Advertised as 'The movie that took over $20 Trillion dollars to make", Inside Job, is now on the screens of theaters throughout the nation. The movie's premise is that the recent, systemic, financial collapse was founded upon AIG's feared inability to payout on the claims for failed sophisticated financial instruments that AIG insured. The resulting consequences of the AIG bailout became a vehicle to shelter and fund Wall Street at enormous taxpayer expense.
Copyright
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
AIG -The Inside Job
Advertised as 'The movie that took over $20 Trillion dollars to make", Inside Job, is now on the screens of theaters throughout the nation. The movie's premise is that the recent, systemic, financial collapse was founded upon AIG's feared inability to payout on the claims for failed sophisticated financial instruments that AIG insured. The resulting consequences of the AIG bailout became a vehicle to shelter and fund Wall Street at enormous taxpayer expense.
Thursday, February 10, 2011
AIG Reaches For Its Wallet to Cover $4.1 Billion in Work Comp Claims and Asbestos Liabilities
AIG's long and troubled history was the subject of investigative reporting in the Academy Award nominated film, Inside Job. The Many factors have impact on an insurance company's solvency including the ability to collect premiums in a down economic cycle, the investment of the premiums collected and colateral bad investments the have a massive economic impact of the financial worth of the company in general.
Workers' compensation claims continue despite a low employment cycle. Latent diseases, such as asbestos related lung cancer, asbestosis and mesothelioma, may be dormant for decades before manifesting into a chronic and terminal medical condition.
The industry continues to struggle on how workers' compensation should be employed to insure industries and employers from these condition. Originally the workers' compensation acts did not cover occupational conditions such as silicosis or asbestosis. In the 1950s acts were amended, at industries insistence to bring these occupational conditions under the umbrella of coverage and shield employers from civil lawsuits. With the expansion of products liability claims, based on the intentional concealment of information of the hazards of these conditions, as well as low economic recoveries from struggling workers' compensation systems put the boat back into the bottle, "the longest running tort", asbestos litigation, was born.
Industry continues to try to put the genie back into the bottle, which is reflected in the latest attempt in Missouri to bar liability claims against employers and co-workers. One of the incentives of a workers' compensation program is to prevent industrial accidents, but the system continues to struggle both economically and procedurally in achieving that objective.
The need for AIG to raise additional cash to pay claims raises a concern as to whether premium dollars to pay claims are being adequately protected in the first place, and whether those premiums ared being directed to injured workers and victims of occupational illness. Instead of trying to figure how to further restrict the payment of benefits, perhaps more attention should be paid to making a safer workplace by banning asbestos use, and providing more convenience access through universal medical care.
Related articles
- AIG -The Inside Job (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- AIG to pay $100 million in workers' comp fines (reuters.com)
- The RICO Consequences of Managing Health Care in Workers Compensation (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Proposal to Eliminate Participation of Lawyers (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- A.I.G. to Take $4.1 Billion Charge (dealbook.nytimes.com)
- The Health Reform Act Charts a New Course for Occupational Health Care
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Class Action Certification Sought in NCCI et al v AIG Premium Case
Related articles
- Judge Refuses to Dismiss AIG Class - Action Lawsuit (nytimes.com)
- Judge refuses to dismiss AIG lawsuit (reuters.com)
- AIG Declines on Questionable Workers Compensation Reserves
- AIG CLaims Conspiracy by Liberty and Hartford
- AIG Workers' Compensation Under Investigation Again
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
AIG settles workers compensation insurance complaint with all 50 states, DC for $146.5M
The Office of Insurance Regulation (Office) will receive $5.6 million in fines and penalties with an additional $8.7 million split between the Department of Financial Services (DFS) Division of Workers’ Compensation, Department of Revenue (DOR) and the Florida Workers’ Compensation Insurance Guaranty Association (FWCIGA).
