For this assignment, please read SHRM 2020 Employee Benefits: The Evaluation of Benefits. After you have read pages 1-16 cho
For this assignment, please read SHRM 2020 Employee Benefits: The Evaluation of Benefits. After you have read pages 1-16 chose an area of benefits to focus your minor project research on and then answer the questions below.
Benefit Plans to choose from (choose 1):
- Wellness
- Leave
- Healthcare
- Retirement
- Flexible Work and Work-life
- Professional Development
After choosing one of the benefit offerings above and researching that offering, write a 4-5 page paperanswering the following questions:
- Based on your research explain how this selected benefit offering impacts both the employee and the employer. (1 page)
- Based on your research, what trajectory can we expect this benefit offering to make over the next 5 years? (i.e. what changes can HRM professionals expect or what must HRM professionals do to keep up with these changes?). (1 page)
- What types of benefit plans exist for your benefits offering? Research at least two companies and describe how they utilize this benefit offering for their employees. (1-2 pages)
- Discuss your experience from a previous employer(s) regarding your selected benefit offering (.5-1 page)
- Discuss one creative idea that HR Managers could introduce regarding your selected benefit offering that would benefit the employees without being too much of a financial burden for the employer. (.5-1 page)
Remember: Don’t forget that all major and minor research papers require APA formatting (which is not included in the page count). In addition, each paper should include Times New Roman and double-spaced formatting. For this paper utilize multiple sources in your research.
Rubric
2020 E M P L O Y E E B E N E F I T S
The SHRM Benefits Survey is one of the longest-running annual research reports covering trends in employee benefits in the United States.
Each year, SHRM launches the survey to HR professionals across the country to assess the popularity and prevalence of specific employer-offered benefits. Data users may determine short- and long-term changes in an array of benefits employers offer year-over-year, broken out by industry, organization size, and region.
Historically, there are several reasons why benefits change. In the short term, new laws and employment regulations, national economic shifts, and the changing job market can drive benefits trends, and over the long run, demographic and societal changes make their impact.
In 2020, COVID-19 played an appreciable role in employee benefits—and to our data collection.
• Data collection was delayed due to COVID-19 and required a supplemental survey in 2021 because in certain industries, fewer people were able to participate in 2020 because of increased workloads as well as layoffs and furloughs.
• The 2020 survey is shorter to focus on core benefits offered across most organizations, like Family- Friendly, Flexible Work, Healthcare, Leave, Professional Development, Retirement and Wellness benefits.
• We removed questions related to business travel, relocation benefits and other benefits reliant on physical access to a workplace.
• We added questions about how organizations adjusted their offerings throughout the pandemic to determine some of the direct impacts of COVID-19 on employee benefits.
FOREWARD NOTE
When COVID-19 began triggering states of emergency across the U.S. in March 2020, organizations abruptly shuttered their offices and instructed tens of millions of employees to work from home indefinitely. Others were laid off, furloughed, or placed in the category of essential worker, putting in longer hours and assuming new responsibilities while being physically present in a locked-down world. Everyone needed more support, whether for managing remote work, caring for family members, or protecting their physical and mental health.
Accordingly, benefits that address such challenges were the ones more likely to have been expanded.
Benefits Expand to Support Remote Work, Caregiving and Health
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 2
Top 5 Expanded Employee Benefits (percentage of respondents who indicated their organization increased the benefit)
EMPLOYEE OPTIONS FOR TELEWORK
LEAVE TO CARE FOR CHILDREN
TELEMEDICINE SERVICES
78%
43%
39%
LEAVE TO CARE FOR ADULT FAMILY
MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
27%
25%
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 3
Top 5 Reduced Employee Benefits (percentage of respondents who indicated their organization reduced the benefit)
EMPLOYER MATCH FOR 401(K) PLANS
EMPLOYEE OPTIONS FOR TELEWORK
COMPENSATION, INCLUDING HAZARD PAY
7%
4%
2%
STUDENT LOAN REPAYMENT PLANS
CHILDCARE BENEFITS
1%
1%
Understandably, telework is at the top, followed by telemedicine services, leave to care for children or other family members, and mental health services. Social distancing and caregiving needs made the top four a priority, but the expansion of Mental Health services may have resulted from employers recognizing the acute need to support their employees under increased stress, both work- and non-work related.
