November 10, 1999
The Working Group report, submitted to the ERISA Advisory Council on
November 10, 1999, was approved by the full body and subsequently forwarded
to the Secretary of Labor. The Advisory Committee on Employee Welfare and
Pension Plans, as it is formally known, was established by Section 512(a)(1)
of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 to advise the
Secretary with respect to carrying out his/her duties under ERISA.
(Footnotes in this report can be found at the conclusion of the report.)
I. THE WORKING GROUP’S PURPOSE AND SCOPEII. PROCEEDINGS OF THE WORKING
GROUP
III. DISCUSSION
IV. FINDINGS
V. RECOMMENDATIONS
VI. SUMMARIES OF TESTIMONY
VII. EXHIBITS AND WRITTEN MATERIALS RECEIVED
MEMBERS OF THE WORKING GROUP
WORKING GROUP
ON THE BENEFIT IMPLICATIONS OF THE GROWTH
OF A CONTINGENT WORKFORCE
Whether called contingent, flexible, alternative or nonstandard, the
portion of the American workforce engaged in nonpermanent or less than
full-time employment constitutes approximately 30% of the entire workforce
and is growing. Because the workers in this portion of the workforce have
substantially less access to traditional employment-based health and
retirement benefits, and evidence substantially less proclivity to
participate in such benefit plans where available, serious social policy
implications are presented.
And, whether or not the growth of this contingent workforce reflects the
preferences of a new generation of “free agents by choice,” or the
economic product of global competition unencumbered by effective collective
bargaining, its social consequences require serious policy consideration.I.
THE WORKING GROUP’S PURPOSE AND SCOPEThe subject matter of this Working
Group — the benefit implications of the growth of a contingent workforce
— flows logically from the findings of Working Groups of the Advisory
Council on Employee Welfare and Pension Benefit Plans in both 1997 and 1998
which identified and measured the decline of the traditional system of
employer-provided pension benefits in the United States.In 1997 the Working
Group on Defined Contribution vs. Defined Benefit Plans identified a virtual
flight by employers from defined benefit to defined contribution plans, and
a resulting undermining of the traditional annuity form of benefit payment
that characterized the defined benefit system for the lump sum form of
benefit characterizing defined contribution plans. Particularly troubling to
the Working Group was the domination of 401(k) plans in this defined
contribution plan growth because 401(k) plans were, by their nature,
particularly vulnerable to participant dissipation of assets for purposes
other than retirement.1
Because of serious reservations about the growth of 401(k) plans, and
their susceptibility to asset dissipation prior to retirement, the 1997
Working Group on Defined Contribution vs. Defined Benefit Plans, recommended
that a working group be established by the 1998 Advisory Council to inquire
into the dangers of asset dissipation, popularly known as “leakage,” of
defined contribution plan assets.Upon that recommendation the 1998 Advisory
Council established a Working Group on Retirement Plan Leakage. That Working
Group’s report identified and measured empirical evidence of the
opportunities, and utilization of those opportunities, for the leakage of
401(k) plan assets prior to retirement, and urged strong action to limit
those opportunities if 401(k) plans were to successfully supplant
traditional defined benefit plans as the primary form of employer-provided
retirement security in the United States.2Following on those two prior
Working Group reports, it was appropriate that in 1999 the Advisory Council
established a Working Group on the Benefit Implications of the Growth of the
Contingent Workforce. Taken together, the findings of the two prior Working
Groups established that the defined benefit pension system, historically
available to those in permanent full-time employment, is being supplanted by
a 401(k) system bearing an inherent risk of asset dissipation prior to
retirement. If, at the same time that the retirement security system for the
traditional workforce is being exposed to these new risks, the U.S. economy
is experiencing a growth in the nontraditional workforce that has
historically had very limited access to employer-provided benefits, the
potential for crisis in health and retirement benefits has been magnified.
Accordingly, at its February 1999 meeting the Advisory Council on
Employee Welfare and Pension Benefits established the Working Group on the
Benefit Implications of the Growth of a Contingent Workforce, which now
presents its report.
II. PROCEEDINGS OF THE WORKING GROUP
The Working Group held five hearings at which fifteen
witnesses presented testimony.
At the Working Group’s first hearing the authors of the Bureau of Labor
Statistics’ (BLS) 1995 and 1997 studies of contingent workers and
alternative work arrangements, Mr. Stephen Hipple and Ms. Sharon Cohany
appeared and described in detail their methodologies and findings. Because
their studies had attempted to measure the characteristics and size of the
workforces engaged in contingent and alternative work arrangements, but did
not specifically address the availability of employer-provided fringe
benefits for these cohorts, Dr. Paul Yakoboski, Senior Research Fellow of
the Employee Benefits Research Institute (EBRI), also appeared at the
Working Group’s first hearing.Dr. Yakoboski co-authored a March 1999 EBRI
study that took the same data utilized by Mr. Hipple and Ms. Cohany and
further analyzed it to determine the extent to which employer-provided
health and retirement benefits were available to those employed in
alternative work arrangements, i.e., temporary help agency workers, on-call
workers, contract company workers, independent contractors and regular
part-time workers.
At the Working Group’s second hearing testimony was received from Dr.
Edith Rasell who co-authored a 1997 study, and 1999 follow-up study,
sponsored jointly by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) and the Women’s
Research and Education Institute, which analyzed the 1995 and 1997 BLS
surveys with specific reference to the availability of employer-provided
benefits.At the second hearing the Working Group also received testimony
from Mr. Larry Engelstein, Associate General Counsel of the AFL-CIO, who
described the limited ability under current labor laws for contingent
workers to secure access to employer-provided fringe benefits through the
traditional system of collective bargaining.
At its third hearing the Working Group received testimony from
representatives of the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the U.S.
