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UI Benefit Accuracy Measurement Report for CY 2003

Calendar Year 2003 Benefit Accuracy Measurement Data Summary

The Benefit Accuracy Measurement (BAM) program is designed to determine the accuracy of paid and denied claims in three major Unemployment Insurance (UI) programs: State UI, Unemployment Compensation for Federal Employees (UCFE), and Unemployment Compensation for Ex-Servicemembers (UCX). State Workforce Agencies select weekly random samples of UI payments and denied claims. BAM investigators audit these paid and denied claims to determine whether the claimant was properly paid or denied eligibility. The results of the BAM statistical samples are used to estimate accuracy rates for the populations of paid and denied claims.

I. Paid Claims Accuracy

Calendar year (CY) 2003 BAM paid claims results are based on the 24,847 sample cases completed by April 29, 2004, the date by which states were required to complete all CY 2003 BAM cases. This represents a completion rate of 99.8 percent. UI benefit payments included in BAM in CY 2003 increased slightly to nearly $41 billion, compared with $40.4 billion in CY 2002.

No single measure can reflect all aspects of UI benefit payment integrity. Four analytical measures have been developed, which are summarized in the following chart.

bargraph shows UI Benefit Payment Integrity Rates

BAM Operational Rate (5.0%) - The BAM operational overpayment rate includes those overpayments that the states are reasonably expected to detect and establish for recovery -- fraud and nonfraud recoverable overpayments, excluding work search, employment service (ES) registration, base period wage issues and miscellaneous causes, such as benefits paid during a period of disqualification, redeterminations, and back pay awards. The operational rate is discussed in more detail below.

BAM Annual Report Rate (9.3%) - The Annual Report rate includes fraud, nonfraud recoverable overpayments, nonfraud nonrecoverable overpayments, official action taken to reduce future benefits, and payments that are technically proper due to finality or other rules. All causes and responsible parties and are included in this rate.

Agency Responsibility (3.2%) - This rate includes overpayments for which the state agency was either solely responsible or shared responsibility with claimants, employers, or third parties, such as labor unions or private employment referral agencies. The rate includes fraud, nonfraud recoverable overpayments, nonfraud nonrecoverable overpayments, official action taken to reduce future benefits, and payments that are technically proper due to finality or other rules.

Fraud (2.1%) - The definition of unemployment compensation fraud varies from state to state. The rate includes all causes and responsible parties.

 

BAM Operational Rate

The BAM operational rate is a component of the performance indicator that measures the detection of recoverable overpayments, which is one of four UI goals for the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA). These goals reflect the UI program’s benefit payment, tax, and reemployment facilitation responsibilities. Additional information on the Employment and Training Administration’s (ETA) goals can be found in the ETA Strategic Plan for Fiscal Years 2003-2008 at http://www.dol.gov/_sec/stratplan/main.htm.

The detection of overpayments measure is the percentage of recoverable overpayments estimated by BAM that state Benefit Payment Control (BPC) operations establish for recovery. This measure is also a proposed core measure for UI Performs, the UI performance management system.

The operational rate represents that portion of total overpayments that state BPC operations should be able to detect and establish for recovery. The operational rate was defined following an extensive analysis of BAM overpayment data. The following charts show the three broad components of UI overpayments to illustrate the derivation of the operational rate.

1. Nonrecoverable Overpayments

A little over one-fourth of the total amount of UI benefits overpaid in CY 2003 was unrecoverable. These overpayments consist of improper payments that cannot be recovered either because the time that has elapsed between the overpayment and its detection exceeds the period established in state law in which an erroneous payment can be recovered (finality rule) or responsibility for the improper payment error rests with the agency, employer, or third party, not the claimant. ES registration and separation issues constitute the majority of this subgroup.

distribution of UI Overpayments - distribution of nonrecoverable overpayments causes

 

2. Fraud and Nonfraud Overpayments Excluded from the Operational Rate

These overpayments consist of fraud and nonfraud recoverable overpayments that state agencies are unlikely to detect through the methods commonly employed by BPC (for example, crossmatches of UI claimant Social Security Numbers with wage record and New Hire Directory data, appeals reversals, and tips or leads). The cost of pursuing many of these overpayment errors exceeds the amount of benefits that can be recovered. Work search and base period wage issues constitute the majority of this subgroup, which includes around 21 percent of UI benefits overpaid in CY 2003.

