Press Release - Government Response to the Productivity Commission Report on National Workers Compensation and Occupational Health and Safety Framework [24/06/2004]
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RESPONSE OF THE AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT
TO THE PRODUCTIVITY COMMISSION INQUIRY REPORT
NO. 27, 16 MARCH 2004
National Workers’ Compensation and
Occupational Health and Safety Frameworks
OVERVIEW
- The Final Report of the Productivity Commission’s (Commission) inquiry
into national occupational health and safety (OHS) and workers’ compensation
arrangements has identified a lack of national consistency in these programmes.
- The Commission found fundamental differences in Australian workers’
compensation arrangements. The differences relate to design elements of the
schemes in terms of coverage, benefits and self-insurance obligations. The
result is a compliance burden for multi-State employers and uncertainty for
employers and employees.
- In regard to OHS arrangements, the Commission found that these also exhibited
inconsistencies, however not to the extent of workers’ compensation.
While all parties, including State and Territory (State) governments, subscribe
to national consistency, in practice the legislative frameworks for both OHS
and workers’ compensation continue to exhibit inconsistencies.
- There are ten separate OHS statutory regimes along with other statutory
regimes that regulate aspects of OHS. The compliance burdens and costs imposed
by multiple regimes, regulations, administration and enforcement, compounded
by regular amendment, are a feature of OHS across the jurisdictions. The Commission’s
report recognises the benefits of nationally consistent frameworks, but demonstrates
that current approaches are not achieving this goal.
- The Commission has proposed a model to progressively move Australia to
nationally consistent arrangements, similar to that presented in the Commission’s
Interim Report. The essential features of the model are:
- replace the tripartite National Occupational Health and Safety Commission
(NOHSC) with a smaller body appointed on the basis of skills and expertise;
- require all jurisdictions to adopt uniform OHS regulation;
- shared funding of NOHSC between the Government and the States;
- the Government to develop an alternative national workers’ compensation
scheme to operate in parallel with existing State schemes under a three step
process:
- Step 1: allow eligible corporations to self-insure under the Safety,
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (SRC Act) scheme;
- Step 2: establish a national self-insurance scheme for corporations
not eligible under Step 1; and
- Step 3: establish a national premium-paying scheme.
- corporations gaining coverage under Step 1 to have the choice of national
OHS coverage under the Government’s OHS scheme;
- establish, by legislation, a workers’ compensation body to develop
nationally consistent scheme elements; and
- the Workplace Relations Ministers’ Council (WRMC) to oversee the
framework.
- While supporting a number of the Commission’s recommendations the
Government does not support the key elements of the Commission’s proposed
national framework model. These include:
- replacing NOHSC with a smaller body appointed on basis of skills and expertise;
- requiring all jurisdictions to adopt uniform OHS regulations;
- sharing funding of NOHSC between the Government and the States;
- developing an alternative national workers’ compensation scheme to
operate in parallel with existing State schemes as proposed under Steps 2
and 3 of the Commission’s model; and
- establishing, by legislation, a workers’ compensation body to develop
nationally consistent scheme elements.
- The Government’s decision not to support these recommendations is
based on the premise that the role of the Australian Government is to facilitate
the development of a nationally consistent framework for OHS and workers’
compensation rather than developing national template OHS safety standards
or be in the business of providing national workers’ compensation. It
was also evident from responses to the Commission’s Interim Report that
the model proposed by the Commission would not be acceptable to States, major
employer and employee groups. In particular there was concern over the impact
that a national compensation scheme would have on small business and the viability
of State schemes themselves as larger multi-State corporations withdrew to
take part in a national scheme.
- Instead the Government is developing a number of alternative strategies
that builds on cooperation with the States and key industry parties to achieve
nationally consistent frameworks. The key element of this strategy is to revitalise
the national consultative arrangements through the establishment of a new
non-legislative Advisory Council that will cover for the first time both OHS
and workers’ compensation.
- The role of the national Advisory Council, to be named the Australian Safety
and Compensation Council, will be to develop the broad policy and strategic
directions for the OHS and workers’ compensation programmes under the
guidance of the Workplace Relations Ministers’ Council, aimed at achieving
national consistency in both OHS and workers’ compensation.
