insurance Wellness is directly proportionate to your health insurance By www.banknetindia.com Published On :: How your wellness is directly proportionate to your health insurance premium? Full Article
insurance AES refinances solar portfolio with help of insurance against underperformance By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-04-11T15:41:03Z kWh Analytics, a leader in solar risk management, this week announced the first refinancing supported by the Solar Revenue Put. The portfolio of 41 projects, owned by AES, totaling approximately 28 MW DC of capacity is located in Arizona and Massachusetts. The portfolio is being funded by Silicon Valley Bank and a Japanese financial services company. Swiss Re Corporate Solutions, a leading global corporate insurer, is providing capacity for the Solar Revenue Put. Full Article Rooftop News Utility Scale C&I Solar
insurance MiFID II and Insurance Products By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2014-05-20 The European Commission (Commission), Parliament and the Council have now reached agreement on the texts for the Recast Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (... Full Article
insurance IPO Update: TRX Insurance Proposes IPO Terms By seekingalpha.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 15:54:44 -0400 Full Article TIRX Donovan Jones
insurance Coronavirus - Insurance Claims: Covid-19 Protocol - UK By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-03-25 In these extraordinary times a number of insurers and “claimant” law firms have agreed a protocol that should avoid unnecessary procedural problems. The full and commendably concise text can be found here. In summary, signatories t... Full Article
insurance Insurance horizon scanner - Summer 2019 By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2019-09-05 Please click here to download our insurance summer horizon scanning booklet. The booklet summarises key insurance related legal and regulatory changes expected over the next 18 months to 2 years, as well as providing electronic links t... Full Article
insurance Coronavirus - losses and liabilities for insurance industry By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-03-03 Businesses across the world are suffering a variety of different losses as a result of the spread of, and public reaction to, coronavirus. The answer to the question of whether these losses will be covered by your insurance policies is, as wit... Full Article
insurance Coronavirus FCA expectations of general insurance firms - UK By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-03-20 The FCA has published information on its expectations of general insurance firms in relation to their treatment of consumers during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. The FCA has also published information for consumers on what they sho... Full Article
insurance Coronavirus FCA expectations of general insurance firms - UK By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-03-20 The FCA has published information on its expectations of general insurance firms in relation to their treatment of consumers during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. The FCA has also published information for consumers on what they sho... Full Article
insurance Coronavirus draft FCA guidance for the Insurance industry customers in temporary financial difficulty and product value - UK By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-05-04 On 1 May, the FCA issued two sets of draft guidance which will be important reading for all firms involved in insurance arrangements and particularly insurers, intermediaries and premium finance lenders. As it considers that the delay involved in co... Full Article
insurance Shipping: Supreme Court's decision in Zurich Insurance PLC UK Branch v International Energy Group Limited By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2015-08-12 The Supreme Court’s decision in Zurich Insurance PLC UK Branch v International Energy Group Limited provides some clarity to the position of Clubs who face long-tail work related illness claims where multiple employers or insurers were involve... Full Article
insurance Closing the GAP: Guaranteed Asset Protection insurance - competition remedy By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2015-06-22 New rules in the FCA’s policy statement on Guaranteed Asset Protection (GAP) insurance (PS15/13) are about to change the way GAP insurance sold alongside the sale of a motor vehicle (add-on GAP Insurance) is sold to both consumers and commerci... Full Article
insurance Shipping and International Trade: what the Insurance Act 2015 means for you By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2016-06-30 On 12 August this year, the Insurance Act 2015 will introduce the most significant changes to insurance law in 110 years how will it affect the shipping industry? The Act applies to all insurance policies taken out by businesses which are subject ... Full Article
insurance Stepping into the breach - Managing cyber risks with insurance By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2019-06-26 ... Full Article
insurance FCAs Market Study into General Insurance Pricing Practices: Pricing interventions proposed to tackle competition concerns By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2019-10-09 The FCA has published its interim report in relation to its market study into how general insurance firms charge their customers for home and motor insurance (Interim Report). The FCA has provisionally found that the market is not working well for ... Full Article