Department of Labor concerning the statutory framework governing the
obligations of employers providing fringe benefits to do so on a non-
discriminating basis and in conformity with the terms and provisions of all
plan documents. Ms. Deborah Walker and Mr. William Bortz of the Treasury
Department described in detail the substantial costs which can be avoided by
employers seeking to evade their statutory obligations, and the ongoing IRS
enforcement program to identify and pursue cases of employee
misclassification.
Mr. Marc Machiz, Associate Solicitor of the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL),
described for the Working Group the obligations imposed by the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) with respect to contingent
workers. Using both the recently filed DOL suit against Time Warner, Inc.,
and the ongoing private action in Vizcaino vs. Microsoft as examples, Mr.
Machiz emphasized that through precise and artful draftsmanship of plan
documents employers can in most cases lawfully exclude contingent workers
from benefit plan coverage.
At its fourth hearing the Working Group received testimony from four
witnesses representing the employer perspective on the contingent workforce.
Mr. Edward Lenz, Senior Vice President Public Affairs and General Counsel of
the National Association of Temporary Staffing Services (NATSS), and Mr.
Marc Freedman, Special Counsel of the National Technical Services
Association (NTSA), both provided testimony on the size and growth of the
temporary help agency portion of the contingent workforce, and emphasized
its growth in the technical and professional fields. Likewise, Mr. Carl
Camden, Executive Vice President Field Operations of Kelly Services Inc.,
discussed the growth of the industry as a whole and his company’s growth
experience, and emphasized his view that the traditional system of
employment-based fringe benefits was entirely inadequate for the delivery of
benefits to the growing contingent workforce, and that the inability to
provide benefits to this workforce was the greatest impediment to the growth
of the flexible workforce required to meet the challenges of global
competition.Mr. Milan Yager, Executive Vice President of the National
Association of Professional Employer Organizations (NAPEO), testified
concerning the truly explosive growth--30% per year for the last five
years--of professional employer organizations. These organizations,
virtually nonexistent 10 years ago, act as intermediaries between employers
and their workforces to provide complete payrolling and human resources
services. Employees, while retaining a co-employer relationship with the
entity to which they provide their services, can be hired, fired and paid by
the intermediary professional employer organization. Accordingly, while
these employment relationships are not included within the contingent
workforce, from the employees’ standpoint they have all the hallmarks of
the disconnect between employer and employee that characterize the other
cohorts of the contingent workforce.The fifth and final hearing of the
Working Group received testimony from two researchers, Dr. Susan Houseman of
the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research and Dr. Paul Osterman of
the Sloan School at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and attorney
David Stobaugh of Seattle, Washington, who represents the plaintiffs in
Vizcaino vs. Microsoft, as well as plaintiffs in a variety of other
litigation seeking to secure fringe benefits for workers excluded from
coverage by their employers.
Dr. Houseman discussed with the Working Group the findings contained in
her 1997 report entitled Temporary, Part-Time, and Contract Employment in
the United States, as well as recent follow-up research she has conducted on
the subject for the U.S. Department of Labor. Dr. Houseman’s study
analyzed the same cohorts of the contingent workforce analyzed in the BLS
survey of alternative work arrangements. However, Dr. Houseman’s study was
based upon employer interviews, while the BLS data was harvested from
employee interviews.Given the different universes from which their data was
drawn, the similarity in findings of the Houseman and BLS studies as to the
size of the various cohorts of the contingent workforce is remarkable.
Indeed, the outcomes of the EBRI (Dr. Yakoboski), EPI (Dr. Rasell) and
Upjohn Institute (Dr. Houseman) studies of the health and retirement benefit
coverage of the various cohorts is all quite similar and, accordingly, is
presented in Tables 1, 2 and 3 of this Report as bases for evaluating the
benefit implications of the contingent workforce.
Dr. Osterman of MIT discussed his recent book Securing Prosperity: How
the American Labor Market Has Changed and What To Do About It, and
specifically addressed the policy judgements to be made when balancing the
health and retirement security interests of the U.S. workforce against the
competitive needs of U.S. industry for a flexible workforce.
Mr. Stobaugh reviewed in some detail the various factual settings in
which his litigation on behalf of employees labeled as contingent workers
— generally agency temporaries, contract company workers or independent
contractors — has arisen. He described the legal theories he has
successfully pursued to secure benefit coverage for these employees as true
common law employees of the employer to whom they provide their services,
not the employer who may merely be acting as conduit agent for the payment
for those services. Mr. Stobaugh strongly urged that statutory penalties be
imposed in addition to the compensatory damages currently available to act
as a deterrent to further growth of the unlawful utilization of contingent
workers to avoid payment of fringe benefits.
III. DISCUSSION
For purposes o f this report, the Working Group adopts as its
definition of contingent work, work that is nonpermanent or less than full
time. The rationale for adoption of this definition is articulated well in
the Introduction to the March 1999 EBRI study, Contingent Workers and
Workers in Alternative Work Arrangements:
“The changing employment environment in the Untied States can be
characterized by the increased use of flexible work arrangements. The term
contingent employment is often used to describe flexible work arrangements
or alternatives to traditional full- time work arrangements through which
individuals are hired by, and work for, a single employer. Contingent work,
defined broadly, covers flexible employment practices such as temporary
work, employee leasing, self-employment, contracting, and home- based work,
as well as part-time work. Contingency work implies changes in three
traditional notions of employment:Time--something different from an
eight-hour, five-day work week.
Permanency--something other than a permanent relationship between an
employer and worker.