GENERAL COMMENTS
- These general comments are intended to provide context to the responses
to individual recommendations made by the Productivity Commission in its Final
Report into National Workers’ Compensation and Occupational Health and
Safety Frameworks, No. 27, 16 March 2004.
Workplace injury and disease in Australia - Putting the problem into perspective
- Workplace injury and disease in Australia is a significant human and economic
issue. In the financial year 2001-02, the various workers’ compensation
schemes compensated close to 300 fatalities as a result of workplace injury
and disease. Compensated injuries and disease resulting in one week or more
off work amounted to 14.1 cases per 1000 workers.1
Compared to other developed countries, Australia’s workplace health
and safety performance is about 100 per cent below the world’s best
in terms of workplace incidents that result in a fatality.2
- The available evidence suggests however, that the total number of workplace
injuries and diseases in Australia may be much higher than the number of eligible
workers for compensation. A survey by the Australian Bureau of Statistics
found that over a twelve month period, five per cent of the work-force, or
477,800 workers, experienced a work-related injury or illness.3
This equated to an incidence of injury rate of 49.3 per thousand employees,
compared to an incidence rate of 14.1 reported by workers’ compensation
schemes.
- The Commission reports that the economic cost of workplace accidents to
workers, employers and the community is estimated to be in excess of $31 billion
annually or some 4.3 per cent of Gross Domestic Product. The human
cost in terms of pain and suffering to the injured workers and their families
is impossible to quantify.
Current Workers’ Compensation and OHS Arrangements
- The Commission found fundamental differences in Australian workers’
compensation arrangements. The differences relate to the design elements of
the schemes in terms of coverage, benefits and self-insurance obligations.
The result is a compliance burden for multi-State employers and uncertainty
for employers and employees. Multi-state corporations employ over a quarter
of Australian employees and the costs to them of meeting the requirements
of the various jurisdictions, rather than those of a single national scheme,
can be in the order of millions of dollars a year.
- Scheme differences also provide difficulties for workers who operate across
jurisdictions. Differences in the definition of ‘employee’ may
mean that a worker is covered by one scheme, but not by another.
- One result of the design of the State schemes is that the Australian Government’s
social security schemes have become a ‘de-facto’ workers’
compensation scheme. The taxpayer funded income support and health schemes,
are required to support a substantial number of workers who have suffered
a work-related injury or disease.
- The Commission also found that the current approach to delivering national
consistency in OHS has not worked. The compliance burdens and costs imposed
by multiple regimes, regulations, administration and enforcement, compounded
by regular amendment, are a feature of OHS across the jurisdictions, although
not to the same degree as with workers’ compensation.
- Recognition of common issues in OHS faced by all jurisdictions, and the
need for greater consistency led to the establishment of the NOHSC in 1985.
Essentially, NOHSC’s function is to develop national workplace standards
and codes of practice for adoption by the jurisdictions in their regulatory
framework. NOHSC has developed a number of important national safety standards,
but the Commission noted that, in practice, these standards are rarely accepted
by individual jurisdictions. Instead, it is normal for the State jurisdictions
to adopt them with modifications ranging from substantial to trivial or to
reject them.
- The Government has made administrative changes to the operations of NOHSC,
but its functions and overall activities have remained largely unchanged since
1985. Further, NOHSC has consumed considerable resources in developing standards.
For example, a national standard on dangerous goods declared in 2001 cost
over $6m to develop, involving over 100 meetings of NOHSC committees. Three
years later only two jurisdictions have adopted the standard into their regulatory
framework, albeit inconsistently.
- Under its establishing legislation, the National Occupational Heath
and Safety Commission Act 1985 (NOHSC Act), NOHSC has an 18 member board
appointed on the basis of representation. The Commission considered NOHSC’s
size and composition make it an ineffective board of management.
Small Business
- The Commission has reported on the impact of its proposals on small business.
It reports that small business would not be adversely affected by allowing
eligible corporations entry into the Commonwealth workers’ compensation
scheme. The Commission considers under its proposed OHS model all workers
and business, including small business would benefit from the more timely
development and uptake of ‘best practice’ workplace safety procedures.
In addition, greater OHS uniformity would assist those small to medium enterprises
that wish to expand beyond their State boundaries.
