Employers Not Planning to Drop Health Care Benefits

October 23, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) Employers say it will be business as usual in their approaches to health benefits, as they plan for new developments in the coming year due to the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

According to a survey by the Midwest Business Group on Health (MBGH) in collaboration with The Benfield Group, for the next few years, there is little indication that employers plan to drop health care coverage and provide employees a set amount to buy health care coverage elsewhere.   

In preparation for the 2018 40% excise tax on high cost “Cadillac” plans, 31% of employers indicated they plan to reduce their benefits between 2014 and 2016, with 41% responding they will do so in 2017 or 2018.   

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Only 9% of employers indicated they plan to participate in state health insurance exchanges when they begin. While there is interest in private health insurance exchanges, at this time only 4% believe they will use these for active employee coverage in 2014 to 2016, while 11% indicated they will move toward private exchanges for post-65 retirees.

Fifty-seven percent of respondents currently offer consumer directed health plans (CDHP), such as health savings accounts and health reimbursement accounts, as a plan option and indicated that this would increase to 62% in 2013 and 71% through 2018. All large-size employers indicated they will offer CDHPs by 2018. More than one-quarter (29%) of all employers will make their CDHP offering their only plan available to employees by 2018.   

More than half (52%) of employers plan to make vision and/or dental coverage voluntary benefits in 2013, increasing to 55% by 2017 to 2018.  

"Employers still believe that health benefits are vital to attract talented employees and maintain a productive work force," says Scott Thompson, president of the health care practice at The Benfield Group. "This research found that most employers, especially those with more than 200 employees, will not drop employee benefit coverage in the foreseeable future. Instead, they'll control costs in other ways like implementing CDHPs, basing premium contributions on the number of dependents covered (unit pricing) and reducing benefits to avoid the Cadillac tax. Employers will continue to be active purchasers of health care."  

The online survey was conducted in August 2012 with 111 respondents from across the U.S. in a variety of industries representing self-insured (77%) and fully-insured (23%) employers.

DC Plans Could Use Some DB Plan Strategies

October 23, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – A study suggests defined contribution (DC) plans could improve retirement outcomes for participants by adopting practices developed by defined benefit (DB) plans and other institutional investors.

“The Path Forward: Importing Winning DB Strategies into DC Plans,” the third installment of Northern Trust’s research series on the future of DC plans, pinpoints best practices from investment models used by pension plans, endowments and foundations, and identifies how they can be implemented by DC plans to improve retirement outcomes for participants. Executing a more disciplined investment approach, designing more efficient fee structures and encouraging participants to maintain their assets in the plan structure after retirement would all help to improve results in DC plans, Northern Trust found, but the survey also identified hurdles to implementing these practices, including resistance to perceived changes to benefits and concerns over fiduciary liability.   

Nearly 70% of plan sponsors interviewed are optimistic that DC plans are capable of providing sufficient retirement income to working Americans. However, respondents also believe that DC plans could improve their chances of participant success by importing winning strategies from institutional investors, including: 

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  • Investment Approach: Establish a streamlined investment menu that includes simplified pre-mixed default options, access to alternatives and cost effective investment strategies.  
  • Fee Structure: Minimize overall participant cost by utilizing institutional investment vehicles, maximizing the plan scale, conducting regular fee benchmarking and reducing or eliminating revenue sharing. 
  • Governance: Dedicate appropriate resources and attention in proportion to DC assets invested, create efficient decisionmaking process and be mindful of fiduciary liability.  
  • Decumulation: Enhance the plan’s decumulation strategy by providing education about distribution options, offering appropriate asset preservation and income generating investment products, and maintaining an ongoing dialogue with retirees.  
  • Communication: Maintain lifetime engagement with participants through personalized communications clearly focused on specific outcomes. 

The survey found some gaps between identification and implementation of these best practices. While all consultants surveyed say they recommend a limit of 15 investment options to help participants make better choices, nearly half (46%) of plan sponsors maintain 16 to 25 options and 8% offer more than 25 options.   

Three-quarters of plan sponsors do not offer access to alternative asset classes. Mutual funds are the most popular investment vehicle, used by 79% of DC plan sponsors surveyed. However, the shift to collective investment trusts (CITs) is under way, with 73% of participating DC plan sponsors offering CITs and many remaining plans considering them for future use.   

As participants enter retirement, DC plans could improve outcomes by maintaining a relationship with retirees, so they continue to get the benefits of institutional pricing and professional oversight of investment options in the plan. Yet the survey found a significant portion of retirees take lump-sum payouts from their DC plans, and only 31% of plan sponsors encourage participants to keep their assets in the plan. Nearly two-thirds (65%) of plan sponsors offer income planning tools to retirees, and more than half (58%) offer income education and advice.   

Regarding issues from limiting investment options to keeping retirees in the DC plans, survey respondents identified potential roadblocks to adoption of strategies from defined benefit plans and other institutional investors. Plan sponsors cited resistance from participants, who tend to view any change as a loss of benefits. Concern about fiduciary liability can also be an impediment, although plan sponsors and consultants have differing views on its impact. While 66% of consultants said their plan sponsor clients voice concerns about fiduciary liabilities related to investment changes in their DC plan, only 25% of plan sponsor respondents said it is a significant concern.   

The research report can be found at http://www.northerntrust.com/pointofview/path-forward/index.html.

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