Social contract--something different from the traditional reciprocal
rights, protections, and obligations between the worker and the employer
(Christensen and Murphree, 1988).”Table 1 presents the findings of three
of the studies whose authors presented testimony before the Working Group:
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (Ms. Sharon Cohany), the Economic Policy
Institute (Dr. Edith Rasell) and the Upjohn Institute for Employment
Research (Dr. Susan Houseman). The estimates of the size of the contingent
workforce in these three studies range from 25.3 to 31.2 When simple
arithmetic averages of each component group are added together, the three
studies produce a combined total average of 31.8%. Accordingly, it is fair
to say that the contingent workforce represents approximately 30% of the
overall U.S. workforce. In absolute numbers approximately 38 million of the
126.7 million workers in the U.S. workforce in 1997 were employed in
contingent jobs.Tables 2 and 3 present the findings of the three studies
reviewed by the Working Group that analyzed the availability of health and
retirement benefits to the primary cohorts of the contingent workforce,
relative to the regular full-time workforce. The percentages in each table
represent the percentage of workers in each cohort who actually receive
pension or health benefits from their employers.
Independent contractors are not included in these tables because they
are, by definition, self- employed and do not qualify to participate in
benefit plans of the employers to whom they provide their services.
With respect to pension benefits, Table 2 presents the findings of the
EBRI, EPI and Upjohn Institute studies, and averages of the three. On
average, 62.4% of regular full-time employees participate in
employer-provided pension plans. Compared to regular full-time employees,
only two- thirds as many employees of contract companies (41.8%), one-half
as many on-call workers (30.1%), one-third as many regular part-time
employees, and one-twelfth as many temporary help agency employees (4.8%)
participate in employer-provided pension plans.
The story is much the same for employer-provided health benefits. As
shown in Table 3, an average of 73.2% of regular full-time employees
participate in employer-provided health benefit plans. Comparatively, only
three-fourths as many contract company workers (55%), two-fifths as many
on-call workers (32.1%), one-fourth as many part-time workers (17.1%), and
one-tenth as many temporary help agency workers (7.4%) participate in
employer-provided health benefit plans.
Several explanations were offered for these low levels of
employer-provided pension and health benefits in the continent workforce.
First of all, representatives of the temporary help agency industry
described the difficulty in designing pension and health benefit plans for
workers with relatively brief periods of attachment to any particular
agency, and argued that an alternative must be found to the traditional
employment-based system for delivering health and pension benefits. Without
providing specific details, Mr. Carl Camden of Kelly Services suggested that
the provision of benefits needs to be separated from the place of
employment. He pointed out that even among the 30% of Kelly Services’
workforce that are long-term temporaries, the participation rate in Kelly’s
benefit plans is only 10%. Likewise, Mr. Marc Freedman of the National
Technical Services Association, without specifics, expressed the opinion
that the traditional linkage between benefits and employment has become an
inefficient delivery system and that we should address solutions that focus
on providing greater individual access to benefits outside of the employment
relationship.Another explanation for the low level of benefit participation
by contingent workers was the cost and type of benefits offered. While no
testimony or evidence was produced on the question, it is likely that the
type of pension plans offered to contingent workers are not traditional
noncontributory defined benefit plans, but rather the increasingly prevalent
401(k) plans that require voluntary employee contributions. And Mr. Lenz of
the National Temporary and Staffing Services Association testified that
among temporary agencies with annual revenues exceeding $50 million, the
health benefit plans offered, on average, require the employee to pay 60% of
the premium. So, undoubtedly, the low levels of participation are a function
of the relatively costly nature of the benefit plans available to the
contingent workforce.
A further explanation offered for the low level of benefit plan
participation was the availability of benefits through a spouse or other
family member. While this explanation is supported by the research, it is
more troubling than comforting. To the extent that employers of the
contingent workforce are avoiding the costs of fringe benefits because they
are available through relatives of their employees who work for employers
that do provide benefits, the viability of the employment- based system of
benefits is placed under further stress. In effect benefit-provider
employers are subsidizing non-providers, and workers are induced to
arbitrage the system.
In addition to providing the Working Group with insight into the reasons
for the low participation of contingent workers in employment-based
benefits, the representatives of the temporary help agency industry also
documented the rapid growth in contingent employment in recent years, and
the expectation that this growth will accelerate.
The BLS study of workers in alternative work arrangements confirmed that
between 1995 and 1997 three of the cohorts of the contingent workforce
remained relatively static as percentages of the overall workforce:
independent contractors, on-call workers and part-time workers. On the other
hand, the remaining two cohorts grew substantially: the temporary help
agency cohort grew by 10%, and contract company workers grew by 24%. These
numbers were confirmed by the other research studies reviewed by the Working
Group.
The growth in these two segments was not viewed with alarm because they
comprise the two smallest cohorts of the contingent workforce. Hidden in
those numbers, however, may well be the beginnings of truly explosive growth
in that portion of the contingent workforce that has little, if any, chance
of attaining health and retirement benefits through the traditional system.
While the EBRI, EPI and Upjohn Institute studies all confirmed that
employees of temporary help agencies constituted about 1% of the 1997
workforce, or 1,267,000 workers, Mr. Lenz of the NATSS testified that in
1990 the average daily employment for temporary help firms was 1.1 million,
as of 1998 it was 2.6 million, and he estimated that it is currently about 3
million--a threefold increase in nine years. This growth rate is consistent
with the 15% per year growth of Kelly Services over the last five years
reported by Mr. Camden.
