Public Service Association Tuesday 16 February 2010, 4:42PM
"The government plan to privatise workplace accident
compensation will see workers' paying more for less," says Public
Service Association National Secretary Richard Wagstaff.
"The government has already begun undermining support for victims
in preparation for the reduced support they'll get from insurance
companies under privatisation."
The Injury Prevention Rehabilitation and Compensation Amendment
Bill will reduce ACC coverage, cut accident compensation
entitlements and force accident victims to return to work
earlier.The Bill is waiting for its final readings before becoming
law.
"There's no need to cut ACC support because ACC had a $1.1 billion
operating surplus in 2009," says Richard Wagstaff. "The
government's claim that ACC is in financial trouble is
false."
"The fake crisis at ACC is being driven by the government demanding
ACC be fully funded by 2019."
"The reason for fully funding ACC is to put it on the same
financial footing as insurance companies so they can cash-in when
accident compensation is opened up to competition," says Richard
Wagstaff.
This was pointed out by Sir Owen Woodhouse in an article entitled
'Father of ACC opposes changes' published in the Otago Daily Times
on October 21 last year.
"Sir Owen said fully funding ACC is like requiring parents to pay
the full cost of their child's education at age five on their first
day at school," says Richard Wagstaff.
"Not only is it unnecessary to pay for a child's entire education
when they start school at five, it's impossible to know if the
child will go to university, poly tech or leave school and go
straight into a job."
"Requiring ACC to be fully funded is to enable overseas-owned
insurance companies access to $2.1 billion in new premium income
when workplace accident compensation is privatised.''
"The Australian investment bank, Merrill Lynch, estimates this
would boost the insurance companies after tax earnings by $200
million."
"New Zealand workers will provide this profit to overseas-owned
insurance companies when workplace accident compensation is
privatised."
"Australian workers pay more than double the amount New Zealand
workers pay for workplace accident compensation, because insurance
companies provide workplace accident compensation across the
Tasman," says Richard Wagstaff.
In Australia, workers pay an average of $1.96 in every $100 of
their pay towards their worker compensation schemes. In New Zealand
workers pay 94 cents per $100.
"As well as paying more for their workplace accident compensation
Australian workers get worse service," say Richard Wagstaff.
ACC disputes 0.2% of workplace injury claims. In Australia on
average 9% of workplace injury claims are disputed by accident
compensation providers.
"Despite the evidence showing ACC provides cheaper and better
accident compensation the government is determined to privatise
workplace accident compensation," says Richard Wagstaff.