insurance FCA review of outsourcing in the life insurance sector By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-04-14 Background and scope of the review On 4th March, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published the findings of its desktop review of outsourcing in the life insurance sector. The review forms part of the FCA’s broader consultation and propos... Full Article
insurance Coronavirus Dear CEO letter on SME business interruption insurance - UK By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-04-21 After previously setting out its expectations of general insurance firms in relation to their treatment of consumers during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, on 15 April 2020 the UK Financial Regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), ... Full Article
insurance Corona signifies importance of insurance By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 06:00:00 +0500 Islamabad: Chairman of the United International Group, Mian Shahid said Friday that the current economic meltdown because of coronavirus may impact the business volumes of the industry, which are yet to be ascertained.Speaking on the development, Mian Shahid said that we have planned to generate... Full Article
insurance Fear, sticker shock over health insurance greet laid-off workers By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 13:43:59 -0400 If you were laid off in April, the health insurance from your job may stop at the end of the month. Then what? Full Article PersonalFinance
insurance Obamacare May Help Many Laid-Off Workers Get Health Insurance By www.medicinenet.com Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 00:00:00 PDT Title: Obamacare May Help Many Laid-Off Workers Get Health InsuranceCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/29/2020 12:00:00 AMLast Editorial Review: 4/30/2020 12:00:00 AM Full Article
insurance Thousands of Health Care Workers Lack Insurance If COVID-19 Strikes: Study By www.medicinenet.com Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 00:00:00 PDT Title: Thousands of Health Care Workers Lack Insurance If COVID-19 Strikes: StudyCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/30/2020 12:00:00 AMLast Editorial Review: 5/1/2020 12:00:00 AM Full Article
insurance ACA Medicaid Expansion and Insurance Coverage Among New Mothers Living in Poverty By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T01:00:46-07:00 BACKGROUND: Medicaid plays a critical role during the perinatal period, but pregnancy-related Medicaid eligibility only extends for 60 days post partum. In 2014, the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) Medicaid expansions increased adult Medicaid eligibility to 138% of the federal poverty level in participating states, allowing eligible new mothers to remain covered after pregnancy-related coverage expires. We investigate the impact of ACA Medicaid expansions on insurance coverage among new mothers living in poverty. METHODS: We define new mothers living in poverty as women ages 19 to 44 with incomes below the federal poverty level who report giving birth in the past 12 months. We use 2010–2017 American Community Survey data and a difference-in-differences approach using parental Medicaid-eligibility thresholds to estimate the effect of ACA Medicaid expansions on insurance coverage among poor new mothers. RESULTS: A 100-percentage-point increase in parental Medicaid-eligibility is associated with an 8.8-percentage-point decrease (P < .001) in uninsurance, a 13.2-percentage-point increase (P < .001) in Medicaid coverage, and a 4.4-percentage-point decrease in private or other coverage (P = .001) among poor new mothers. The average increase in Medicaid eligibility is associated with a 28% decrease in uninsurance, a 13% increase in Medicaid coverage, and an 18% decline in private or other insurance among poor new mothers in expansion states. However, in 2017, there were ~142 000 remaining uninsured, poor new mothers. CONCLUSIONS: ACA Medicaid expansions are associated with increased Medicaid coverage and reduced uninsurance among poor new mothers. Opportunities remain for expansion and nonexpansion states to increase insurance coverage among new mothers living in poverty. Full Article
insurance Underweight Increases the Risk of End-Stage Renal Diseases for Type 2 Diabetes in Korean Population: Data From the National Health Insurance Service Health Checkups 2009-2017 By care.diabetesjournals.org Published On :: 2020-04-20T12:00:33-07:00 OBJECTIVE There is a controversy over the association between obesity and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in people with or without type 2 diabetes; therefore, we examined the effect of BMI on the risk of ESRD according to glycemic status in the Korean population. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS The study monitored 9,969,848 participants who underwent a National Health Insurance Service health checkup in 2009 from baseline to the date of diagnosis of ESRD during a follow-up period of ~8.2 years. Obesity was categorized by World Health Organization recommendations for Asian populations, and glycemic status was categorized into the following five groups: normal, impaired fasting glucose (IFG), newly diagnosed diabetes, diabetes <5 years, and diabetes ≥5 years. RESULTS Underweight was associated with a higher risk of ESRD in all participants after adjustment for all covariates. In the groups with IFG, newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes, diabetes duration <5 years, and diabetes ≥5 years, the hazard ratio (HR) of the underweight group increased with worsening glycemic status (HR 1.431 for IFG, 2.114 for newly diagnosed diabetes, 4.351 for diabetes <5 years, and 6.397 for diabetes ≥5 years), using normal weight with normal fasting glucose as a reference. The adjusted HRs for ESRD were also the highest in the sustained underweight group regardless of the presence of type 2 diabetes (HR 1.606 for nondiabetes and 2.14 for diabetes). CONCLUSIONS Underweight showed more increased HR of ESRD according to glycemic status and diabetes duration in the Korean population. These associations also persisted in the group with sustained BMI during the study period. Full Article