Design elements
- All Australian workers’ compensation schemes are experiencing difficulties
adapting to contemporary work practices. This has exacerbated the inconsistencies
across schemes, particularly in core areas of coverage, benefits, compensable
injuries and diseases and injury management.
- Poor injury management by the schemes, along with scheme design, is resulting
in more persons being unable to return to work following a workplace accident.
Factors contributing to the falling return to work rates include increased
use of redemption of benefits by schemes; access to common law damages, and
injured workers being ‘parked’ on benefits for a limited period
and then effectively discharged without any further income support, medical
benefits, rehabilitation or return to work assistance.
- In developing a nationally consistent framework for OHS and workers’
compensation the Government asked the Commission to consider and report on
a number of key design elements common to OHS and workers’ compensation
schemes, such as access and coverage issues; premium setting principles; access
to common law damages and injury management approaches.
- The Commission in its report has recommended a number of core principles
that need to be considered in the design of a national framework for OHS and
workers’ compensation. These principles relate to issues such as, access
and coverage; injury management; common law access; statutory benefits structures;
premium setting; role of private insurers; self-insurance; and dispute resolution
in workers’ compensation.
- For example in the area of access and coverage, the Commission found that
jurisdictions primarily base their definition of the work relationships that
should be covered under workers’ compensation schemes on the common
law definition of employee. However, in their workers’ compensation
legislation, each jurisdiction supplements the common law definition through
use of a unique set of inclusions (‘deeming’) and exclusions.
- The complexity of these current arrangements and inconsistencies across
States can lead to confusion for workers and employers about their legal rights
and obligations. This particularly affects parties which operate interstate.
RESPONSES TO RECOMMENDATIONS
Recommendation 1
The Commission recommends that the following features be included in
a cooperative occupational health and safety national framework model
in Australia:
- a National Occupational Health and Safety Commission (NOHSC) of five
to nine members appointed by the Minister on the basis of their expertise
and skills, the appointment to be approved by the Workplace Relations
Ministers’ Council;
- clear specification of the objective of achieving uniform national
occupational health and safety legislation and regulation in all jurisdictions
in the NOHSC enabling legislation;
- agreement by all jurisdictions to adopt, without variation, the legislation
and regulations proposed by NOHSC and approved by the Council;
- NOHSC have the ability to appoint advisory bodies, noting the importance
of consulting with employers, unions and all jurisdictions;
- specified timetables for Council review of proposals from NOHSC,
similar to those applying in relation to food standards – the
process to be prescribed in the legislation; and
- funding of NOHSC shared by the jurisdictions, together with a commitment
to funding the research and data collection necessary to ensure the
development of a best practice national occupational health and safety
system.
|
Government Response
- The Government does not support this recommendation.
- The Government does not consider that the proposal for a smaller board,
appointed on the basis of their skill and expertise, and with no obligatory
requirement to include industry representatives, is a viable option. Based
on the State governments’ response to the Interim Report it is unlikely
that States would agree to the proposed uniform legislative regime required
under the Commission’s model.
- The Commission’s findings, do however demonstrate that current national
consultative arrangements are not working. The Government considers it is
therefore timely to further pursue greater national coordination of these
programmes through the establishment of a non-legislative national OHS and
workers’ compensation advisory council – the Australian Safety
and Compensation Council (ASCC). The ASCC would develop the policy and strategic
direction for these programmes under the guidance of the Workplace Relations
Ministers’ Council (WRMC). The Federal Minister for Workplace Relations
and Employment will appoint members to the ASCC and invite State governments
and industry parties, including those representing the views of small business,
to nominate members.
- The primary function of the ASCC will be to recommend initiatives to the
WRMC aimed at national consistency in OHS and workers’ compensation.
There is a continuum between prevention, efficient compensation insurance
and effective injury management. OHS activities are reliant on the workers’
compensation system claims to improve the management of risk and hazards in
the workplace. Likewise, the workers’ compensation system only comes
into play when prevention activities fail. Having separate advisory forums
or legislative bodies – as recommended by the Commission – would
be duplicative and not build on the synergies between the systems.
- The ASCC would assume the OHS activities of NOHSC to the extent that it
would identify and recommend national workplace safety standards for adoption
into regulations. Ideally, a lead jurisdiction would be nominated to develop
a standard as a regulatory instrument.