At the same time, other benefits were scaled
back, typically as a cost- cutting measure, but reducing benefits in
2020 was relatively rare.
Employers continued to view healthcare as the benefit they believe to be most important to employees—no real surprise given the COVID-19 pandemic. The tension between managing ever-increasing healthcare and health coverage costs and attracting and retaining top talent continues to be the central driver of employee benefits offerings.
Annual family premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose 4% in 2020, similar to the year-to-year rise in workers’ earnings (3.4%) and nearly double that of inflation (2.1%), according to the Kaiser Family Foundation1.
However, rankings of importance for other benefits shifted in 2020 compared to years past, with the biggest impact to retirement benefits, which sunk from its longtime position as second-most important to sixth.
Flexible work and leave emerged as the second- and third-ranked benefits employers felt they could offer to employees, respectively. Future surveys will determine whether these benefits will remain in these positions of importance in the years ahead as the world of work recovers.
1 https://www.kff.org/report-section/ehbs-2020-summary-of-findings/
Many Traditional Benefits Assumed New Importance During the Pandemic
HEALTHCARE
37%
FLEXIBLE WORK
LEAVE
FAMILY-FRIENDLY
WELLNESS
RETIREMENT
PROFESSIONAL
55%
62%
76%
83%
83%
90%
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 4
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 5
BENEFITS SNAPSHOTS
Family-Friendly Benefits In 2020, the often-conflicting demands of caregiving and work came under a harsh spotlight, with employers challenged to ease employee stress. Closed schools and reduced options for eldercare weighed heavily on workers and their employers, and for millions of working women, the situation was especially dire.
Based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, between February 2020 and February 2021, more than 2.3 million women left the labor force, bringing women’s labor force participation rate to 57%—lower than at any time since 1988. Caregiving was only one cause: Sectors with heavily female workforces were severely impacted by COVID-19 restrictions and shutdowns.
Some of the largest 2019-to-2020 increases in our survey were seen in parental leave. Although there is no clear connecting line to the events of 2020, these increases may reflect organizations’ heightened awareness of the advantages that come in supporting the complex needs of employees with young children.
PAID MATERNITY LEAVE (includes coverage by family/parental leave, other than what is covered by
short-term disability or state law)
PAID PATERNITY LEAVE (includes coverage by family/parental leave)
PAID PARENTAL LEAVE
PAID ADOPTION LEAVE (includes coverage by family/parental leave)
PAID FOSTER LEAVE (includes coverage by family/parental leave)
26% 34%
53% 21%
30% 44%
17% 28%
39% 20%
28% 36%
13% 20%
28% 20202016 2019
The COVID-related Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Tax Relief Act of 2020, passed in December 2020, allows employers to modify their flexible spending plans (FSA) so employees can make mid-year changes such as new enrollment or increasing, decreasing, or stopping contributions, but the rules only applied for 2020. The new law lets employers adjust their programs in 2021 and 2022.
Employers also can extend the permissible period for incurring FSA claims for plan years ending in 2020 and 2021 and can establish a special claims period and carryover rule for dependent care assistance programs when a dependent “ages out” during the COVID-19 public health emergency. Employers can also allow mid-year elections changes for dependent care assistance programs for plan years ending in 2021 and provide a grace period of up to a year for the remaining money in FSAs to be spent down.
The added burdens of caregiving driven by COVID—both in terms of increased illness and the closure of schools, daycares, senior centers, etc.—drove more employers to increase paid family leave.
Parental Leave Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS • Two-thirds of (66%) of organizations in the Retail, Wholesale, Transportation
& Warehousing, Utilities industry said they offered a Dependent Care FSA— up 20 points since 2019 and the highest percentage since 2018.