"AIG systematically underreported workers' compensation insurance premium by putting this premium into the general liability or commercial automobile liability categories,” stated Commissioner McCarty. "The practical effect of this misreporting was to report premium in lines of business with lower residual market obligations or premium tax rates and assessments. I am pleased by the collaborative multi-state investigative effort that will yield millions of dollars in unpaid taxes owed to the states."
The lead states issued their multi-state examination report in December 2010 and entered into a related regulatory settlement agreement. The agreement was subject to several conditions, all of which have now been resolved. One of those was a $450 million residual market settlement that was approved by the U.S. District Court in February 2012. The remaining open condition, a settlement with insurance guaranty associations, was satisfied on May 30, 2012 when a $25 million settlement agreement was signed.
Florida was one of the lead states in this multistate examination along with Delaware, Indiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New York, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island. As part of the agreement, AIG entered into a compliance plan concerning the financial reporting of its workers’ compensation premium, and going forward agreed to be monitored and subject to a follow-up examination by the lead states in two years.
Related articles
Monday, September 15, 2008
Workers’ Compensation May Become a Creditor in an AIG Bankruptcy
The US insurance industry represents a huge portion of the nation's financial assets and the instability of the market threatens the backbone of an unregulated workers' compensation national market, The AIG announcement comes on the heels of the failure of Lehman Brothers', the 4th largest financial institution in the United States, statement that it will be filing for bankruptcy after a weekend of failed negotiation seeking a bailout and government support. This cascading economic crash was further reflected by the Bank of America rush agreement to purchase Merrill Lynch for $53.03 billion within the last few days.
The economic woes of AIG, have been longstanding and were triggered by major investigations into the actions of its former chairman, Maurice "Hank" Greenberg's activities and the company's irregularities in the workers' compensation market. This sparked both State and Federal investigations into the company, but did not result in Federal regulation of the financial viability of the workers' compensation insurance program that are mostly State run and regulated.
State workers' compensation programs provide a huge amount of medical, temporary disability and permanent disability benefits to injured workers' and their families. While most of these benefit programs are financed by premiums collected from employers, the programs are administered and ultimately financed, administratively and fiscally, through insurance companies and reinsurers like AIG. State mechanisms that are triggered when the insurance companies or employers become insolvent are mostly if completely reliant upon other insurance companies and employer contributions.
The AIG collapse signals the need for Federal monitoring and regulation of workers' compensation benefits. It has been over 3 decades since a national commission was appointed survey the benefit program that was universally enacted by the States in 1911. The workers' compensation programs may at this time become nothing more than a bankruptcy creditor is a long and non-rewarding litigious process. The Federal Government needs to do more to honor the dignity of its workers.
Friday, October 11, 2013
AIG Facing Lawsuit for Fraud
American International Group for nearly 40 years has been underreporting workers' compensation premiums, causing insured employers to pay improperly inflated state insurance surcharges, three federal classes claim.
The coordinated suits were filed this week in San Francisco, Manhattan and Newarkagainst AIG and its subsidiaries and affiliates. AIG is accused of unfair business practices, fraud, unjust enrichment and violations of federal anti-racketeering law.
The California complaint, filed by Franjo Inc. and DMS Facility Services Inc., says it all began in the 1970s when AIG "devised, implemented, participated in, and carried out nationwide schemes - later characterized by AIG's own general counsel as 'permeated with illegality' - to miscategorize, falsely report, and falsely book the AIG companies' [workers' compensation] premium as other premium (for example, as 'general liability' premium), in order to reduce defendants' expenses, inflate their profits, and unjustly enrich themselves at the expense of plaintiffs and the class." (Parentheses in original.)
AIG allegedly falsified certified annual financial reports that underreported workers' compensation (WC) figures to evade its equitable shares of financial responsibility for state-levied taxes and assessments. It caused state insurance regulators, through no fault of their own, to assess artificially inflated fees on insured employers, according to the complaint.
Click here to read the entire article.