distribution of UI Overpayments - causes of recoverable overpayments excluded from operational rate

 

3. Operational Overpayments

After the exclusions described above, the remaining fraud and nonfraud recoverable overpayments meet the operational overpayment rate definition. Most of these overpayments involve benefit year earnings (unreported or misreported wages, severance pay, vacation pay, and social security or other pension income), separation, and able and available issues. The "Other Eligibility" category includes refusal of suitable work, self-employment, alien status, identity theft, and reporting issues (failure to appear as requested by the state agency to provide information related to the UI claim). Overpayments included in the operational rate constitute over half of all UI benefits overpaid in CY 2003.

distribution of UI Overpayments - distribution of operational rate causes

 

Overpayment Cause By Integrity Rate

The distribution of the causes of UI overpayments varies considerably among the four integrity rates. For example, benefit year earnings and income (including severance pay, vacation pay, and social security or other pension income) account for over half (55.4 percent) of UI fraud overpayments, nearly half (48.8 percent) of the overpayments defined by the operational rate, a little over a quarter (27.5 percent) of the overpayments included in the Annual Report rate, and less than 10 percent of the amount overpaid for which the agency had full or partial responsibility.

Separation issues are the second leading cause of UI overpayments included in the Annual Report rate, accounting for nearly a quarter (23 percent) of the amount overpaid, and are also the second leading cause of overpayments included in the operational rate (28.7 percent of the amount overpaid) and fraud overpayments (18.3 percent of the amount overpaid). However, separation issues are the leading cause of overpayments for which the agency had full or partial responsibility, accounting for almost one-third (31.6 percent) of the amount overpaid.

By definition, work search and ES registration issues are excluded from the operational rate, and account for very small proportions of fraud overpayments. However, ES registration issues account for almost one quarter (22.5 percent) of the amount overpaid for which the agency had full or partial responsibility, and approximately 10 percent of the amount overpaid included in the Annual Report rate. Work search issues are a significant cause for the broadest measure of overpayments, the Annual Report rate (16 percent), but are not a significant cause of either fraud overpayments (3 percent) or overpayments for which the agency had full or partial responsibility (approximately 5 percent).

Able and available (A&A) issues account for 11 percent of the amount overpaid included in the operational rate, 7 percent of the fraud overpayments, and 6 percent of the amount overpaid included in the Annual Report rate. A & A issues are not a major component of the agency responsibility rate.

cause of overpayments by integrity rate

 

Overpayment Responsibility By Integrity Rate

As with cause, the distribution of overpayment responsibility varies considerably by integrity rate. Claimants alone were responsible for 55 percent of the dollars overpaid included in the Annual Report rate. Errors resulting in overpayments that were attributed exclusively to the state agency accounted for 15 percent of the amount overpaid, and the claimant and agency were jointly responsible for 11 percent of the dollars that were overpaid.

Claimants alone were responsible for 69 percent of the amount overpaid included in the operational rate, and the claimant and agency were jointly responsible for 12 percent of the UI benefits overpaid under the operational rate definition.

Claimants alone were responsible for 80 percent of the fraud overpayments, and claimants along with employers, agencies, or third parties were responsible for nearly all of the remainder.

The agency rate is defined by responsible party. The agency was solely responsible for just under half of the amount overpaid included in this rate. Agencies shared responsibility with claimants, employers, or third parties for the remainder.

responsibility for overpayments by integrity rate

 

Prior Agency Action for UI Overpayments

For all payment errors, BAM identifies the action that the state workforce agency took prior to the time that the payment was selected for the BAM sample. For all overpayments (Annual Report rate), approximately two-thirds of the amount of UI benefits that were overpaid were not detectable through normal agency procedures. For over one-fourth of the amount overpaid, the agency had sufficient information to identify the overpayment issue but did not resolve the issue (14 percent), did not follow procedures (7 percent), or took the incorrect action (7 percent). At the time BAM selected the sample, the agency had resolved or was in the process of resolving improper payments constituting less than 5 percent of the amount overpaid.