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 6
PAID FAMILY LEAVE
FAMILY LEAVE ABOVE FEDERAL FMLA LEAVE
ELDERCARE LEAVE ABOVE FEDERAL FMLA LEAVE
18% 24%
31% 21% 22%
31% 10%
13% 16%
Parental Leave Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
Family- friendly benefits
were among the most changed
in 2020 as organizations
adapted to employee
needs
20202016 2019
Financial Wellness and Education Assistance
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 7
Financial wellness benefits remain relatively rare, with less than a quarter of organizations (24%) providing non-retirement financial education—a 13-point reduction since 2019. Similarly, just 17% offer employer sponsored credit counseling services, down from 19 percent the previous year
The percentage of organizations offering undergraduate or graduate tuition assistance dropped by 9 points since 2019 (47% in 2020), likely caused by their tight finances, concern about the quality of higher education being provided during the pandemic, and reduced employee demand.
The SECURE Act also allowed employees to use tax-advantaged 529 accounts for qualified student loan repayments—up to $10,000 annually. Ten percent of organizations offer their workers access to these savings plans, down 1 point since 2019. Just 1 of 100 employers contributed to these plans in 2020.
The percentage of employers offering student loan repayment benefits remained at the same low level as 2019 (8%). We anticipate a ramping up of employers offering this benefit as the 2020 CARES Act allows employer-provided student loan repayment as a tax-free benefit to employees. Employers can choose to make tax-exempt annual contributions of up to $5,250 per employee toward eligible education debt.
Education benefits are ripe for expansion, as employers could see real advantages in talent acquisition and retention by being early adopters of these relatively rare but popular offerings.
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS • The prevalence of organizations
in the Healthcare and Social Assistance industry offering student loan repayment assistance (17%) grew 9 points in a year, compared to an 8-point decrease for the Government & Education industry (7%).
• The percentage of organizations in the Leisure & Hospitality industry offering credit counseling service as a benefit was halved to 10% in 2020.
Flexible Work Benefits
While remote work has been the focus of workplace changes during the pandemic, flexibility remains a critical benefit to workers as they return to workplaces, as well as for those who never left their worksites. Flexibility may include compressed workweeks, flexible full-time hours and even flexibility in break arrangements.
Flexible work arrangements can reduce tardiness and absenteeism among workers and can make it easier for employers to recruit workers valuing flexibility. Workers who are also caregivers may use flexibility to better meet the needs of the children or elders they care for.
As organizations worked to respond to changing conditions, the number of organizations providing flextime during core business hours in 2020 (50%) is 7 points lower than in 2019; however, this drop was largely offset by an increase in organizations providing less- restricted flextime outside of core hours—up 2 points to 32%. Overall, about half of organizations provide flextime during core hours, and about a third provide flextime outside of core business hours.
Flexible Work Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
2016 2019 2020 Flextime during core business hours 51% 57% 50% Flextime outside of core business hours 28% 30% 32% Compressed workweek 29% 32% 32%
20202016
Healthcare Some health insurance plans and other healthcare benefits offered by organizations showed very small increases, but more declined slightly in 2020, and likely as a cost-saving measure.
MEDICAL FLEXIBLE SPENDING ACCOUNT (FSA)
HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNT (HSA)
EMPLOYER CONTRIBUTION TO HSA
HEALTH REIMBURSEMENT
ARRANGEMENT (HRA)
67% 70%
68% 50%
58% 59%
32% 41%
40% 20%
19% 17%
2019
However, organizations expanded supplemental health benefits in almost every category, seemingly in response to a widespread pandemic that was causing higher-than-usual rates of illness and hospitalizations.