insurance State Pension top up: Can you top up missed National Insurance contributions? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:12:00 +0100 STATE PENSIONS are calculated by National Insurance contributions - but can you top up any missed years? Full Article
insurance More than £1.2bn in coronavirus insurance payouts expected By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-25T09:36:00Z Full Article
insurance Nearly half of all UK insurance companies stop selling travel insurance amid coronavirus crisis By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-03-31T15:33:00Z Many insurers either no longer sell travel insurance or have amended existing policies, a Which? report has found Full Article
insurance KRPA urges state govt to bring pharmacists under insurance cover on lines of healthcare workers engaged in treating COVID─19 patients By pharmabiz.com Published On :: 20200505080001 Full Article
insurance AIOCD urges govt to provide insurance cover to chemists to strengthen fight against COVID─19 By pharmabiz.com Published On :: 20200507080001 Full Article
insurance Justice Department Settles Allegations of Religion Discrimination Against Guideone Mutual Insurance Co. By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 18 Sep 2009 19:19:17 EDT The Department announced a settlement that, pending court approval, will resolve allegations that the GuideOne Mutual Insurance Company and two authorized agents discriminated because of religion when they advertised special benefits and discounts only to “churchgoers” and “persons of faith.” Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Michigan Attorney and Client Sentenced for Tax Crimes in Connection with a Fraudulent Insurance Tax Shelter By www.justice.gov Published On :: Mon, 2 Nov 2009 15:51:15 EST John A. Campbell, a resident of Portage, Mich., was sentenced to 60 months in prison today by the Honorable Janet T. Neff of the U.S. District Court in the Western District of Michigan for conspiring to defraud the United States. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance General Reinsurance Corporation Enters into Agreement Resolving Its Role in Fraudulent Reinsurance Transaction with AIG By www.justice.gov Published On :: Wed, 20 Jan 2010 13:01:34 EST General Re has admitted that its most senior management engaged in a scheme to falsely inflate AIG’s reported loss reserves, a key indicator of financial health to insurance industry analysts and investors. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Accountant for Former Arizona Congressman Convicted of Embezzling Insurance Premiums and Conspiracy By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 9 Jul 2010 15:03:13 EDT Dwayne Lequire, 51, of Elgin, Ariz., was found guilty by a federal jury in Tucson, Ariz., late yesterday of eight counts of embezzling insurance premiums and one count of conspiracy. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Justice Department Sues Nation’s Largest Mortgage Insurance Provider for Discrimination Against Women on Paid Maternity Leave By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 5 Jul 2011 18:45:43 EDT The Justice Department announced today that it has sued the Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation (MGIC), the nation’s largest mortgage insurance company, and two of its underwriters, Elgina Cunningham and Kelly Kane, for violating the Fair Housing Act by discriminating against women on paid maternity leave. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Justice Department Requires Divestiture to Preserve Health-Insurance Competition in Montana By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 8 Nov 2011 16:42:29 EST The Department of Justice will require New West Health Services Inc. to sell the majority of its commercial health-insurance business to a third-party buyer and provide additional relief in order to preserve health-insurance competition in Montana. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Arrested on Tax Charges By www.justice.gov Published On :: Wed, 30 Nov 2011 16:33:11 EST William A. Herder of Mifflin Township, Ohio, was arrested today on federal tax charges. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Iowa Insurance Agent to Pay US to Resolve False Claims Allegations on the Federal Crop Insurance Program By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 9 Dec 2011 15:11:36 EST Russell Hawley and Hawley Insurance Inc. of Vail, Iowa, have agreed to pay the United States $834,897.50 to settle allegations that they caused false claims to be submitted to the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Pleads Guilty to Failing to File Income Tax Returns By www.justice.gov Published On :: Mon, 16 Apr 2012 17:50:09 EDT Thomas Mitchell of Mansfield, Ohio pleaded guilty before United States District Judge George J. Limbert of the Northern District of Ohio to criminal information charging him with willfully failing to file an income tax return with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Justice Department and IRS announced today. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Justice Department Reaches Settlement with Nation’s Largest Mortgage Insurance Provider to Resolve Allegations of Discrimination Against Women on Maternity Leave By www.justice.gov Published On :: Mon, 30 Apr 2012 16:50:51 EDT The Department of Justice announced today that it has settled its lawsuit against the Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation (MGIC) for discriminating against women on maternity leave in violation of the Fair Housing Act. This settlement is the department’s first involving discrimination against women and families in mortgage insurance. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Guilty of Tax Charges By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 22 May 2012 10:07:51 EDT A jury convicted William A. Herder of Richland County, Ohio, yesterday on federal tax charges, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Brooklyn Doctor Convicted for Role in Medicare and Private Insurance Fraud Scheme By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 15 Jun 2012 17:23:40 EDT A Brooklyn board-certified colorectal surgeon, who owned and operated a New York medical clinic, was convicted for his role in a fraud scheme that billed Medicare and numerous private insurance companies for surgeries and other complex medical procedures that were never performed. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Indicted for Impairing and Impeding the IRS By www.justice.gov Published On :: Mon, 25 Jun 2012 16:47:15 EDT William R. Herder of Bellville, Ohio, was arrested today on federal tax charges, Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Tax Division Kathryn Keneally, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio Stephen M. Dettelbach and Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Criminal Investigation, Cincinnati Field Office, Darryl K. Williams announced. On June 19, 2012, a federal grand jury sitting in Cleveland returned an indictment against Herder, charging him with corruptly endeavoring to impair and impede the due administration of the Internal Revenue laws, failure to file tax returns, failure to pay taxes, and structuring transactions to evade currency reporting requirements. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Sentenced to 37 Months in Prison for Tax Evasion By www.justice.gov Published On :: Tue, 16 Oct 2012 17:16:58 EDT A federal judge today sentenced William A. Herder of Richland County, Ohio, to 37 months in prison for tax crimes, the Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced. U.S. District Judge Sara Lioi also ordered Herder to pay restitution to the IRS. On May 21, 2012, an Akron, Ohio, jury convicted Herder on all counts of an indictment that charged Herder with one count of tax evasion, one count of corruptly endeavoring to obstruct the administration of the Internal Revenue laws and five counts of willful failure to file tax returns. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Pleads Guilty to Tax Obstruction and Currency Structuring By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 26 Oct 2012 10:25:25 EDT William R. Herder of Bellville, Ohio, pleaded guilty yesterday to corruptly endeavoring to obstruct the administration of the tax laws and currency structuring, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Tax Division Kathryn Keneally, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio Stephen M. Dettelbach and Special Agent in Charge, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) - Criminal Investigation, Cincinnati Field Office, Darryl K. Williams announced. Herder was previously indicted in June of this year. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Ohio Insurance Salesman Sentenced to 20 Months in Prison for Tax Obstruction and Currency Structuring By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 24 Jan 2013 13:20:15 EST A federal judge in Cleveland today sentenced William R. Herder of Bellville, Ohio, to 20 months in prison for tax crimes. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Obama Administration Announces a Coordinated Effort to Protect Consumers by Preventing and Detecting Potential Fraud in the Health Insurance Marketplace By www.justice.gov Published On :: Wed, 18 Sep 2013 12:10:18 EDT Attorney General Eric Holder, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chairwoman Edith Ramirez met at the White House to kick off a comprehensive interagency initiative to prevent, protect against, and where necessary prosecute consumer fraud and privacy violations in the Health Insurance Marketplace. Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Connecticut Insurance Salesman Indicted on Tax Charges By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 28 Aug 2014 14:01:46 EDT A Newington, Connecticut, man was indicted last Thursday by a grand jury in the District of Connecticut for one count of corruptly interfering with the due administration of the internal revenue laws, two counts of filing false tax returns and five counts of willfully failing to file tax returns, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced Full Article OPA Press Releases