Three-fourths of the amount overpaid for those improper payments that states are most likely to identify for recovery (operational overpayment rate) was not detectable through normal agency procedures at the time the payment was made. The agency had sufficient information to identify the overpayment issue but did not resolve the issue for improper payments accounting for 9 percent of the amount overpaid. At the time BAM selected the sample, the agency had resolved or was in the process of resolving improper payments constituting only 6 percent of the amount overpaid.

Over 80 percent of the amount overpaid due to fraud was not detectable through normal agency procedures at the time the payment was made. The agency had sufficient information to identify the overpayment issue but did not resolve the issue for 7 percent of the amount overpaid due to fraud.

For overpayments for which the agency had full or partial responsibility, the agency had sufficient information to identify the overpayment issue but did not resolve the issue for 42 percent of the amount overpaid. The agency took the incorrect action for 22 percent of the amount overpaid and did not follow procedures for 21 percent of the amount overpaid. Only 10 percent of the amount overpaid for which the agency had full or partial responsibility was not detectable through normal agency procedures at the time the payment was made, and the agency had resolved or was in the process of resolving improper payments constituting less than 5 percent of the amount overpaid.

prior agency action for overpayments by integrity rate

 

Dollar vs. Case Error Rates

The previous analyses have focused on dollar error rates -- the percentage of UI benefits that were overpaid. Rates can also be estimated based on the number of UI payments (weeks of unemployment compensation that were paid). The following chart compares the dollar and case overpayment rates for the four integrity rate definitions. For example, while 9.3 percent of UI benefits were overpaid using the Annual Report definition, 16.5 percent of the 160 million UI payments included in the BAM survey population had overpayment errors. The difference in these rates is explained by the fact that many overpayments are partial overpayments -- that is, the claimant’s benefit is reduced, but not completely eliminated for the week claimed. This can occur, for example, if the claimant had some earnings during the week for which he or she received benefits, but these earnings were not large enough to completely disqualify the claimant for that week.

The smaller the difference between the case and dollar overpayment rates, the fewer partial overpayments are included in the rate. For example, the fraud case error rate is 2.9 percent compared with the fraud dollar rate of 2.1 percent. Most fraud overpayments result in establishment of overpayments equal to the entire amount of the payment.

dollar and case overpayment rates by type of error

 

BAM Annual Report Overpayment Rate In Detail

Additional analyses of the Annual Report overpayment rate are provided in Attachment 1, including overpayment causes, responsibility, state agency action, and rate changes.


Underpayment Rates

BAM estimates that $257.1 million were underpaid in CY 2003, compared with $268.5 million in CY 2002. As a percentage of UI benefits paid, the CY 2003 national underpayment rate of 0.63 percent is essentially unchanged from CY 2002. The underpayment rate decreased in 29 states in CY 2003, increased in 21 states, and was unchanged in 2 states.

Highest and Lowest Underpayment Rates
States with Highest UP Rates CY 2003 UP Rate (Percentage Point Change from 2002) States With Lowest UP Rates CY 2003 UP Rate (Percentage Point Change from 2002)
Delaware 1.50% (+0.70) Missouri 0.08% (-0.26)
New Jersey 1.32% (+0.32) New Mexico 0.08% (-0.49)
Puerto Rico 1.29% (-0.59) Kansas 0.12 (-0.09)
Massachusetts 1.28% (-0.64) Arizona 0.13% (-0.15)
Ohio 1.27% (+0.33) Texas 0.14% (-0.01)

 

  •   Errors in reporting or recording base period wages accounted for nearly three-fourths of the amount underpaid and represented 0.46 percent of the amount of UI benefits paid in CY 2003. Errors in reporting or recording benefit year earnings were the second leading cause -- nearly 20 percent of all underpayments and 0.12 percent of UI benefits paid.
  • ui underpayments by cause
  • Employers alone were responsible for over 40 percent of the amount underpaid, which represented 0.28 percent of the amount of UI benefits paid. Claimants alone were responsible for an additional 21.5 percent of the amount underpaid, which represented 0.14 percent of the amount of UI benefits paid.
  • ui underpayments by responsibility

     

    II. Denied Claims Accuracy (DCA)

    The underpayments estimated from BAM paid claims samples represent underpayments only for those claimants eligible for unemployment compensation (UC). Underpayments also result when claims for UC are erroneously denied. Each week, BAM units in the State Workforce Agencies select samples of denied UC claims from three populations, defined by the type of issue on which the denial was based -- monetary, separation, and nonseparation (continued eligibility).

