Sick Leave, Short-term Disability Payments Could Total $23 Billion

Three possible scenarios for employer spending amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Depending on the total number of Covid-19 cases in the United States, the collective costs for sick-leave wages, short-term disability payments, and spending on employee benefits could range from $6.1 billion to $23 billion, according to an analysis by the Integrated Benefits Institute (IBI).

“Employers and their disability insurance partners will bear substantial lost work time costs, with STD [short-term disability] claims estimated to take between 20 percent to 75 percent of the premiums collected in 2018 due to the growing number of U.S. employees diagnosed with Covid-19,” says IBI’s president, Thomas Parry. “As the numbers change daily, these findings are a very conservative estimate of coronavirus-related lost work time costs and exclude costs pertaining to paid family leave, which was beyond the scope of this analysis.”

The report outlines three potential scenarios:

“One important thing to keep in mind is that however the pandemic plays out—whether that is 1.5 million infected employees, 5 million, or something else—about half of employees at large companies won’t have the income protection afforded by disability insurance or FFCRA,” says Brian Gifford, IBI’s director of research and analytics.

“Even if employees have some sick days to fall back on, on top of everything else, they’re going to lose about $2,000 in earnings if they contract coronavirus,” Gifford says. “That’s not only going to impact the U.S. workforce, but also consumer spending when businesses try to restart after the pandemic.”


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From: BenefitsPro