- Similarly the work of the ASCC on workers’ compensation would be
to identify and recommend to WRMC design elements of schemes to gain consistency
in the regulatory framework. For example, a number of submissions from large
businesses to the Commission sought consistent national self-insurance arrangements.
The Council could propose minimum national prudential and regulatory requirements
for self-insurance to be adopted by all jurisdictions. As the Commission noted,
such consistency would reduce business cost and overcome the need for a single
national scheme.
- The Council would also have responsibility for oversighting and coordinating
national research into OHS and workers’ compensation matters along with
promoting workplace safety and rehabilitation and return to work of injured
employees.
Recommendation 2
The Commission recommends that the Australian Government amend the Occupational
Health and Safety (Commonwealth Employment) Act 1991, to enable those
employers who are licensed to self-insure under the Australian Government’s
workers’ compensation scheme to elect to be covered by the Australian
Government’s occupational health and safety legislation. This legislation
would be extended to cover those insuring under any future alternative
national premium-paying insurance scheme. |
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation with modification.
- The Government considers that there is merit in the Commission’s
recommendation to open up access to the Government’s OHS regime to give
those firms granted a self-insurance licence under the SRC Act scheme the
choice of a single set of national OHS rules. The Government’s workers’
compensation and the OHS schemes are effectively integrated and there are
benefits to employers having coverage under both schemes. For these reasons,
the Government does not support eligible firms having the choice as proposed
by the Commission. Instead the Government will accept this recommendation
by amending the OHS(CE) Act to require coverage of non-Commonwealth employers
who gain a self-insurance licence under the SRC Act scheme.
Recommendation 3
The Commission recommends that the Australian Government develop an alternative
national workers’ compensation scheme to operate in parallel to
existing State and Territory schemes by taking the following steps progressively:
- step 1 – immediately encourage self-insurance applications
from employers who meet the current competition test to self-insure
under the Comcare scheme, subject to meeting its prudential, claims
management, occupational health and safety and other requirements;
- step 2 – commence, at the same time, the development of an
alternative national self-insurance scheme for corporate employers who
wish to join such a scheme, and who meet prudential, claims management
and other requirements;
- step 3 – in the longer term, consider the establishment of
an alternative national premium-paying insurance scheme for corporate
employers who so wish, including small to medium enterprises, which
would be competitively underwritten by private insurers and incorporate
the national self-insurance scheme established under step 2.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports Step 1 of this recommendation to the extent that
the Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations has a legislative duty
to consider applications on their merit.
- The Government does not support Step 2 or Step 3 of this recommendation.
- The Commission’s national workers’ compensation proposal would
result in a substantial shift to the Government of responsibility for an area
of the economy that is traditionally a State matter.
- The trends of increasing cost and complexity of these schemes will continue.
Increased shifting of workplace injury costs to the Government’s social
welfare programmes will also continue unless design elements of the State
schemes are addressed. In addition, these programmes face a number of major
policy challenges. For example, reduced coverage, the changing nature of working
arrangements and the alarming increase in the incidence and cost of stress
claims, particularly in the public sector. The Government considers that it
has a responsibility to provide national leadership to have such issues addressed
which would be provided through the establishment of the ASCC.
- Effective OHS and workers’ compensation systems are integral to gaining
good workplace relations outcomes. The Commission’s model would however,
establish national institutional bodies that remove the influence of industry
parties and States might have on the policy direction of these core workplace
relations areas. Responses to the Commission’s Interim Report also demonstrated
that any attempt by the Government to legislate for the Commission’s
model. would not be supported by the States, major employer groups and unions.
Recommendation 4
The Commission recommends that the current regulatory framework for the
oversight of the Australian Government’s workers’ compensation
schemes and occupational health and safety regimes be strengthened by
progressively developing the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation (SRC)
Commission as a stand-alone regulator. The SRC Commission to:
- be controlled by a board of independent directors appointed for a
fixed term on the basis of their expertise and skills;
- have a full-time director appointed as chairperson; and
- be provided with its own staff and funding.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports further examination of the recommendation.
- The Commission’s recommendation to strengthen and progressively develop
the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Commission (SRCC) as a stand-alone
regulator was made to support their recommendation for the government to develop
an alternative national workers’ compensation scheme to operate in parallel
with existing State schemes under a three step process.