insurance Chinese tax platform Huisuanzhang snags $60m round led by Sunshine Insurance By www.dealstreetasia.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 03:25:55 +0000 Returning investors Xiaomi Corporation and Gaocheng Capital also participated in the fresh round. The post Chinese tax platform Huisuanzhang snags $60m round led by Sunshine Insurance appeared first on DealStreetAsia. Full Article gaocheng capital Huisuanzhang Sunshine Insurance Group Xiaomi Corporation
insurance A more accurate incidence of acute spinal cord injury in South Korea can be estimated by the national health insurance system By feeds.nature.com Published On :: 2020-04-30 Full Article
insurance Disability insurance: The Way Forward By webfeeds.brookings.edu Published On :: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 08:30:00 -0400 Editor’s note: The remarks below were delivered to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget on release of their report on the SSDI Solutions Initiative. I want to thank Marc Goldwein for inviting me to join you for today’s event. We all owe thanks to Jim McCrery and Earl Pomeroy for devoting themselves to the SSDI Solutions Initiative, to the staff of CFRB who backed them up, and most of all to the scholars and practitioners who wrote the many papers that comprise this effort. This is the sort of practical, problem-solving enterprise that this town needs more of. So, to all involved in this effort, ‘hats off’ and ‘please, don’t stop now.’ The challenge of improving how public policy helps people with disabilities seemed urgent last year. Depletion of the Social Security Disability Insurance trust loomed. Fears of exploding DI benefit rolls were widespread and intense. Congress has now taken steps that delay projected depletion until 2022. Meticulous work by Jeffrey Liebman suggests that Disability Insurance rolls have peaked and will start falling. The Technical Panel appointed by the Social Security Advisory Board, concurred in its 2015 report. With such ‘good’ news, it is all too easy to let attention drift to other seemingly more pressing items. But trust fund depletion and growing beneficiary rolls are not the most important reasons why policymakers should be focusing on these programs. The primary reason is that the design and administration of disability programs can be improved with benefit to taxpayers and to people with disabilities alike. And while 2022 seems a long time off, doing the research called for in the SSDI Solutions Initiative will take all of that time and more. So, it is time to get to work, not to relax. Before going any further, I must make a disclaimer. I was invited to talk here as chair of the Social Security Advisory Board. Everything I am going to say from now on will reflect only my personal views, not those of the other members or staff of the SSAB except where the Board has spoken as a group. The same disclaimer applies to the trustees, officers, and other staff of the Brookings Institution. Blame me, not them. Let me start with an analogy. We economists like indices. Years ago, the late Arthur Okun came up with an index to measure how much pain the economy was inflicting on people. It was a simple index, just the sum of inflation and the unemployment rate. Okun called it the ‘misery index.’ I suggest a ‘policy misery index’—a measure of the grief that a policy problem causes us. It is the sum of a problem’s importance and difficulty. Never mind that neither ‘importance’ nor ‘difficulty’ is quantifiable. Designing and administering interventions intended to improve the lives of people with disabilities has to be at or near the top of the policy misery index. Those who have worked on disability know what I mean. Programs for people with disabilities are hugely important and miserably hard to design and administer well. That would be true even if legislators were writing afresh on a blank legislative sheet. That they must cope with a deeply entrenched program about which analysts disagree and on which many people depend makes the problems many times more challenging. I’m going to run through some of the reasons why designing and administering benefits for people determined to be disabled is so difficult. Some may be obvious, even banal, to the highly informed group here today. And you will doubtless think of reasons I omit. First, the concept of disability, in the sense of a diminished capacity to work, has no clear meaning, the SSA definition of disability notwithstanding. We can define impairments. Some are so severe that work or, indeed, any other form of self-support seems impossible. But even among those with severe impairments, some people work for pay, and some don’t. That doesn’t mean that if someone with a given impairment works, everyone with that same impairment could work if they tried hard enough. It means that physical or mental impairments incompletely identify those for whom work is not a reasonable expectation. The possibility of work depends on the availability of jobs, of services to support work effort, and of a host of personal characteristics, including functional capacities, intelligence, and grit. That is not how the current disability determination process works. It considers the availability of jobs in the national, not the local, economy. It ignores the availability of work supports or accommodations by potential employers. Whatever eligibility criteria one may establish for benefits, some people who really can’t work, or can’t earn enough to support themselves, will be denied benefits. And some will be awarded benefits