Related articles
- Study: Calif. workers compensation overhaul too new to parse (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Report Recommends Raising Workers' Compensation Premiums (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- NJ Police Officer Indicted for Misclassification and Workers' Compensation Fraud (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- New York Second in Nation for Questionable Workers' Compensation Claims (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Workers compensation rates to decline in Oregon in 2014 (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- California employer sentenced for insurance fraud (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Friday, August 8, 2008
What Impact Will AIG’s Decline Have on the Workers’ Compensation Industry
Since AIG is a major component of the national workers’ compensation scene, the devaluation of the company will most probably have financial repercussions thought the workers’ compensation sector. If AIG is unable to meet its obligation in some jurisdictions then an automatic insolvency procedure will be implemented. The ultimate cost will flow into the system itself.
Compounding this issue is the fact that workers’ compensation premiums that are to be collected are heading south. Also announced yesterday was that the job market in the US had become further restricted as unemployment claims rose to 455,000 last week which is a 6 year high.
The NCCI also reported recently that claims nationally were down 2.5% in 2007. These factors may demonstrate that reforms to restrict access to the system are becoming effective, but the massive infrastructure that has been amassed for handling the dwindling claims will need to be ramped down at even a faster rate that anticipated because of the declining economic base signaled by the AIG announcement.
Thursday, December 18, 2008
AIG: going, going,......?
Bloomberg reported, "...Wider losses may cast new doubt on whether the federal funds will be enough to prop up AIG, the biggest U.S. insurer by assets. The U.S. package almost doubled from the $85 billion approved in September to save the company from bankruptcy. Previous miscalculations about the swaps contributed to the ouster of Chief Executive Officer Robert Willumstad and his predecessor, Martin Sullivan. "
The huge insurance carrier, AIG, is considered to be a backbone of the workers' compensation insurance market and its financial instability, including insolvency, could critically shake the national patchwork of State programs. Earlier this year several State's issued statements that their insolvency funds would be a mechanism for relief should AIG fail. Declining State resources may place that solution also in jeopardy.
Saturday, January 9, 2016
Insurance Company Plans to Track Movements of Workers In The Name Of Safety
Monday, March 2, 2009
AIG Up For Sale
AIG, the distressed insurance company, is expected to announce a $60 Billion quarterly loss. The announcement, anticipated shortly, follows three separate failed efforts by the Federal Government to rescue the company.
Creditors of the company, and the US Government, have reached a four new deal to bailout the company. This time the company is being structured to be sold. It has been reported that the property and casualty lines maybe the first to go.
The US Treasury and AIG issued the following statement:
"The steps announced today provide tangible evidence of the U.S. government’s commitment to the orderly restructuring of AIG over time in the face of continuing market dislocations and economic deterioration. Orderly restructuring is essential to AIG’s repayment of the support it has received from U.S. taxpayers and to preserving financial stability. The U.S. government is committed to continuing to work with AIG to maintain its ability to meet its obligations as they come due."
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
AIG Declines on Questionable Workers Compensation Reserves
To read more about AIG and workers' compensation click here.
Monday, August 3, 2009
Major Insurance Companies Still In A Downward Spiral
On Friday Moody's Investors Services downgraded two American International Group Inc. (AIG) lending united to near "junk" status. Other rating companies also lowered their ratings of AIG to Baa3.
This follows news last week that Travelers Insurance Company Inc.'s (Travelers) 2nd quarter income fell 21% which resulted in lower income and higher claims costs. Travelers is the second largest insurer after AIG. The revenue decrease at Travelers was reported to be 2.1% of $6.16 Billion.
As unemployment remains static or increases, fewer people are working, and premium revenues will continue to decline.
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Lehman Brothers Crisis May Meltdown State Workers’ Compensation Programs
Workers’ Compensation is an employer funded benefit program. Even self-insured companies purchase reinsurance for economic protection. The reliance upon insurance companies to operate workers’ compensation programs in the US is vital.