CRITICAL ILLNESS INSURANCE
HOSPITAL INDEMNITY INSURANCE
LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE
INTENSIVE CARE INSURANCE
LONG-TERM CARE INSURANCE FOR FAMILY*
31% 43%
48% 21%
26% 32%
27% 33%
39%
16% 21%
19% 17%
25%
20202016 2019
*Long Term Care Insurance for Family was not asked in 2016
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS
• 45 percent of organizations in the hard-hit Leisure & Hospitality industry offered employees an HSA in 2020—an 18-point decrease since 2019 and the lowest prevalence since 2017.
• 63 percent of organizations in the Retail, Wholesale, Transportation & Warehousing, Utilities industry offered employees a medical Flexible Spending Account—up 16 points since 2019 and the highest prevalence in the last five years.
• 49 percent of organizations in the Retail, Wholesale, Transportation & Warehousing, Utilities increased employer contributions to HSAs—a 9-point boost since 2019 and the highest percentage in the last five years.
Health Insurance Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
Supplemental Health Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 8
Coverage for mental health, family planning and other specific health services also rose in every category we surveyed. While mental health coverage rose just 1 percent, coverage for other services that significantly impact mental wellness and quality of life increased. This could be a reflection of organizations becoming more aware of health and well-being during the pandemic and growing demand from employees generally.
MENTAL HEALTH COVERAGE
CONTRACEPTIVE COVERAGE
IN-VITRO FERTILIZATION COVERAGE
INFERTILITY TREATMENT COVERAGE (NON-IVF)
EGG FREEZING FOR NONMEDICAL REASONS
GENDER REASSIGNMENT SURGERY COVERAGE
6% 7% 10%
3% 2%
5%
27% 20%
29%
26% 19%
28%
80% 71%
78%
85% 84% 85%
Healthcare benefits saw minor decreases in 2020 as organizations coped
with COVID-related financial hardships
Specific Health Services Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 9
20202016 2019
Over half (53%) of U.S. organizations offered paid time
off to vote in 2020, a major shift since
we began measuring the benefit in 2017
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 10
Almost all organizations offer Vacation Leave (98%) and Sick Leave (95%) to their largest group of employees, although both dropped 1 point since 2019. Seven percent of organizations surveyed offer Open or Unlimited leave, up 1 point over 2019.
COVID-19 legislation brought changes to Family Leave in 2020.1 Organizations offering paid family leave increased by 7 percentage points from 2019 to 31% in 2020, likely due to the impact of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) and state and local legislation requiring employers to provide paid leave in some localities. Still, many workers cannot afford to take unpaid leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) when they are sick or need to care for family members. In addition, the administration of FMLA leave is a significant burden on many organizations because of the patchwork of state and local paid leave regulations and new 2020 leave legislation. Shifts in leave data for 2020 should be viewed considering the unique year rather than indicators of important leave trends.
For the first time since we began asking on the Benefits Survey in 2017, more than half of organizations (53%, up 10 points from 2019) offered their workers paid time off to vote. Most states have laws requiring employers to provide time off to vote in some circumstances, but not every state requires that time to be paid.2
1 Many employers made statutorily permitted or required changes once the pandemic hit, and some survey respondents likely provided their organization’s policy at the time of the survey in 2020/ 2021. 2 https://www.workplacefairness.org/voting-rights-time-off-work
Leave
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 11
2016 2019 2020 Paid vaction time 97% 99% 98% Paid sick time 93% 96% 95% Paid time off (PTO) including both vacation and sick time – 63% 66% Paid open/unlimited leave 4% 6% 7%
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS
• 44% of organizations in the Construction industry said they offer paid maternity leave beyond what is required by short- term disability or state law—up 29 points since 2019 and the highest percentage in the last five years.
• 51% of organizations in the Professional & Business Services industry said they offer paid parental leave, up 16 points since 2019 and the highest percentage in the last five years.
• 89% of organizations in the Healthcare and Social Assistance industry said they offer up to 12 weeks unpaid leave to care for immediate family, up 25 points since 2019 and the highest percentage in the last five years.