who could work. Good program design helps keep those numbers down. Good administration helps at least as much as, and maybe more than, program design. But there is no way to reduce the number of improper awards and improper denials to zero. Second, the causes of disability are many and varied. Again, this observation is obvious, almost banal. Genetic inheritance, accidents and injuries, wear and tear from hard physical labor, and normal aging all create different needs for assistance. These facts mean that people deemed unable to work have different needs. They constitute distinct interest groups, each seeking support, but not necessarily of the same kind. These groups sometimes compete with each other for always-limited resources. And that competition means that the politics of disability benefits are, shall we say, interesting. Third, the design of programs to help people deemed unable to work is important and difficult. Moral hazard is endemic. Providing needed support and services is an act of compassion and decency. The goal is to provide such support and services while preserving incentives to work and to controlling costs borne by taxpayers. But preserving work incentives is only part of the challenge. The capacity to work is continuous, not binary. Training and a wide and diverse range of services can help people perform activities of daily living and work. Because resources are scarce, policy makers and administrators have to sort out who should get those services. Should it be those who are neediest? Those who are most likely to recover full capacities? Triage is inescapable. It is technically difficult. And it is always ethically fraught. Designing disability benefit programs is hard. But administering them well is just as important and at least as difficult. These statements may also be obvious to those who here today. But recent legislation and administrative appropriations raise doubts about whether they are obvious to or accepted by some members of Congress. Let’s start with program design. We can all agree, I think, that incentives matter. If benefits ceased at the first dollar earned, few who come on the rolls would ever try to work. So, Congress, for many years, has allowed beneficiaries to earn any amount for a brief period and small amounts indefinitely without losing eligibility. Under current law, there is a benefit cliff. If—after a trial work period—beneficiaries earn even $1 more than what is called substantial gainful activity, $1,130 in 2016, their benefit checks stop. They retain eligibility for health coverage for a while even after they leave the rolls. And for an extended period they may regain cash and health benefits without delay if their earnings decline. Members of Congress have long been interested in whether a more gradual phase-out of benefits as earnings rise might encourage work. Various aspects of the current Disability Insurance program reflect Congress’s desire to encourage work. The so-called Benefit Offset National Demonstration—or BOND—was designed to test the impact on labor supply by DI beneficiaries of one formula—replacing the “cliff” with a gradual reduction in benefits: $1 of benefit last for each $2 of earnings above the Substantial Gainful Activity level. Alas, there were problems with that demonstration. It tested only one offset scenario – one starting point and one rate. So, there could be no way of knowing whether a 2-for-1 offset was the best way to encourage work. And then there was the uncomfortable fact that, at the time of the last evaluation, out of 79,440 study participants only 21 experienced the offset. So there was no way of telling much of anything, other than that few people had worked enough to experience the offset. Nor was the cause of non-response obvious. It is not clear how many demonstration participants even understood what was on offer. Unsurprisingly, members of Congress interested in promoting work among DI recipients asked SSA to revisit the issue. The 2015 DI legislation mandates a new demonstration, christened the Promoting Opportunity Demonstration, or POD. POD uses the same 2 for 1 offset rate that BOND did, but the offset starts at an earnings level at or below earnings of $810 a month in 2016—which is well below the earnings at which the BOND phase-out began. Unfortunately, as Kathleen Romig has pointed out in an excellent paper for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, this demonstration is unlikely to yield useful results. Only a very few atypical DI beneficiaries are likely to find it in their interest to participate in the demonstration, fewer even than in the BOND. That is because the POD offset begins at lower earnings than the BOND offset did. In addition, participants in POD sacrifice the right under current law that permits people receiving disability benefits to earn any amount for 9 months of working without losing any benefits. Furthermore, the 2015 law stipulated that no Disability Insurance beneficiary could be required to participate in the demonstration or, having agreed to participate, forced to remain in the demonstration. Thus, few people are likely to respond to the POD or to remain in it. There is a small group to whom POD will be very attractive—those few DI recipients who retain a lot of earning capacity. The POD will allow them to retain DI coverage until their earnings are quite high. For example, a person receiving a $2,000 monthly benefit—well above the average, to be sure, but well below the maximum—would remain eligible for some benefits