Why didn’t the BLS survey capture the size and rate of growth of this
cohort? Dr. Rasell of EPI provided one answer. In her testimony she pointed
out that while the BLS 1995 and 1997 surveys used a definition of temporary
help agency workers not previously used, there has for many years been
another BLS survey conducted monthly, the Current Population Survey (CPS),
which identifies workers in the “help supply services industry.” While
she did not explain the differences in the definitions, she testified that
in 1982 only .5% of workers identified themselves as working in the help
services industry, but as of 1998 2.2%, or 2.5 million workers so identified
themselves in the CPS. This number is more consistent with both the size and
growth rates identified by Mr. Lenz and Mr. Camden.A further explanation of
the discrepancy may lie in the way BLS asked its questions. Mr. Freedman of
the NTSA pointed out that while his member companies provide temporary
services, they tend to be of a longer term nature than the typical temporary
help agency worker and, therefore, may well have been captured under the
contract company category in the BLS Survey. Mr. Freedman explained that if
that is indeed what took place it would explain the rapid growth in the
contract company cohort between 1995 and 1997, reflecting what he
characterized as the rapid growth in his industry.
For purposes of the Working Group the discrepancies in estimates of the
size of the temporary agency and contract company workforces are relatively
immaterial. What is material is that by every estimate these cohorts are
growing and growing rapidly.
Indeed, the testimony of all the industry witnesses compels no other
conclusion than that the workers employed through their agencies represent
the vanguard of the emerging workforce of the American economy. As described
by Messrs. Lenz, Freedman and Camden temporary help agencies now provide
workers in virtually every occupation, with the greatest growth coming in
the technical and professional fields. And their testimony as to the rapid
growth expected in this field is consistent with the Upjohn Institute survey
in which two-thirds of the responding employers predicted that organizations
in their industry would increase their use of flexible staffing arrangements
in the coming five years.
Most importantly, whether this vanguard consists of “free agents” by
their own choice — Mr. Camden’s term — or “freelancers” by their
employer’s choice (as described by Mr. Stobaugh), Microsoft identified
their long-term temporary employees as “freelancers”), this is a
vanguard that will have only the most minimal access to health and
retirement benefits in our traditional employment-based system of
delivery.IV. FINDINGS
The term “contingent workforce” utilized by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics does not adequately describe the workforce at risk in the
traditional U.S. employment-based system of health and retirement
benefits.The workforce at risk in the traditional employment-based system of
health and retirement benefits includes the substantial and growing portion
of the workforce engaged in nonpermanent or less than full-time employment.
The percentage of the workforce engaged in nonpermanent or less than
full-time employment is approximately 30% and is growing.
A nonpermanent or less than full-time workforce can permit employers to
respond to global competitive pressures and may also respond to employee
preferences for flexibility.
The inaccessibility of health and retirement benefits to the nonpermanent
or less than full-time workforce is a substantial barrier to the development
of a flexible workforce.
Continued growth of this nonpermanent or less than full-time workforce
without benefits coverage will increase the subsidy by employers that do
provide benefits to employers that do not provide benefits, and further
burden all taxpayers with the obligation to subsidize the health and
retirement benefits of this workforce.
In the absence of a collectively bargained obligation, the provision of
employment-based health and retirement benefits is entirely a matter of
voluntary employer choice.
The current laws regulating collective bargaining were not designed to,
nor do they adequately, provide access to collective bargaining to the
nonpermanent or less than full-time workforce.
V. RECOMMENDATIONS
Having identified the size and growth of the contingent workforce, its
limited access to traditional employment-based fringe benefits, and its
limited ability to secure such benefits through collective bargaining, the
Working Group makes the following recommendations:
The Department of Labor and the Internal Revenue Service should continue
to vigorously enforce existing laws to prevent the denial of fringe benefits
to statutory employees misclassified as contingent workers.
Existing labor and antitrust laws that prevent access by contingent
workers to multiemployer plans of the type that have traditionally served
employers and contingent workers in the construction and garment industries
should be modified:
Independent contractors should be permitted to organize and bargain
collectively on a single or multiemployer basis.
The “community of interest” standards developed administratively by
the National Labor Relations Board to define appropriate units of workers
for collective bargaining should be modified to permit temporary and
contract company employees to organize and bargain with their employers.The
provisions of labor law recognizing the temporary and intermittent nature of
work in the construction and garment industries, that permit employers and
employees in those industries to enter into pre-hire agreements setting the
terms and conditions for employment, should be extended to independent
contractors, temporary agency employees and contract company workers.
While the decoupling of benefits from employment urged by representatives
of the temporary help industry may most simply be accommodated by a system
of universal health and retirement benefits, intermediate solutions should
be explored:
The multiemployer plan model, which facilitates the availability of
health and retirement benefits for small employers with temporary and
intermittent workforces, should be expanded to the contingent workforce. In
addition to the construction and garment industries, successful examples of
such plans are found in state and local governments and rural electrical
cooperatives.
While problems of cost and adverse selection will likely limit their
effectiveness, purchasing coalitions permitting contingent workers to obtain
health and retirement benefits at group rates, should be facilitated.
The Department of Labor should review current statutory impediments to
group purchasing of health benefits along the multiemployer model.
Specifically, the Department of Labor, pursuant to Section 3(40) of ERISA,
should seek to expand the ability to extend health benefits to contingent
workers through Multiple Employer Welfare Arrangements (MEWAs) with,
however, strong safeguards to assure the adequate funding of such
arrangements.
The Internal Revenue Code Section 403(b) retirement plan model should be
reviewed for utilization as a vehicle to permit employers of contingent
workers to contribute to retirement accounts of those workers.
To eliminate a possible disincentive to the provision of heatlh and
retirement benefits to contingent workers, the Department of Labor and the
Department of the Treasury should review whether removing the provision of
employee benefits as one of the factors in the current 20-factor test for
determining employee status would enhance the ability of contingent workers
to secure health and retirement benefits, without unacceptable offsetting
losses to the critical health and retirement systems funded through
employment taxes, or other fundamental worker protections.
