Government Notices




NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE, No. 22 — 11 MARCH 2016

GOVERNMENT NOTICES

Authorities/Other Agencies of State

Report in Relation to Rates of Levies Prescribed in the Accident Compensation (Work Account Levies) Regulations 2016 and the Accident Compensation (Earners’ Levy) Regulations 2016

Sections 331(5A) and 331(5B) of the Accident Compensation Act 2001 ("Act") require the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) to prepare a report in relation to the rates of levies prescribed in regulations in accordance with generally accepted practice within the insurance sector in New Zealand.

This report relates to the Work and Earners’ Accounts and their respective levies for the year from 1 April 2016. It provides information about the expected long-term impacts of the 2016/17 levy rates for those Accounts and describes long-term projections of each Account’s finances along with key assumptions on which the projections are based. Appendices A and B provide more information about the projections and assumptions.¹

The average levy rates discussed in this report are shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Average levy rates for 2016/17 for the Work and Earners’ Accounts

Work Account Earners’ Account
Average levy rate per $100 of liable earnings (excl. GST) Average levy rate per $100 of liable earnings (excl. GST)
$0.80 $1.21

The Accident Compensation Scheme

ACC is a Crown agent providing comprehensive, no-fault personal injury cover to all New Zealand residents and visitors to New Zealand.

ACC cover is managed under five separate Accounts including the Work Account and the Earners’ Account. ACC collects levies to fund both these Accounts.

The Work Account covers claims for all work-related injuries. The Work Levy is paid by employers and self-employed people working in New Zealand. The Work Levy is expressed as a rate per $100 of liable earnings. The average Work Levy, reported here, is the rate that all employers and self-employed people in New Zealand would pay if ACC charged a flat levy rate. The actual rate paid by each business differs from the average rate and is determined by the claims experience of its classification unit, individual business’ claims experience, and any ACC safety incentive products and programmes a business participates in.

The Earners’ Account covers claims for non-work personal injuries for employed persons (including self-employed) not including motor vehicle injuries. The Earners’ Levy is a flat rate paid by all employees and self-employed on their liable earnings up to a defined maximum. The Earners’ Levy is expressed as a rate per $100 of liable earnings.

The Levy Setting Process

ACC reviews the expected costs of the levied Accounts to determine the levy rates required to meet the lifetime cost of claims in the upcoming period, along with funding adjustments to move each Account towards its funding target. The ACC Board ("Board") undertakes public consultation before recommending levy rates to the Minister for ACC.² Cabinet sets the levy rates for the forthcoming levy period after considering the Board’s recommendations, along with the public interest as required by section 300 of the Act.

Work and Earners’ Accounts’ levies are set by regulation under the authority of sections 167, 218, 219, 244, 329 and 333 of the Act. Regulations for the forthcoming levy period will come into force on 1 April 2016.

Principles of Financial Responsibility in Relation to the Levied Accounts

Section 166A of the Act requires the cost of all claims under the levied Accounts to be fully funded. This means adequate assets must be maintained to fund the costs of claims. To achieve full funding when setting levies,



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Online Sources for this page:

Gazette.govt.nz PDF NZ Gazette 2016, No 22





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏥 Report in Relation to Rates of Levies Prescribed in the Accident Compensation (Work Account Levies) Regulations 2016 and the Accident Compensation (Earners’ Levy) Regulations 2016

🏥 Health & Social Welfare
Levy rates, Accident Compensation, Work Account, Earners’ Account, Financial projections