- Under the Commission’s proposed workers’ compensation model,
it considered that the existing institutional arrangements for Comcare would
require extensive modification and development to support the Australian Government’s
expanded role in providing better national frameworks for workers’ compensation
(and OHS).
- The Government has previously indicated that it does not support the Commission’s
proposal for a national workers’ compensation scheme, however it does
consider that there is merit in examining in more detail the Commissions’
recommendation that the SRCC become a stand-alone regulator.
Recommendation 5
The Commission recommends that, independent of, and operating in parallel
to, the progressive development of a national workers’ compensation
scheme, the States and Territories join with the Australian Government
to establish immediately a new national body for workers’ compensation
having the following features:
- establishment by Australian Government legislation with an independent
board of five to nine members appointed by the Minister on the basis
of their relevant expertise and skills, the appointment to be approved
by the Workplace Relations Ministers’ Council (the Council);
- it would develop nationally consistent scheme elements for consideration
and approval by the Council, collect data and undertake/coordinate analysis
of research, and monitor and report on the performance of workers’
compensation schemes. It would take over the current performance monitoring
role of the Council;
- its priority work areas would be determined by the Council;
- it would have the ability to appoint advisory bodies, noting the
importance of stakeholder concerns and operational matters to maintaining
the contemporary relevance of workers’ compensation schemes; and
- its funding would be shared by the jurisdictions.
The Australian, State and Territory governments would retain responsibility
for implementation, with a view to improving the performance of their
respective schemes and, over time, achieving national consistency. |
Government Response
- The Government does not support this recommendation.
- The Government considers that the establishment of a separate body for
workers’ compensation to run in parallel with NOHSC would be duplicative
and not build on the synergies between the OHS and workers’ compensation
systems. The most effective injury management programme a workers’ compensation
scheme can establish is one that provides a seamless continuum of injury prevention
and rehabilitation services that have a workplace focus. The workers’
compensation scheme can make an effective contribution to injury prevention,
while at the same time facilitating early intervention in the event of an
injury and integrating medical and rehabilitation process with employment
practices to achieve a durable return-to-work.
- As previously stated the Government has recommended the establishment of
a new advisory council, the ASCC, to coordinate policy development and strategic
directions for both workers’ compensation and OHS programmes under the
guidance of the WRMC.
Recommendation 6
The Commission recommends the following as principles to use when defining
an employee, to determine coverage under compulsory workers’ compensation
schemes:
- employer control, recognising that the common law ‘contract
of service’ provides a solid basis for defining an employee in
most situations;
- certainty and clarity, as coverage under workers’ compensation
should be clear to both workers and employers at the commencement of
the work relationship. For certain groups of workers and types of work
relationships, deeming may be necessary;
- administrative simplicity, to reduce the costs of administration
and enforcement;
- consistency with other legislation, to capture significant informational
benefits and cost savings; and
- durability and flexibility, to deal with a wide variety of work arrangements.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC provide advice on the development
of the Commission’s recommended principles to use when defining an employee
to determine coverage under compulsory workers’ compensation schemes.
The Australian Government’s position on these principles would also
be presented to the ASCC as part of the development process.
Recommendation 7
The Commission recommends the following as principles to use when defining
a work-related fatality, injury and illness under compulsory workers’
compensation schemes:
- definition of injury and illness to be comprehensive in terms of
coverage and medical injuries and illnesses to include aggravation,
acceleration, deterioration, exacerbation or recurrence of a medical
condition;
- definition of work-relatedness to be in terms of ‘arising out
of or in the course of employments’, as used by nearly all jurisdictions;
- definition of attribution, ‘a significant contributing factor’,
which is used in a number of jurisdictions, to be a minium benchmark,
while the ‘major contributing factor’ would add clarity;
- coverage for journeys to and from work not to be provided, on the
basis of a lack of employer control, availability of alternative cover
and in most instances and the ability to be dealt with under enterprise
bargaining; and
- coverage for recess breaks and work-related events to be restricted,
on the basis of lack of employer control, to those at workplaces and
at employer sanctioned events.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC provide advice on the development
of the Commission’s recommended principles to use when defining a work-related
fatality, injury and illness under compulsory workers’ compensation
schemes. The Australian Government’s position on these principles would
also be presented to the ASCC as part of the development process.
