certain employee groups

Rosenbloom, Chapter 24, Page 655

22
Q

External Factors that Impact Benefit Management Activities

A
  1. General business and (competitive) conditions - benefit programs are increasingly important for attracting and retaining employees. There is a trend toward benefits outsourcing.
  2. (Governmental) Policy - Requires monitoring laws and subsequent regulations, as well as proposed legislation
  3. Workforce (demographic) shifts - greater diversity has led to flexible benefit plan offerings. The aging of the workforce has created greater interest in retirement programs.
  4. New (product) development - must develop a means to evaluate new products and services, and to integrate them into existing plan offerings
  5. New (organizational) structures - must redesign plans to fit the new structures and remain compliant
  6. (Technological) enhancement and innovation - must keep abreast of technological changes and proactively plan the introduction of new technologies

Mnemonic - Competitive Groups Develop Original Products Today

Rosenbloom, Chapter 24, Page 659

23
Q

Reasons Plans are Outsourcing Benefits Administration

A
  1. The complexity of administering benefits
  2. The efficiencies of specialized service providers
  3. The abilities of specialized providers to obtain favorable pricing because of their business volume
  4. The ability of service providers to more readily implement technology and monitor regulations and market trends

Rosenbloom, Chapter 24, Page 667

24
Q

Cafeteria Plan Advantages and Disadvantages to the Employee

A

Advantages

  1. Employees can pay for benefit expenses on a (Tax-Favored) basis
  2. Employees can have more (control) over their health spending

Disadvantages
1. Benefit (elections) must be made prior to the beginning of the year, and the election is (irrevocable)
2 For (FSAs), the use-it-or-lose-it rule means benefit dollars unused at the end of the year are (forfeited)
3. Since there is no FICA tax, participants may see a slight (reduction in social security benefits)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 25, Page 673

25
Q

Cafeteria Plan Advantages and Disadvantages to the Employer

A

Advantages

  1. Employer does not have to pay (FICA) or (FUTA) taxes on contributions
  2. Deferred amounts do not count when determining (Worker’s Comp)ensation premiums
  3. Creates (increased awareness) of the overall cost and value of employee benefits
  4. Helps to (contain health care costs) and prevent wasting benefit dollars on duplicate or unneeded benefits

Disadvantages

  1. The (Large Cost) of administration and operation of a cafeteria plan
  2. If a medical (reimbursement account) is included in the plan, the total amount of the employee’s account must be available at any time in the year
  3. (Adverse selection) can result in increased costs
  4. Plans are subject to complex coverage and (nondiscrimination testing)

Rosenbloom, Chapter 25, Page 674

26
Q

Types of Cafeteria plans in the US

A
  1. Premium Conversion Plans - there are no employer contributions. The plan is offered so that employees can pay for their employee-paid insurance costs on a tax-favored basis
  2. FSAs - These accounts are permitted for medical reimbursements, dependent care, and adoption
  3. Full flex plans - participants can select from a wide range of benefits. The employer selects an amount to give for benefits, which is put towards the cafeteria plan or into an account

Rosenbloom, Chapter 25, Page 676

27
Q

Benefits that can be offered in a cafeteria plan

A

Qualified (pre-tax basis) benefits

  1. Employer-provided accident or health coverage - Includes medical, dental, vision, disability, AD&D, business travel and accident plans, hospital indemnity, cancer policies, Medicare supplements, and reimbursements for FSAs
  2. Individually-owned accident or health policies
  3. Employer-provided group term life insurance coverage (only first $50k is nontaxable)
  4. Employer-provided dependent care assistance
  5. Employer-provided adoption assistance
  6. Contributions to a 401(k) plan
  7. Contributions to an HSA

Permissible benefits (these can be offered, but are taxable)