The Department of the Treasury should review the Voluntary Employees’
Beneficiary Association (VEBA) rules of Section 501(c)(9) of the Internal
Revenue Code, and consider the inclusion of a greater percentage of
non-employee contingent workers.The Internal Revenue Service should amplify
its instructions and conduct public information and education activities for
taxpayers concerning the deductibility of individual health insurance costs.
VI. SUMMARIES OF TESTIMONY
Meeting of April 6, 1999
Testimony of Mr. Steven Hipple
Bureau of Labor Statistics,
U.S. Department of Labor
Steven Hipple, economist, Division of Labor Force Statistics, Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS) discussed the Current Population Survey (CPS). It is
a sample survey of 50,000 households (100,000 people) conducted each month
since the late 1940’s. Interviews are 60% by phone and 40% in person. It
is the primary source of demographic data on the US labor force over age 15.
The best known statistic from this survey is the national unemployment rate.
It is now 4.2 %, the lowest since January of 1970.BLS also uses the CPS
questionnaire to conduct periodic surveys including the Contingent and
Alternative Work Arrangements Survey. It has been conducted three times —
in February of 1995, 1997 and 1999. Results of the 1999 survey should be
available in the fall of 1999.BLS has not done a contingent work survey of
employers. All of its three surveys were through the Current Population
Survey, which asks questions of individuals.
Contingent work is not a particularly well or narrowly defined term. It
often has referred to temporary work or “just-in-time” work in addition
to other types of non-full time work.BLS defines contingent work as any job
in which an individual does not have an explicit or implicit contract for
ongoing employment. It covers anyone holding a job that, for an economic-
related reason, is structured to be short-term, or temporary. BLS publishes
three different definitions of contingent work:
Estimate 1 is the narrowest and includes wage and salary workers who
expect their jobs will last for one year or less and have held their jobs
for one year or less.
Estimate 2 is broader. BLS adds in the self-employed and independent
contractors who meet the same criteria as Estimate 1.
The broadest (Estimate 3) has no restrictions on current and restricted
tenure. It basically includes anyone who thinks his or her job is temporary
or not expected to continue.
Results of the 1997 survey showed that the number of contingent workers
ranged from 2.4 million under Estimate 1 to 5.6 million under Estimate 3.
The portion of total employment that was in a contingent job (referred to as
the contingency rate) ranged from 1.9% to 4.4%. These were slight declines
from numbers in the 1995 survey. The time periods covered by the 1995 and
1997 surveys involved strong labor market conditions with low unemployment
and strong job growth.
These surveys indicate that younger workers have a higher probability of
holding a contingent job than older workers. For workers under age 25, the
contingency rate was high — over 9% — compared to the overall rate for
all workers, which was 4.4%. A large portion of under-25 workers was
enrolled in school and probably wanted the increased flexibility of a
temporary job.Women had a higher probability of holding a contingent job
than men. Industries with above- average contingency rates included
construction and services. Namely, 30 percent of college-level instructors,
for example, held jobs expected to last a limited period of time and they
reflect the increased use of non-tenured faculty who typically work on
short-term contracts.
Half of contingent workers said that they wanted permanent jobs. For
younger contingent workers a third said they were satisfied with their
temporary jobs. Older contingent workers are more likely to prefer a
permanent job than younger contingent workers; 70% of workers over age 25
wanted a permanent job.
Contingent workers earned only 80% of what their non-contingent
counterparts earned. Contingent workers were also less likely to have
employer-provided health insurance. However, 2/3 were covered by some form
of health insurance — usually from a spouse or another family member.Only
16% of contingent workers were included in an employer-provided pension plan
versus 50% of all non-contingent workers.
Meeting of April 6, 1999
Testimony of Ms. Sharon R. Cohany,
Bureau of Labor Statistics,
U.S. Department of Labor
Sharon Cohany, economist, Office of Unemployment and Unemployment
Statistics, Bureau of Labor Statistics said that BLS has identified four
selected alternative work arrangements:
independent contractors,
on-call workers,
workers employed by contract company firms.workers employed by temporary
help firms, and
The 1995 and 1997 surveys indicate that these four arrangements accounted
for 10% of all workers. The largest arrangement was independent contractors,
independent consultants and free- lance workers. Independent contractors
tend to be middle-aged men, with college degrees, in managerial or skilled
blue-collar fields. Temporary agency workers were more likely to be younger
— women in clerical occupations and men in machine operator jobs.Most
independent contractors preferred their arrangements to traditional jobs,
while only 1/3 of temporary agency workers preferred their situations to
more traditional arrangements. Only 1.9% of on-call workers are represented
by a union.
Contract company workers earn more than traditional workers, while
on-call workers and temporary help agency workers earned less than the
average.
29% of temporary help agency workers had been in their current assignment
for a year or more, which shows that temporary help agencies can be
intermediaries for relatively long-term employment relationships.
News releases with these data (as well as articles in the Monthly Labor
Review) can be found on the BLS web site.
Meeting of April 6, 1999
Testimony of Dr. Paul Yakoboski,
Senior Research Fellow,
Employee Benefit Research Institute
Dr. Paul Yakoboski said that BLS determined that 5% of the total
US-employed population was contingent in February of 1995 compared to 4.5%
as of February 1997.
Only 66% of contingent workers had health insurance coverage in 1997
compared with 82% of non-contingent workers. 54% of non-contingent workers
had employment-based health insurance compared with 21% of contingent
workers. Even counting health insurance coverage from another source such as
a spouse, a greater proportion of contingent workers are uninsured.
Only 16% of contingent workers participated in a retirement plan in 1997
compared with 50% of non-contingent workers.
Contingent work arrangements can offer advantages to both employer and
employee. Employers can benefit from scheduling flexibility, the potential
for incremental growth and management of labor costs. Employees can benefit
through scheduling flexibility, supplemental income and personal
development. However, contingent workers typically earn less and are less
likely to receive health care and retirement benefits.