Recommendation 8
The Commission recommends the following as principles to facilitate durable
return to work:
- early intervention, including the early notification of claims and
the provisional assignment of liability;
- workplace-based rehabilitation where possible, at the pre-injury
workplace, noting the various schemes aimed at overcoming the particular
difficulties faced by small to medium enterprises in the is respect;
and
- return to work programs developed and implemented by a committed
partnership of the employer, employee and treating doctor, drawing on
the services of a rehabilitation coordinator and allied health professionals
as required.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC provide advice on the development
of the Commission’s recommended principles to facilitate durable return
to work. The Australian Government’s position on these principles would
also be presented to the ASCC as part of the development process.
Recommendation 9
The Commission recommends that common law should not be included in a
national framework for workers’ compensation on the grounds that
it:
- does not offer stronger incentives for accident reduction than a
statutory, no-fault scheme;
- can provide lump sum compensation which may prove inadequate to the
longer term needs of seriously injured workers;
- may over-compensate less seriously injured workers who, in the normal
course of events, could be expected to rehabilitate and return to work;
- delays rehabilitation and return to work (if there are psychological
benefits to be derived from receiving a lump sum, these could be obtained
through statutory benefits); and
- is a more expensive compensation mechanism than statutory workers’
compensation.
If common law is to be included in a national framework, then access
should be restricted to:
- the most seriously injured workers (subject to meeting an impairment
threshold); and
- non-economic loss only.
Where common law access is retained, jurisdictions might give consideration
to:
- imposing restrictions on plaintiff legal fees (including incentives
for early settlement);
- mandatory settlement conferences (which include an exchange of offers);
and
- legislative provision to encourage early rehabilitation by plaintiffs.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC provide advice on the development
of the Commission’s recommended principles in regard to access to common
law. The Australian Government’s position on these principles would
also be presented to the ASCC as part of the development process.
Recommendation 10
The Commission recommends the following principles be used in the development
of nationally consistent benefit structures:
- the provision of sufficient incentives for injured or ill employees
to participate in rehabilitation. Benefit step-downs and caps are generally
the most appropriate mechanisms for providing these incentives;
- benefits not to be so ‘low’ as to result in workers bearing
an unacceptably high burden of workplace injury of illness. Employer
to face appropriate incentives to promote workplace safety. Income replacement
to be related to pre-injury average weekly earnings, including any regularly
received overtime;
- all reasonable medical and rehabilitation expenses to be reimbursed
by the scheme;
- access to lump sum payments, which are intended to compensate those
suffering a permanent impairment, to be based on meeting minimum impairment
thresholds, while minimising the extent to which the availability of
such payment delays rehabilitation and return to work; and
- such structures, and health and income support schemes, minimise
the extent of any cost-shifting.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC would provide advice on the Commission’s
recommended principles for developing nationally consistent benefit structures.
The Australian Government’s position on these principles would also
be presented to the ASCC as part of the development process.
Recommendation 11
The Commission recommends the following be used as premium setting principles
to meet the objectives of: the full funding of schemes; incentive to prevent
workplace fatality, injury and illness and to promote rehabilitation and
return to work; stability; and administrative simplicity for employers:
- no cross-subsidisation between employers through premiums as it distorts
pricing signals. If cross-subsidisation is to exist, it should be minimal
and transparent;
- premiums be set efficiently. In essence, premiums for large employers
to be based on experience rating. Premiums for small to medium employers
to be based on industry class rating (where the classes reflect common
risk profiles) accompanied by experience rating to the degree appropriate,
and by explicit, cost-effective financial incentives for preventing
workplace fatality, injury and illness, and for promoting rehabilitation
and return to work;
- compliance by private insurers with relevant requirement under the
Insurance Act 1973 (particularly the prudential standard governing
liability valuation for general insurers), to ensure full funding of
the schemes. There should be separate but light-handed regulatory monitoring
of the premiums set by private insurers; and
- premiums be set by public insurers so as to achieve full funding,
with independent monitoring by a separate body to ensure transparency
of any differences between appropriate and actual premiums.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC would provide advice on the Commission’s
recommended principles for premium setting. The Australian Government’s
position on these principles would also be presented to the ASCC as part of
the development process.