until his or her annual earnings exceeded $57,700. I don’t know about you, but I doubt that Congress would favorably consider permanent law of this sort. Not only would those participating be a thin and quite unrepresentative sample of DI beneficiaries in general, or even of those with some earning capacity, but selection bias resulting from the opportunity to opt out at any time would destroy the external validity of any statistical results. Let me be clear. My comments on POD, the demonstration mandated in the 2015 legislation, are not meant to denigrate the need for, or the importance of, research on how to encourage work by DI recipients, especially those for whom financial independence is plausible. On the contrary, as I said at the outset, research is desperately needed on this issue, as well as many others. It is not yet too late to authorize a research design with a better chance of producing useful results. But it will be too late soon. Fielding demonstrations takes time: to solicit bids from contractors, for contractors to formulate bids, for government boards to select the best one, for contractors to enroll participants, for contractors to administer the demonstration, and for analysts to process the data generated by the demonstrations. That process will take all the time available between now and 2021 or 2022 when the DI trust fund will again demand attention. It will take a good deal more time than that to address the formidable and intriguing research agenda of SSDI Solutions Initiative. I should like to conclude with plugs for two initiatives to which the Social Security Advisory Board has been giving some attention. It takes too long for disability insurance applicants to have their cases decided. Perhaps the whole determination process should be redesigned. One of the CFRB papers proposes just that. But until that happens, it is vital to shorten the unconscionable delays separating initial denials and reconsideration from hearings before administrative law judges to which applicants are legally entitled. Procedural reforms in the hearing process might help. More ALJs surely will. The 2015 budget act requires the Office of Personnel Management to take steps that will help increase the number of ALJs hired. I believe that the new director, Beth Colbert, is committed to reforms. But it is very hard to change legal interpretations that have hampered hiring for years and the sluggish bureaucratic culture that fostered them. So, the jury is out on whether OPM can deliver. In a recent op-ed in Politico, Lanhee Chen, a Republican member of the SSAB, and I jointly endorsed urged Congress to be ready, if OPM fails to deliver on more and better lists of ALJ candidates and streamlined procedures for their appointment, to move the ALJ examination authority to another federal organization, such as the Administrative Conference of the United States. Lastly, there is a facet of income support policy that we on the SSAB all agree merits much more attention than it has received. Just last month, the SSAB released a paper entitled Representative Payees: A Call to Action. More than eight million beneficiaries have been deemed incapable of managing $77 billion in benefits that the Social Security Administration provided them in 2014. We believe that serious concern is warranted about all aspects of the representative payee program—how this infringement of personal autonomy is found to be necessary, how payees are selected, and how payee performance is monitored. Management of representative payees is a particular challenge for the Social Security Administration. Its primary job is to pay cash benefits in the right amount to the right person at the right time. SSA does that job at rock-bottom costs and with remarkable accuracy. It is handing rapidly rising workloads with budgets that have barely risen. SSA is neither designed nor staffed to provide social services. Yet determining the need for, selecting, and monitoring representative payees is a social service function. As the Baby Boom ages, the number of people needing help in administering cash benefits from the Social Security Administration—and from other agencies such as the Veterans Administration—will grow. So will the number needing help in making informed choices under Medicare and Medicaid. The SSAB is determined to look into this challenge and to make constructive suggestions. We are just beginning and invite others to join in studying what I have called “the most important problem the public has never heard of.” Living with disabilities today is markedly different from what it was in 1956 when the Disability Insurance program began. Yet, the DI program has changed little. Beneficiaries and taxpayers are pay heavily the failure of public policy to apply what has been learned over the past six decades about health, disability, function, and work. I hope that SSA and Congress will use well the time until it next must legislate on Disability Insurance. The DI rolls are stabilizing. The economy has grown steadily since the Great Recession. Congress has reinstated demonstration authority. With adequate funding for research and testing, the SSA can rebuild its research capability. Along with the external research community, it can identify what works and help Congress improve the DI program for beneficiaries and taxpayers alike. The SSDI Solutions Initiative is a fine roadmap. Authors Henry J. Aaron Publication: Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget Image Source: © Max Whittaker / Reuters Full Article