  1. Cash
  2. Paid vacation days
  3. Group term life insurance in excess of $50k

Rosenbloom, Chapter 25, Page 688

28
Q

Benefits that cannot be offered in a cafeteria plan

A
  1. Contributions to medical savings accounts
  2. Qualified scholarships and education assistance programs
  3. Certain fringe benefits
  4. Qualified LTC insurance (although HSA fund can pay for LTC)
  5. Athletic facilities
  6. De minimis benefits
  7. Dependent life insurance
  8. Employee discounts
  9. Lodging on the business premises
  10. Meals
  11. Moving expense reimbursements
  12. No-additional-cost services
  13. Parking and mass transit reimbursement
  14. Contributions to a college savings account
  15. Legal or financial assistance
  16. 403(b) plans

Rosenbloom, Chapter 25, Page 689

29
Q

Most common employee benefits for small companies

A
  1. Medical - plan design options usually include HMOs, PPOs, POS plans, direct-access POS plans, and CDHPs
  2. Disability income insurance - long-term, short-term, and supplemental
  3. Life and AD&D - for companies with fewer than a group policy
  4. Dental - may not be cost effective, especially for the smallest of employers. But it can be cost-effective for employees because the employer is paying some of the cost and tax savings can result if a pretax spending account is used.
  5. Cafeteria plan (aka Section 125 plan or flex plan) - this can include an FSA to provide tax benefits. Types include:
    a) Premium-only plan - includes only pre-tax premium payments
    b) Full-range cafeteria plan - may offer 3-4 options in each benefit area. Small companies are generally not able to offer these due to cost and lack of availability

Rosenbloom, Chapter 32, Page 870

30
Q

Challenges for small companies offering group medical plans

A
  1. Because small companies are most often (fully insured), they are subject to state-mandated benefits
  2. Because employees are usually in a relatively (small geographic) area, plans must be designed using options available in that area
  3. Small companies may have to provide additional documentation so that insurers can verify the (existence) of the company
  4. Most states do not allow companies to join forces to form larger (purchasing pools) in order to get group discounts

Rosenbloom, Chapter 32, Page 870

31
Q

Reasons a small company should require employee contributions for medical insurance

A
  1. Most employees today are (accustomed) to paying some level of contribution
  2. Requiring a contribution motivates employees who have (other coverage options) to use these options
  3. It is easier to require contributions beginning at the (plan’s inception) than it is to start requiring contributions at a later date
  4. Requiring a contribution can help (avoid legal) problems since the contributions makes it clear who is covered by the plan versus who opted out

Rosenbloom, Chapter 32, Page 874

32
Q

Eligibility and Amounts for the ACA Small Employer Tax Credit

A
  1. To be eligible, employer must:
    a) Have no more than 25 full-time employees (FTEs)
    b) Have average annual wages of $50k or less
    c) Pay at least 50% of the premium for employees
  2. The credit is a percentage of the employer-paid premium. It is on a sliding scale, with the maximum available to employers with fewer than 10 FTEs and average annual wages of less than $25,000. Maximum credit is:
    a) 35% from 2010-2013
    b) 50% beginning in 2014, can only be taken for up to 2 consecutive years and if employees are covered under a state-based exchange

Rosenbloom, Chapter 32, Page 875

33
Q

Types of Flexible Accounts in Canada

A
  1. Health Spending Account (non taxable if requirements are met) - May cover any health care expenses that would be tax deductible under the Income Tax Act, as long as they are not covered by the provincial plan or other private insurance
  2. Personal Account (Taxable) - may cover a wide range of benefits, at the employer’s discretion, such as child care, financial counseling, or even sports equipment or gym memberships
  3. Executive perquisite account (taxation depends on the taxability of the covered expense) - normally administered separately from the flexible plan

McKay, Chapter 7, Page 153

34
Q

Advantages of the Employer offering Flexible Accounts (Canada)

A
  1. Expansion - Expand the types of benefits offered with little or not additional employer cost
  2. Addition - Add a new benefit without subsidizing an expensive coverage area
  3. Marginal - Offer a benefit that might appeal to only a small segment of the employee population
  4. Containment - Contain costs (by setting a defined contribution) while providing employees with flexibility over how funds are spent
  5. Test - Test the appeal of flexible benefits without committing to a full-choice program

