Valuation of Fringe Benefits
Employers provide
employees with a variety of benefits as part of an employee's
total compensation package. Typical fringe benefits offered by
employers include heath insurance and retirement plans. Health
insurance coverage may include medical, dental, prescription and
vision care. Likewise, retirement plans could consist of a
pension plan (defined benefit or defined contribution) and/or
401(k) plan. The importance of fringe benefits in relation to an
employee's earnings warrants that they be properly valued in
tort litigation.
Forensic economists
value a worker's fringe benefit package based on either the
employer's cost for the benefits or the replacement cost
assuming the worker was to secure the identical benefits,
privately. When a choice is possible, the replacement cost is
the preferred measure of calculating the economic loss of
benefits. The intention is to make the claimant
"whole" in the post-judgment situation. When the
economic value of lost benefits has been determined, it may be
valued separately or converted to a percentage of earnings.
Valuation
Pitfalls
There are several
pitfalls that, if not avoided, could result in a significant
overstatement or understatement of fringe benefits.
# Wage vs.
Non-Wage Benefits
It is important to
differentiate between wage and other fringe benefits when
valuing an employee's fringe benefit package. Wage benefits
include vacation pay, sick pay and bonuses. Because these wage
components are normally reflected in an employee's gross
earnings (i.e., W-2 Wage and Tax Statement) it would be
double-counting to again include them as a component of fringe
benefits.
# Past vs.
Future Years
A damages report
authored by a forensic economist, or trial testimony by an
economist, necessarily must refer to past losses (from the date
of the incident to the present), and future losses (continuing
losses in future years). By its very nature, insurance only has
value prospectively, i.e., individuals obtain insurance in order
to cope with some future potentiality. Thus, it would not
be logical to count the value of lost insurance as past of past
fringe benefits. However, an individual's out-of-pocket expenses
which would have been covered by insurance in past years are
considered a loss. In addition, premiums associated with COBRA
benefits or the purchase of a private health insurance policy
are a loss in past years to the extent such costs exceed the
employee-paid portion of premiums associated with an employer's
plan. Likewise, assuming the individual is alive, the loss of
long-term disability and life insurance are only considered in
future years.
#
Retirement Plans
As action subject
to a tort claim such as an accident or wrongful discharge often
impacts pension benefits. An individual's participation in a
retirement plan often requires separate analysis. Some of the
key issues in valuing a defined-benefit pension plan's payout
are years of service, normal retirement date (usually age 65),
and whether the plan offers early retirement or disability
options.
To properly assess
the impact of an injury on a worker's retirement benefits we
must first determine the amount of retirement benefits that the
individual would have received at retirement absent the
underlying incident. This will involve review of the pension
plan guidelines to project the future benefit payable, assuming
continued employment and ongoing salary increases. The
associated retirement benefits are then projected from the date
of retirement through the worker's statistical date of death,
taking into account annual cost-of-living adjustments, if
applicable. This income steam must be reduced by the
actual/current benefits being received as a result of the
incident. If there are no current benefits, then the individual
may still be eligible to collect a vested monthly benefit
beginning on their normal date of retirement (usually age 65).
Again, such income is projected through the recipient's
statistical date of death.
# Union
Workers
Typically, union
workers receive a broad array of fringe benefits. Such benefits
are funded by the employer at the stated hourly amount provided
in the union's wage and benefits schedules. Our experience
reveals that in some instances (i.e., iron workers), a union
worker's fringe benefits may equate to 60% to 70% of gross
earnings. Union workers often enjoy a pension plan and an
annuity plan. In addition, many unions do not require premiums
from their membership for health insurance costs (referred to as
the Welfare Fund).
A common error made
in valuing a union member's benefit package is the inclusion of
pension benefits and medical benefits at the employer's hourly
contribution rate. When quantifying a loss of pension benefits
on behalf of a union worker we generally compute an estimated
loss pursuant to the specific pension plan's guidelines (as
mentioned above). We note that retirement benefits eventually
paid to retirees have no direct correlation to the hourly
contributions previously made on the member's behalf, as they
are calculated based on a defined benefit formula. In contrast,
annuity benefits are typically based on defined contributions,
and have a high correlation to the hourly contribution
rate. Finally, contributions made by employers to a union
Welfare Fund have no correlation to the value of the
health insurance received by the union membership. Generally,
the value of health insurance is established based on its
replacement cost in the open market.
# Employer
FICA Contribution
Social Security
provides retirement benefits, disability payments, and survivor
payments to a family when a breadwinner is injured or dies. The
inclusion of legally-required employer Social Security
contributions as a component of an employee's fringe benefit
losses is problematic. Inclusion implies that, but for the
underlying event, the claimant's employer would have made
increased contributions on his behalf. But it would be a error
not to account for the higher Social Security taxes that would
have been deducted from the incremental earnings. Furthermore,
treatment of the employer's Social Security contribution as a
pension contribution is inconsistent with the pay-as-you-go
structure of the Social Security program by which the employer's
contribution pays for current retirement benefits.
For these reasons
we recommend excluding Employer FICA contributions from
consideration when valuing a worker's fringe benefit package.
# Young
Individuals
In cases involving
the premature death or impairment of a young child there is no
work experience available to assist in the valuation of fringe
benefits. In such cases we often rely upon national data
published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to develop an
estimate of likely fringe benefits.
We encourage you to
take advantage of our gratis consultation by phone to discuss
this subject or any other aspects of a case you may be handling.
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