Meeting of May 5, 1999
Testimony of Dr. Edith Rasell,
Economist,
Economic Policy Institute
Fundamentally, Dr. Rasell urges that rather than the concept
"contingent workforce,” the best and most applicable, indeed
broadest, and most accurate description is the "nonstandard workforce.”The
"nonstandard workforce" is a workforce where (1) there is no
employer (independent contractor, self-employed); (2) the firm that employs
the worker differs from the one for whom the person works (temps, contract
workers); (3) there is extreme temporal instability (temps, on-call workers,
day laborers) or (4) where the worker works part time. In these jobs,
average pay is lower and retirement and health coverage benefits are less
common compared with the standard workforce. Unfortunately, the Bureau of
Labor Statistics’ definition of "contingent" work (a job of
limited duration) differs from the way this word is commonly used and this
has confused the debate. Dr. Rasell suggests avoiding this confusion and
using the term "nonstandard workforce" to define alternative forms
of employment and that the definition "nonstandard workforce"
should include part- time and self-employed people in addition to those
employees which the Bureau of Labor Statistics includes in its definition of
alternative work arrangements.The choice of definition determines the size
of nonstandard workforce and the scope of the problem of low wages and lack
of health insurance and retirement benefits for the nonstandard workforce.
The main public policy problem with the nonstandard workforce is the low
levels of pay and the relative non-existence of retirement and health
benefits compared to regular full-time employees. The Economic Policy
Institute estimates that approximately 30% of all workers are in the
nonstandard workforce.
Retirement coverage in any form and at any level for the nonstandard
workforce is overall approximately 12% versus retirement coverage for the
standard full-time workforce of approximately 66%.
Between 1982 and 1995, temporary agency workers as a share of total
employment grew from 0.5% of the workforce to 2.0% of the workforce, an
increase of approximately 300%.
Three principal points:
About 30% of workers are in the nonstandard workforce.
Nonstandard workers, on average, are paid less per hour than women with
similar demographic characteristics (including education) in regular,
full-time jobs.
While about two-thirds of standard workers receive health insurance and a
pension from their own employer, just 12 of nonstandard workers do.
Meeting of May 5, 1999
Testimony of Mr. Larry Engelstein,
Associate General Counsel,
AFL-CIO
The National Labor Relations Act enacted in 1935 was based on that era's
industrial model and is ill-suited to the current low wage
"contingent" work force economy.
Today's economy is service-sector dominated.
Employer's who retain the reality of economic controls may easily
manipulate the indicia of legal "employment" to avoid employment
law requirements.
Labor brokers (subcontractors) usually are low capital, labor intensive
operations. Hence labor brokers lack the capacity to significantly raise
wages and benefits and even provide any benefits for their workers without
losing customers and suffering economic failure. In many instances, the real
employer retains control of the premises where the work by labor broker
employees is performed.
Service contracts, for example janitorial contracts for office and large
residential buildings, are usually terminable at short notice and without
cause, these facts reinforce the pressure on labor brokers to control labor
costs which are often 90% of their total costs, and hence determinative of
their ability to compete.
The NLRB has ruled since the 1960's that the real employer may cancel
service contracts with subcontractors because of union organizational
threats or actual union representations. In case of union representations or
threat, the real employer may thereafter substitute a new subcontractor
which is under no obligation to hire the former contractor's workers.
Although the new contractor, in hiring, cannot in theory discriminate
against employees of the former service contractor, this obligation can
easily be avoided.
Any collective bargaining agreement between the union representing the
employees of the old service contractor need not be recognized by a new
service contractor. There is an obligation on the part of the new service
contractor to bargain in good faith with the represented workers if the
operations are substantially continuous and the personnel are substantially
the same. However, the "obligation to bargain" is not the
obligation to recognize an agreement or indeed to reach any agreement,
particularly when the new contractor is sophisticated or is in fact advised
on labor avoidance by the real employer.
The real employer is in control (economic reality of the funds available
for bargaining) but is legally insulated and protected from the economic
pressures essential to real bargaining under the anti-secondary provisions
of the Taft-Hartley Act (NLRA amendments of 1947). Hence real bargaining is
often hindered. Indeed, proscribed secondary pressures are attempted, the
NLRB is mandated to seek immediate injunctive relief in federal court, and
private damage actions are available. These remedies, which are not
otherwise available, apply only when labor organizations apply or attempt to
apply such secondary pressures.
Thus, the real employer who possesses the power to make collective
bargaining a reality rather than fiction is insulated from the need to
engage in collective bargaining.
The joint employer doctrine is recognized by the NLRB, however
adjudication and enforcement are slow, uncertain and ineffectual. For
example, in the trucking industry, the NLRB disregards real employer’s
roles under federal regulations that determine the details of trucking
operations and are imposed by the real employer upon subcontractors. Thus
the NLRA ignores the reality of the employment relationship.The NLRB appears
inclined to find joint employment relationships where only non- supervisory
employees are provided by the labor contractor. But the NLRB has ruled that
even where a joint employer relationship is found, employees of a contractor
may not be included in the same bargaining unit with employees of the client
employer even where these employees share an overwhelming community of
interest unless both employers consent to be the common unit; which rarely
occurs.
Independent Contractors
The 1947 amendments (Taft-Hartley) to the NLRA define "independent
contractors" out of NLRA protection as not being "employees.”
Hence independent contractors attempting to organize are subject to
concerted action and joint activity prohibitions under Federal and State
anti-trust laws which in fact prevent joint independent contractors from
bargaining with real employers.This labor law/labor economics briefing is
background for understanding the "why" of the inadequacy or
non-existence of health and retirement coverages for the contingent work
force.