Major insurance companies such as AIG [stock down 79% Jan-Sept 2008], the nations largest insurer, are intricately involved in operating and funding the nation’s workers’ compensation program. AIG’s shares fell 30% on Friday as the Lehman Brothers fiscal crisis continued to escalate. Congress Waxman has expressed concern over AIG’s premium charges. AIG’s decline was based on their questionable credit default swaps, covering loses on securities based on mortgages.
As this economic crisis continues to domino the question will be whether State the insolvency mechanisms in place will be sufficient to react to keep the system afloat and provide an adequate benefit flow to the workers’ compensation system. It is doubtful that the beneficiaries of the compensation system, and its administrators, will think kindly of becoming creditor in a bankruptcy reorganization scheme paying ten cents on the dollar.
This unfortunate economic scenario brings new life to a call for the reevaluation of the entire failing US workers’ compensation program and the need to look at a Federal approach to co-ordination and delivery of benefits.
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Injured Worker Sues Insurance Company for Malicious Prosecution
Related articles
- Penalties, Paper and The Injured Worker (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- US Supreme Court Advances the Rights of Injured (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Zadroga 9-11 Compensation Fund Opens for Business (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- CDC Seeks to End NeedStick Injuries (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Blowing the Whistle on Unsafe Workplace Conditions Gets a Boost (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Thursday, September 26, 2013
AIG CEO: Anger over AIG bonuses ‘just as bad’ as lynchings
Robert Benmosche (Bloomberg News)
AIG's CEO Robert Benmosche -- who came in to rescue the company after the 2008 financial crisis -- told the Wall Street Journal that the outrage over the bonuses promised to AIG's members was just as bad as when white supremacists in the American South used to lynch African Americans: The uproar over bonuses "was intended to stir public anger, to get everybody out there with their pitchforks and their hangman nooses, and all that -- sort of like what we did in the Deep South [decades ago]. And I think it was just as bad and just as wrong."Yes, enduring some public criticism for receiving multimillion-dollar bonuses after helping crash the global economy is a lot like being hanged from a tree by your neck until you die. These kinds of sentiments don't emerge in a vacuum. Benmosche is expressing a view that was pretty common back in 2010 and 2011, when it was kind of a thing for members of the besieged 1 percent to compare public anger over their compensation to the way Nazi Germany treated the weak. There was supermarket mogul John Catsimatidis: "Taxes are going to go up regardless. What I'm afraid of is, we shouldn't punish any one group. Whether we're punishing people who are wealthy," he said. "New York is for everybody; it's for the poor, it's for the middle-class, it's for the wealthy. We can't punish any one group and chase them away. We - I mean, Hitler punished the Jews. We can't have punishing the '2 percent group' right now."... |
Related articles
- Despite backlogs, VA disability claims processors get bonuses (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- 3 Responses for "What the Recent Data Breach Says About the State of Health IT" (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- How Wal-Mart keeps wages low (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Exxon Mobil subsidiary charged for wastewater spill in Pennsylvania (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Bloomberg Sees Higher Costs in a Union-Friendly Mayor (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
- Love for Labor Lost (workers-compensation.blogspot.com)
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
AIG Claims Conspiracy by Liberty and Hartford
Friday, July 27, 2012
International Business Expands Profits of Liberty Mutual
Liberty’s Long Faults States on Workers’ Comp Rates; Q2 Profit Positive (Property Casualty 360)
Related articles
Saturday, October 20, 2012
NJ Workers Compensation Ranked Nation's 7th Highest Premium Rate
More on Workers' Compensation Premiums
Related articles
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
AIG Workers' Compensation Under Investigation Again
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Do I Need To File A Tax Return On My Workers Compensation?
- if the benefits are retirement plan benefits (this is true even if you retired due to disability)
- if part of your workers’ compensation benefit money lowers the amount you receive from your Social Security or Railroad Retirement Benefits. In that case, that the part of your workers compensation benefits is considered part of your Social Security (or RRB) and may be taxable.