McKay, Chapter 7, Page 154

35
Q

Additional Advantages of Health Spending Accounts (Canada)

A

(these are in addition to the main advantages on a separate card)

  1. Deliver (Compensation) tax effectively
  2. Encourage employees to (self-insure) predictable and budgetable expenses (such as vision and dental)
  3. Soften the (impact) of higher employee (Cost-sharing)
  4. (Replace existing coverage), allowing the employer to gain control of future cost increases
  5. Obtain the maximum value from health benefits under the (Quebec tax system)

McCay, Chapter 7, Page 154

36
Q

Requirement for Canadian Health Spending Account reimbursements to be tax-free

A
  1. An employee’s (election) to allocate funds to the account must be made in advance of the plan year and must be irrevocable. An exception is allowed for family status changes.
  2. The plan must require (forfeiture) of any unused account balances, using one of the following methods:
    a) One year rollover of unused balances - funds allocated to the account can be used to reimburse current year expenses or rolled over to next year’s account. Unused amounts are forfeited at the end of the second year.
    b) One year rollover of unpaid claims - roll over unpaid claims from the prior year to be paid by this year’s account balance. Funds remaining at the end of the year are forfeited

McKay, Chapter 7, Page 156

37
Q

Sources of funds for health spending accounts (Canada)

A
  1. New contributions by employer
  2. Employer savings from reducing medical plan costs
  3. Employees directing employer-provided flexible credits to the account
  4. Employees allocating a part of annual bonuses or company savings plan matches to the account

McKay, Chapter 7, Page 166

38
Q

Considerations for designing flexible accounts (Canada)

A
  1. Type of approach - Decide whether to introduce a flexible account and which types of accounts to offer
  2. How will the presence of the account impact other benefit choices?
  3. Funding considerations - for example, decide if contributions to the account will be monthly or annually
  4. Should there be limits on how much the employee can allocate to the flexible account?
  5. How will mid-year changes be handled? - this will vary by account type and the reason for the change (family status change, termination, retirement, or death)
  6. Disposition of funds at year end - funds are forfeited, rolled over, or (for personal or perquisite accounts) paid in cash

McKay, Chapter 7, Page 167

39
Q

Advantages and disadvantages of health spending accounts replacing health and dental plans (Canada)

A

Advantages for the employer

  1. Fixed contribution (gives employer control over benefit cost increases)
  2. Contributions to the account are tax deductible
  3. The accounts are easy to administer and communicate

Advantages for the employees

  1. The accounts provide flexibility as to how the money is spent
  2. Benefits are non-taxable to the employee
  3. Can be used to buy insurance
  4. The employee can decide what expenses are covered

Disadvantages

  1. Benefits are inadequate since there is no insurance
  2. Inequities
    a) Flat contribution per employee means families receive relatively less protection than singles
    b) % of pay contribution means lower-paid employees receive less protection than higher-paid employees
  3. Inflation is borne by the employees

McKay, Chapter 7, Page 173

40
Q

Plan Design Approaches for Controlling Adverse Selection (Canada)

A
  1. Parallel design should be maintained - e.g., vision and ortho at the same coverage in all plans
  2. Delay Full Payment - have lower benefits during a waiting period of 6 to 12 months
  3. Certain coverages can be grouped together - predictable expenses (such as dental or vision) could be grouped with less predictable expenses (such as supplemental medical)
  4. Offer a health spending account instead of insurance - useful for vision and dental
  5. Not allow a large spread between options - could be done by requiring a core coverage level
  6. Test the program with employees - to bring to light potential design weaknesses
  7. Require proof of insurability for increases inc overage
  8. Only allow mid-cycle changes in a life-changing event occurs
  9. Limit the frequency of choice - allow benefit changes only every 2-3 years, instead of annually
  10. Limit the degree of change - restrict changes to one level of coverage per year (staircase rule)

Mnemonic - PD CONTROLL

McKay, Chapter 16, Page 339

41
Q

Pricing Strategies for Controlling Adverse Selection (Canada?)