Meeting of June 8, 1999
Testimony of Marc Machiz,
Associate Solicitor of Labor,
Plans Benefit Security Division,
and Robin Parry
Mr. Machiz provided written comments covering the general framework of
Title I of ERISA. Many of these issues of vesting, eligibility, etc.
parallel the Tax Code provisions of Title II of ERISA. The Title I
provisions are, in general, more flexible than those of the Tax Code. For
example, there are no ratio tests for coverage in Title I. Thus, for
example, a valid employment contract which denied an employee coverage in a
plan would not be prohibited by Title I.
Mr. Machiz stated that the Department's current focus on this issue is
the fiduciary conduct implications of the decision to cover or not to cover
certain segments of the workforce. The fundamental issue is that employer
promises to provide benefits must be published and kept. The DOL supports
the publication part of this process through the various reporting and
disclosure duties that Title I enforces on the plan sponsor - Summary Plan
Description, Summary Annual Report, statements of vested benefits, etc.
The enforcement part of the process is aided through DOL audits of the
plan's operation, to propose settlements out of Court and the right of the
DOL to participate in litigation on behalf of plan participants.
Within the field of contingent workers, the DOL deals with the same
common-law definition of the employer/employee relationship as the Treasury
Department. The DOL maintains the position that only the plan document can
control who has access to benefits. Though the DOL does not yet have a
formal position on waivers, it appears that any effort to get an employee to
waive coverage would not be valid if the plan document did not authorize
such waiver.
Meeting of June 8, 1999
Testimony of Ms. Deborah Walker
Deputy to the Tax Benefits Tax Counsel,
and
William Bortz
Office of Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy,
U.S. Department of the Treasury
Ms. Walker and Mr. Bortz appeared before us to provide an understanding
of the basic tax structure within which employee plans must operate and how
this structure influences the offering or denying benefit coverage to
contingent workers.
Mr. Bortz spoke first and outlined how the tax incentive structure
encourages profitable employers to establish benefit plans. That these plans
must operate within the context of specific procedures regarding
nondiscrimination, vesting, coverage, entry age, etc. These rules are more
specific and detailed for retirement plans, than they are for welfare plans.
The impact of these rules on contingent workers are:
The eligibility rules allow employers to exclude employees who do not
work more than a minimum number of hours - 1,000 for a retirement plan or a
minimum period of service - 12 months for a retirement plan.
The vesting rules mean that persons who work fewer than 1,000 per year
may never earn a nonforfeitable interest in any benefits that they may
accrue.
The coverage rules allow a plan sponsor to exclude from participation a
portion of their workforce that might otherwise be eligible.
The tax-qualified rules only apply to common-law employees and provide no
protection for bona fide independent contractors.
There is a specific provision covering leased employees but again, this
only comes into play for an individual who has been performing service on a
substantially full-time basis for 12 months.
Ms. Walker expanded the discussion to cover other plans - welfare, stock,
nonqualified deferred compensation agreements, etc. Employee stock purchase
plans must be offered to substantially all common law employees. Some
welfare plans such as self-insured medical and group- term life insurance
have nondiscrimination rules. But the same issues arise, they are aimed at
common-law employees who work roughly half time and on a recurring basis for
the same employer.
Ms. Walker also discussed the hurdles that Congress faces in attempting
to develop a better definition of employee for income tax reporting and
benefits. The common-law tests are the basis for the working definition.
These have been interpreted over the years and Congress granted some
flexibility and protection to employer's in interpreting these rules in 1978
and 1996 tax acts. The importance of this program and the difficulty in
determining the employee status was affirmed by the IRS's recent
Classification Settlement program. Ms. Walker was not optimistic that there
would be a legislative solution to this matter in the near future.
The conclusion to this testimony was that the Treasury Department has the
objective to protect real employees, whatever that may mean. To provide
access to employee benefits for these people. They have an ongoing concern
about employee choice. These major reclassification cases present a serious
concern to them.
Meeting of July 13, 1999
Testimony of Mr. Edward A. Lenz,
Senior Vice President, Public Affairs
and General Counsel,
National Association of Temporary and Staffing Services (NATSS)
Mr. Lenz agreed with the testimony of prior witnesses that the definition
of contingency is a difficult and inherently subjective one. Mr. Lenz
limited his remarks to that portion of the contingent workforce employed
through temporary help agencies or staffing firms.
Mr. Lenz testified that the average daily number of workers employed
through these arrangements has increased from 1 million in 1990 to
approximately 3 million today. He pointed out that since the turnover rate
is roughly 450% annually for these workers, approximately 15 million persons
annually are employed as temporaries. The average job tenure for each job is
9.6 weeks.
Mr. Lenz stressed that this high turnover is a fundamental reason for the
low level of benefits coverage of these workers.
He offered statistical data with respect to the availability of health
coverage based upon a survey of his membership. The vast majority of all
temporary workers are employed by firms with annual revenues exceeding $50
million. In turn 75% of firms in that size category offer health benefits in
which the employer, on average, contributes 40% of the premium costs, with
the employee paying 60%. Finally, of the resulting 56% (i.e., 75% x
75%=56.25%) of temporary workers offered coverage on this basis, only 15%
choose to purchase the coverage.
With respect to pension coverage, Mr. Lenz advised that 60% of large
firms offered 401(k) plans but only 6.5% of eligible workers participated,
although 14% of those in small firms did so.
Mr. Lenz described three distinct groups within the temporary help
industry that his association has identified: traditional, transitional and
career temporaries. “Traditional” temporaries are defined as those who
seek the flexibility of temporary work such as students, teachers, retirees
and parents of young children. They make up 20% of the temporary workforce,
are disproportionately young, are not focussed on saving for retirement and
are often covered by health insurance of a parent or spouse. “Transitional”
temporaries are those utilizing temporary work as a bridge to permanent
employment. They may be looking for a first job, reentering the workforce
after an absence or layoff, transitioning from welfare or simply looking for
a better job. Over 72% of temporary employees go on to permanent jobs within
one year. They are often covered by a spouse’s health plan and do not opt
for available pension benefits. They comprise 50% of the temporary
workforce. “Career” temporaries comprise 25% of the temporary workforce.