COVID- 19-related legislation, including
the FFCRA (Families First Coronavirus
Response Act) had a major
impact on leave benefits for
2020
Paid Leave in 2016/2019 vs 2020
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 12
Professional Development Organizations that encourage employee development and professional education will benefit in the short term from upskilling and retaining current staff and increasing employee engagement. And those benefits will compound over time as staff move into leadership roles and help the organization grow in the years ahead.
Unlike many other benefits in our report, Professional Development is not subject to statutory or regulatory requirements, nor is it locked in by a benefits selection process. For that reason, these benefits tend to be much more reactive to the dramatic changes in work we’ve seen during the pandemic.
In a year where virtually every business faced changes, organizations were forced to adapt quickly to new pandemic-related public health measures, remote work, new customer service approaches and more. Time and budgets being limited, fewer organizations provided training to keep skills current (77%, down points from 2019). However, the number of organizations providing formal training for new skills increased by 29 points to 74%1.
1 We asked respondents to our 2020 Benefits survey to report the benefits that their organizations were providing in 2020 prior to the pandemic but anticipated that some respondents would tell us about the benefits their organization was offering when data was collected in the fall of 2020.
FORMAL TRAINING TO KEEP SKILLS CURRENT
FORMAL TRAINING TO DEVELOP NEW SKILLS
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
78% 87%
77% 42%
45% 74%
88% 83%
81%
Professional Development Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS
• 78% of organizations in the Construction industry said they offer formal training or education provided by or paid for by employer to develop new skills—up 40-points since 2019 and the highest percentage in the last five years.
COVID-19-related legislation,
including the FFCRA (Families First Coronavirus
Response Act) had a major impact on leave benefits for
2020
20202016 2019
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 13
Retirement Following a surge in 2019, the number of organizations offering a traditional 401(k) in 2020 dropped back to 2016-2017 levels (down 3 points to 91% in 2020). Traditional defined pension plans (9 points in 2020) also decreased 3 points to their lowest in 5 years. The movement away from these plans may reflect cost-cutting measures from employers, and the corresponding 4 point rise in those offering Roth 401(k)s, which allow tax-free withdrawals, may indicate these investments are more attractive to employees than a 401(k) during an uncertain economic climate. SHRM will be watching to see if this movement continues beyond the COVID-19 period.
INDUSTRY INSIGHTS • Fewer organizations in the Government &
Education industry offered a traditional defined pension plan in 2020 (57%) than in 2019 (69%)—the lowest percentage in the last five years.
• Many more organizations in the Healthcare and Social Assistance industry (71%) offered 401(k) hardship withdrawals—a 31-point increase since 2019 and the highest percentage in the last five years.
• 57% of organizations in the Leisure & Hospitality industry offer loans against savings plans—a 22-percentage point increase since 2019 and the highest prevalence percentage in the last five years.
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 14
Retirement Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
TRADITIONAL 401(K) OR SIMILAR DEFINED CONTRIBUTION RETIREMENT SAVINGS PLAN
ROTH 401(K) OR SIMILAR DEFINED CONTRIBUTION RETIREMENT SAVINGS
PLAN
TRADITIONAL DEFINED PENSION PLAN FOR ALL EMPLOYEES
20202016 2019
90% 94%
91% 51%
59% 63%
25% 22%
19%
Hardship withdrawals increased 18 points to 72% in 2020, and loans against 401(k) plans increased 12 points to 59%, likely driven by the COVID-19 pandemic and provisions in the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, enacted in March 2020. The CARES Act allows workers financially impacted by the pandemic to take early withdrawals from their 401(k) plans with delayed tax liability or take out loans up to $100,000 of their 401(k) balance, with up to six years to repay.
The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act of 2019 also stimulated action on retirement benefits, increasing the opportunity for small businesses to establish retirement and education plans for their employees. They could now set up “safe harbor” retirement plans that are less expensive and easier to administer and offer retirement plans to part-time workers more readily.
Many small businesses took advantage of these new opportunities by expanding automatic enrollment in retirement plans for new or existing employees, which jumped 16 points over 2019 to 43% (among organizations with less than 100 employees).