Recommendation 12
The Commission recommends the following regulatory framework which would
allow licensed insurers to provide coverage under all schemes:
- in privately underwritten schemes, it should be sufficient for insurer
licensing requirements to rely on Australian Prudential Regulation Authority
authorisation under the Insurance Act 1973 as evidence that prudential
concerns are satisfied;
- in publicly underwritten schemes, competitive outsourcing to appropriately
skilled and resourced service providers to be supported by carefully
designed and monitored contracts; and
- were the Australian Government to establish a national insurance
scheme as an alternative to existing schemes, it should be e privately
underwritten by insurers authorised by Australian Prudential Regulation
Authority under the Insurance Act 1973.
|
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC would provide advice on the Commission’s
recommended regulatory framework to allow licensed insurers to provide coverage
under all schemes. The Australian Government’s position on these principles
would also be presented to the ASCC as part of the development process.
Recommendation 13
The Commission recommends the following principles be used for assessing
self-insurance licence applications under the national self-insurance
scheme:
- self-insurers to demonstrate appropriate prudential and claims management
requirements, to ensure that they can adequately fund and manage claims;
- prudential requirements to be based on financial capability (including
actuarial evaluation of claims liability), bank guarantees and reinsurance
policies;
- remaining risks to be reduced further by making provision for a post-event
levy;
- occupational health and safety requirements to apply equally to all
employers; and
- there to be no explicit minimum employee requirement as it adds no
prudential or operational value.
Self-insurers under the national scheme should withdraw from, rather
than be recognised under, any or all other schemes. |
Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Commission’s recommendation to use the above principles for assessing
self-insurance licence applications is made primarily to support their recommendation
for an alternative national workers’ compensation scheme under a three
step process. As previously stated the Government does not support Steps 2
and 3 of this model.
- In its report the Commission proposed that the existing self-insurance
requirements of the SRC Act administered by Comcare would continue to apply
under Step 1 of their model. The Commission, assisted by advice from the Australian
Government Actuary, assessed the self-insurance requirements of the SRC Act
and found them to be sound. It was also noted that the prudential requirements
had been strengthened in response to advice from the Government Actuary. The
Comcare scheme’s self-insurance requirements are already based on these
principles with the exception of provisions for a post-event levy.
- To further strengthen the prudential requirements of the Comcare scheme
the Government recommends that the ASCC provide advice on the development
of the Commission’s recommended principles used for assessing self-insurance
licence applications under Australian workers’ compensation schemes,
and for the ongoing monitoring of the prudential soundness of self-insurers.
The Australian Government’s position on these principles would also
be presented to the ASCC for incorporation in the development process.
Recommendation 14
The Commission recommends the following features of mechanisms to manage
and resolve disputes about claims in an equitable and effective manner:
- be tailored to deal with the disputes arising from the specific workers’
compensation scheme that it supports and the broader dispute resolution
culture of the jurisdiction within which it operates;
- be supported by claims handling methods that minimise the likelihood
of disputes arising in the first place. These include:
- the provision of information about the scheme to stakeholders
which explain their benefits and rights;
- informed initial claims decisions based on an early exchange
of all available information; and
- use of provisional liability/payments for a limited period; and
- applications to be screened, using the least invasive methods first.
These include:
- a requirement for claims managers to provide for, and injured
workers to first use, internal review procedures;
- use of alternative dispute resolution procedures involving mediation/conciliation
and arbitration, with incentives for the use of the lest invasive;
- identification and, as appropriate, rectification of informational
and power imbalances;
- appeals allowable to a suitable court on points of law; and
- use of independent medical panels to provide final and binding
determinations on question of medical opinion.
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Government Response
- The Government supports this recommendation in-principle.
- The Government recommends that the ASCC would provide advice on the development
of the Commission’s recommended features of mechanisms to manage and
resolve disputes about claims in an equitable and effective manner. The Australian
Government’s position on these principles would also be presented to
the ASCC as part of the development process.
1 NOHSC, Comparative
Performance Monitoring Fifth Report, November 2003, Australian Government,
p9.
2 International Labour
Office, hhtp://laborsta.ilo.org/ Yearly statistics of occupational injuries
3 ABS, Work-related
Injuries Australia, Cat. No. 6324.0