    BAM estimated that 11.3 percent -- with an estimated sampling error of ± 0.8 percentage points (95 percent confidence interval) -- of the 1.2 million monetary denials in CY 2003 were improper. This represents a decrease of 3.4 percentage points from the estimated improper monetary denial rate in CY 2002. These UI claims were denied because the agency had initially determined that the claimant had not earned sufficient wages in employment prior to being unemployed. The BAM DCA audit identified additional wage credits for these claimants that had not been included in the original monetary determination or identified errors in the original determination.

    For many of these improper denials, the state agency had identified the additional wages and issued a redetermination establishing eligibility independent of the BAM investigation or the initial denial was reversed on appeal. When the rate is adjusted for these redeterminations and appeals reversals, the improper denial rate for monetary determinations drops to 6.9 percent (with a 95 percent confidence interval ± 0.6 percentage points), a 2.5 percentage point decrease from CY 2002.

    BAM estimated that 8.0 percent (with a 95 percent confidence interval ± 0.6 percentage points) of the nearly 2.2 million separation denials issued in CY 2003 were improper, a slight increase from the 7.6 percent estimated for CY 2002. When redeterminations and appeals reversals are taken into account, the improper denial rate for separations decreases to 6.2 percent (± 0.5 percentage points), a 0.5 percentage point increase from CY 2002.

    The estimated improper denial rate of 11.8 percent (± 0.7 percentage points) for the 2.2 million nonseparation determinations in CY 2003 and the adjusted improper denials rate of 9.3 percent (± 0.6 percentage points) are unchanged from CY 2002.

    BAM determined that small percentages of the separation (0.3 percent) and nonseparation (1.7 percent) denials resulted in overpayments. Overpayments can occur if the period of disqualification for UI benefits was less than it should have been, and the claimant received compensation during the period that he or she should have been ineligible for benefits. Overpayments can also occur if the claimant received a partial payment that was too large. A partial payment is a reduction in the claimant’s weekly benefit amount and is issued when the claimant has earnings or other income for weeks that he or she claims UI benefits. For some of these compensated weeks, the BAM audit identified additional income that reduced benefits further or in some cases eliminated eligibility for benefits entirely.

    Small percentages of all three types of denials are classified as proper denials but for the wrong reason or section of the law. For example, a claimant may have been denied because of a monetary determination that the claimant had earned insufficient wages in the minimum number of weeks required by state law. The BAM audit determined that the claimant did meet the minimum weeks test, but was still ineligible due to insufficient total wage credits earned in the base period. For separation and nonseparation determinations, these errors typically involve citing the wrong issue in the determination (for example, availability versus reporting).

    CY 2003 National Denied Claims Accuracy Rates
    Denial Type Population Sample Improper
    Rate*
    Adjusted
    Improper
    Rate#
    Over
    Payment
    Proper
    Denial+
    Monetary 1,230,141 7,492 11.34% 6.87% 0.0% 0.81%
    Separation 2,170,249 7,669 8.01% 6.16% 0.30% 2.25%
    Nonseparation 2,179,517 7,649 11.78% 9.34% 1.70% 1.98%

    Notes:

    Data exclude Michigan, which did not complete a sufficient number of cases to produce statistically reliable accuracy rate estimates.

    In several states the population from which the BAM DCA samples were selected may not include all of the determinations that meet the definition for inclusion in the DCA population. This limits the degree to which inferences about the population can be made from BAM DCA data. States are in the process of resolving these population issues.

    * Improper rate is the percentage of denied claims that BAM DCA concluded were erroneous, whether or not official agency action was taken to issue payment or increase claimant’s WBA, MBA or remaining balance.

    # Adjusted improper rate excludes erroneous denials that were corrected by the agency and claims for which eligibility was established on appeal prior to DCA case completion.