A
  1. Risk-based pricing - price options in a way that reflects the expected costs of the benefit (e.g., vary rates by age, gender, and smoker status)
  2. Employer subsidization - subsidize prices to encourage broad participation, which will cause a better spread of risk

McKay, Chapter 16, Page 341

42
Q

Options for Spreading the cost of Adverse Selection

A
  1. Load prices of the lesser-valued options - reduces the reward for opting down
  2. Load prices of the highest-valued option - this may cause more employees to opt down
  3. Spread the cost of the adverse selection over the price of all the options

McKay, Chapter 16, page 343

43
Q

Considerations when setting employee contribution levels for an employer health plan

A
  1. Total Compensation Philosophy - this includes how compensation is divided between salary and benefits. Some employers allocate a larger portion of total compensation towards benefits
  2. Benefits budget - many employer budgets are not keeping pace with increases in the cost of health care, so a greater portion of costs must be paid by employees
  3. Benefit Competitiveness - employers must consider the total benefit structure compared to other employers with whom they compete for talent
  4. Collective bargaining - this leads to union groups often having better health coverage and subsidization than non-union groups at the same company
  5. Legislative and regulatory issues - New laws was may cause employers to change benefits or employee contribution levels. For example, the ACA affordability threshold (contributions being no more than 9.5% of household income) resulted in some employers reducing required contributions

GHC-106-16, Page 1

44
Q

Approaches for setting Employee Contribution Levels for an Employer Health Plan

A

Two Basic Approaches

  1. Defined Benefit - Such as setting the employee’s contribution equal to a specified % of premium
  2. Defined Contribution - the employer provides a defined dollar subsidy regardless of plan choice

Other levers (or strategies) the employer may use:

  1. Income-based contributions - require higher contributions from higher-paid employees
  2. Dependent subsidy or spousal surcharge - require a greater level of contribution to cover dependents
  3. Health incentives - implement wellness incentive programs where employees receive a premium reduction for healthy behaviors, such as completing a health risk assessment or receiving preventive services

GHC-106-16, Page 3

45
Q

Common Elements of Private Exchanges

A
  1. Employee (Choice) - Private exchanges often offer more plan design optiosn than traditional employer-sponsored plans
  2. Employer (Subsidies) - The employer typically makes a defined contribution
  3. (Ancillary) product offerings - products such as dental and vision are often offered alongside medical and pharmacy benefits
  4. (Online) enrollment and decision-making tools - these tools allow members to evaluate their health care needs, understand their employer’s subsidy, and elect benefits that meet their needs
  5. Benefits (Administration) - Most private exchanges offer end-to-end benefits administration, including enrollment, eligibility, customer service, and billing

Mnemonic - So…. ACA!

HW: Private Exchanges, Page 12

46
Q

Advantages and Disadvantages of Private Exchanges

A

Advantages:

  1. Increased employee choice
  2. Cost-savings potential from increased competition
  3. Increased consumerism from members buying-down benefits as a result of a transparent defined-contribution approach
  4. Robust online decision-support tools and customer service
  5. Benefits administration simplification
  6. Shift of financial and regulatory risks (for fully-insured models)
  7. Cost predictability (for fully-insured models)
  8. Improved cost transparency

Disadvantages:

  1. Additional expenses for exchange operator financing
  2. Less control over plan design, clinical management, and member outreach
  3. The need for the employer to increase the defined-contribution amount over time
  4. Other member concerns, such as loss of plan sponsor support and less generous benefits

HW: Private Exchanges, Page 13

47
Q

Considerations for determining the employer’s optimal defined-contribution amount for a private exchange

A
  1. Current funding approach - what is the employer’s current philosophy around subsidies and how does it compare to a defined-contribution approach?
  2. Variations by coverage tier - does the employer want to subsidize dependents at a different level than the employee?
  3. Member impact - how does the impact the member payroll contributions and what sort of dissatisfaction could arise?
  4. Financial goals - does this change meet the employer’s financial goals?
  5. Competitive pressures - how does the subsidy compare to the benefits provided by other organizations that compete for similar talent?

HW: Private Exchanges, Page 15