Wellness Benefits
Even as COVID-19 swept through the population, many benefits promoting physical wellness in the workplace decreased in 2020. This may be due to the difficulty in 2020 of delivering programs in the physical workplace or the inability of employees to utilize incentives like gyms, personal trainers, or physician visits. On the other hand, benefits that are more easily offered online or practiced solo were more likely to increase.
Wellness Benefits in 2016/2019 vs 2020
GENERAL WELLNESS PROGRAM
ONSITE SEASONAL FLU VACCINATIONS
HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT
61% 59%
52% 54%
61% 52%
42% 44%
34%
20202016 2019
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 15
HEALTH INSURANCE PREMIUM DISCOUNT FOR PARTICIPATION IN WELLNESS PROGRAMS
REWARDS OR BONUSES FOR COMPLETING CERTAIN HEALTH AND WELLNESS PROGRAMS
STRESS MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
PERSONAL OR LIFE COACHING
MEDITATION/MINDFULNESS/CONTEMPLATIVE PROGRAM (SUBSIDIZED, UNSUBSIDIZED, OR REIMBURSED)
17% 31%
20%
14% 25%
6%
14% 21%
37%
18% 11%
41% 39%
30%
20202016 2019
CONCLUSION
The COVID-19 pandemic was likely the cause of most movement in employee benefits in 2020 due to the adjustments organizations made to support employees whose work and family life were so disrupted by the demands of social distancing. Often these adjustments were encouraged or required by new COVID-related employment legislation.
Only time will tell how many of the changes from the 2019-2020
benefits landscape were as a result of COVID-19, but without doubt, the pandemic will have a lasting effect on the
kinds of benefit offerings that employees demand from organizations going
forwards
These results may be used as a starting point to estimate which employee benefits employers decide to change in the future, either by maintaining, expanding, or reducing them relative to their pre-pandemic state). For the 2021 and 2022 Employee Benefits survey, SHRM will be watching closely to see if trends in benefits prevalence that emerged this year will continue or return to levels seen in prior years.
Employee benefits will likely play a stronger role in attracting talent, as organizations experience a 2021 “turnover tsunami.” More U.S. workers are quitting their jobs than at any time in at least two decades: In June 2021, the share of U.S. workers leaving jobs was 2.7%, according to the U.S. Labor Department, a jump from 1.9% a year earlier and the highest level since at least 20001.
SHRM’s newest research on workplace culture supports this, with more than half of working Americans (52 percent) now considering leaving their workplace—up from almost half in 2019.
1 https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/jolts.pdf
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS 2020 | 16
To collect data sufficient to be used throughout the rapidly changing workplace landscape during the COVID-19 pandemic, we adjusted our sampling methodology somewhat as compared to previous years. We continue to collect from our membership of more than 300,000 HR professionals. However, rather than the simple random samples of SHRM members that we’ve used in the past, for 2020 we employed a stratified sampling methodology to ensure that we had coverage of all organization sizes, regions, and industries we planned to include in this report.
The data used in this report were collected from 2,504 HR professionals through SHRM membership across the United States. All respondents were employed by an organization at the time they completed the survey.
Initial data collection was conducted between September 28, 2020, through November 10, 2020. Supplemental data were collected from May 17, 2021, through June 28, 2021. All survey respondents were asked to provide answers on what employee benefits their organization offered during plan year 2020, unless otherwise specified. The data is unweighted.
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Scan the QR code or visit shrm.co/benefits to see full results across industry, organization size, and region
SHRM, the Society for Human Resource Management, creates better workplaces where employers and employees thrive together. As the voice of all things work, workers and the workplace, SHRM is the foremost expert, convener and thought leader on issues impacting today’s evolving workplaces. With 300,000+ HR and business executive members in 165 countries, SHRM impacts the lives of more than 115 million workers and families globally. Learn more at SHRM.org/ futureofwork
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