    + Properly denied, but for the wrong reason or section of the law.

     

    Agency Action for Improper Denials

    Not every improper denial results in official action on the part of the agency to issue a payment to the claimant or to increase the claimant’s weekly benefit amount, maximum benefit amount, or dependents’ allowance. Agencies took action to insure that benefits were paid for over 80 percent of the improper monetary denials and 70 percent of the erroneous nonseparation denials. However, only 56 percent of the claimants improperly denied for separation issues received benefits. In some cases the agency is precluded from taking action because of the time that has elapsed since the denial was issued (finality rules) or other by other provisions of the law.

    The following chart shows the classification of the type of error by type of denial, and shows the portion of improper denials for which the agency took official action.

    type of error by type of denial

     

    Responsibility for Improper Denials

    The party responsible for erroneous denials varies by type of denial determination. Employers were solely responsible for 32 percent of the erroneous monetary denials due to misreporting or underreporting employees’ wages. Agency error accounted for 20 percent of the improper monetary denials, and employers and state agencies were jointly responsible for another 17 percent of the erroneous monetary denials.

    The state agencies were solely responsible for the 56 percent of the incorrect separation denials and 53 percent of the improper nonseparation denials. Employers and the state agencies were jointly responsible for 16 percent of the erroneous separation denials. Claimants were responsible for nearly a quarter (23.6 percent) of the erroneous nonseparation denials.

    responsibility by type of denial

     

    Prior Agency Action for Improper Denials

    Because the state agencies are responsible for the majority of the erroneous nonmonetary denials and for a significant proportion of the monetary denials, it is instructive to examine agency action prior to the DCA investigation. Agencies had resolved or were in the process of resolving nearly 40 percent of the erroneous monetary denials. The agency could not detect the cause of the erroneous denial through its normal procedures for one-third of the improper monetary denials. Typically, these are claims for which the employer incorrectly reported the wages.

    For improper nonmonetary denials, the agency identified the issue but took the incorrect action for over half (57 percent) of the improper separation determinations and nearly half (48 percent) of the erroneous nonsepartion determinations.

    Although the agency followed its procedures, the issue or information was undetectable for 17 percent of the improper separation determinations and 21 percent of the erroneous nonsepartion determinations. That is, the agency issued its determination to deny eligibility based on inadequate information that was the best available under normal procedures at the time of its decision.

    prior agency action by type of denial

     

    Separation Issues

    separation denial issues

    A majority of the separation denials concerned voluntary quits, while discharges accounted for most of the balance. "Other" includes a small number of labor disputes, military separations, or claimants who were still job attached (partial unemployment).

     

    separation error rates by issue

    Claims that were denied for discharge issues were somewhat more likely to be in error than denials issued for voluntary quits (VQ). Over nine percent of discharge denials were improper, compared with 7.5 percent of the VQ denials. Only 2 percent of the separation denials that were based on "Other" issues were incorrect.

     

    Nonseparation Issues

    Nonseparation denials are distributed among several issues, with reporting and registration issues, disqualifying or unreported income issues, and able / available issues collectively comprising the majority. nonseparation denial issues
    nonseparation error rates by issue

    Denials issued for disqualifying or unreported income had the lowest error rate (10.1 percent). Determinations that denied eligibility because the claimant refused suitable work or for other nonseparation issues (such as alien status, athlete, school, and seasonality issues) had the highest error rate (14.6 percent).

     

    Links to Additional BAM Paid and Denied Claims Data and BAM Methodology

    1. BAM Paid Claims Annual Report Overpayment Rate in Detail

    2. BAM CY 2003 Overpayment and Underpayment Rates By State

    3. BAM Payment Accuracy Rates By State for CY 2003 and CY 2002

    4. BAM Payment Integrity Measures By State for CY 2003

    5. BAM Denied Claims Accuracy Rates By State for CY 2003

    6. BAM State Contacts

    7. BAM Background and Methodology

     

    Prepared by:
    U. S. Department of Labor
    Employment and Training Administration
    Office of Workforce Security
    Division of Performance Management
    August 2004


    Created: March 29, 2004

    Updated: September 14, 2004