They tend to be better educated and higher paid and are more likely to have
benefits. Of those working more than 12 months as temporary employees, 60%
have health insurance from some source and 28% were eligible for pension
coverage, although no participation figures were offered. These workers
prefer the flexibility of temporary work.In conclusion Mr. Lenz offered
three proposals for increasing benefit coverage for temporary workers:
Increase portability of benefits by encouraging pooling arrangements to
allow trade associations or other groups to provide continuous health
coverage to temporaries employed by participating firms.
Accelerating the timetable for full deductibility of health insurance
premiums and eliminating the linkage between deductibility and employment
status.
Increasing the annual limits on IRA contributions.
Meeting of July 13, 1999
Testimony of Marc D. Freedman,
Special Counsel,
National Technical Services Association (NTSA)
The member firms of NTSA fall mostly within the contract company
definition of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) because the workers are
employed by companies under contract, are assigned to one customer at a time
and perform work at the customer’s worksite. The assignments tend to last
longer than temporary help agency assignments and, given the nature of the
work and high level of skills involved, the workers are better paid and have
greater access to benefits. The workers supplied work in design, drafting,
engineering, project management, computer programming, staff augmentation
and technical publication services.Mr. Freedman criticized the BLS
definition of contingent worker as one which is not well suited for
capturing the technical contract and temporary workforce because it focuses
on whether the worker believes he has a job for a fixed duration. Most
technical contract and temporary workers do have jobs of fixed durations.
Mr. Freedman expressed agreement with the testimony of Mr. Lenz of the
NATSS, and specifically agreed that the traditional concept of
employment-based benefits is not suitable for the emerging flexible
workforce. He suggested that the higher wages commanded by workers employed
by his constituent members--an average of $52,000 annually--would permit
them to purchase benefits individually if there was greater access
available.
Mr. Freedman cautioned that if benefits for contract and temporary
workers were mandated, then client firms of his members might not continue
to use temporary staffing firms in such great numbers, and salaries might be
reduced to offset the costs of benefits. In addition, the economy and labor
market would suffer by net being able to take better advantage of the
services provided by contract companies such as greater career development
opportunities and career choices for workers and efficient labor
intermediaries for their clients and the economy.
Mr. Freedman stated that the segment of the market represented by his
members falls within the contract worker portion of the BLS survey, and is
the fastest growing segment of the industry.
Meeting of July 13, 1999
Testimony of Mr. Carl A. Camden,
Executive Vice President, Field Operations,
Kelly Services, Inc.
Mr. Camden expressed the belief that the provision of employee benefits
to the contingent workforce represents the most significant barrier to the
ability of the economy and workforce to grow and remain globally
competitive, and that dealing with this issue is one of the most important
issues that the Department of Labor can be addressing.
Mr. Camden advised that 70% of the average 750,000 workers that work for
Kelly Services do so for less than two months--a significant challenge to
benefits design. Furthermore, while 80% of Kelly’s revenues are derived
from the 30% of their employees who are of long tenure sufficient to
participate in available benefit plans (i.e., 1,000 to 1,500 hours per year
on a nearly continuous basis), only 10% elect to do so. These statistics
define the challenge.Mr. Camden stated that we should acknowledge that
certain segments of the temporary workforce will choose not to participate
in benefit plans because they are young and feel immortal, have benefits
available elsewhere, or are structurally difficult to deal with because of
short-duration employment, but nevertheless move on to address how to make
benefits available to that segment of this workforce that want and need
benefit coverage but find it difficult to do so at their income levels.
Mr. Camden advised that Kelly Services has grown at the rate of 15% per
year for the last five years and has tripled in size since 1990. He
anticipates continued change in the nature of the workforce that will
require a change in the fundamental nature of benefits delivery.
Mr. Camden went on to describe a segment of Kelly’s workforce, 30% to
40%, which he characterized as free agents by choice, who will not accept
permanent employment if offered. He shared the concern that if benefits
continue to be employment based that the cross subsidies by employers who do
provide benefits to employers who don’t will continue to increase. He
referred to this as the ability of workers to arbitrage benefits, and
referred to the historical model that produced our system of
employment-based fringe benefits as dysfunctional for a significant part of
the workforce as the new economy is taking hold.Mr. Camden advised that
Kelly operates in 20 countries around the world and that all of them are
grappling with this same problem. He urged that the Working Group examine
the experience in these other countries before reaching any conclusions.
In response to a question from the Working Group, Mr. Camden advised that
there has been tremendous growth in the temporary staffing business in the
last five years and that this represents only a small part of the free agent
workforce that is creating this challenge for benefits provisions.
Consultants, independent contractors and thousands of professionals working
for traditional companies, but with no expectation of permanent employment,
are all part of the emerging free agent workforce that should be of concern
for benefits policy.
Meeting of July 13, 1999
Testimony of Mr. Milan Yager
Executive Vice President,
National Association of Professional Employer Organizations (NAPEO)
It is estimated that between 2 and 3 million workers are employed
pursuant to coemployment relationships between the employer to whom they
provide services and the professional employer organization (PEO) that pays
them and provides all relevant human resource services, including fringe
benefits where available.
Mr. Yager emphasized that employees employed pursuant to these
relationships--an industry which has grown more than 30% each of the last
five years--are not a part of the contingent workforce as defined. This is
because the workers are not employed for a limited duration, but rather are
regular full-time employees whose salary and benefits are provided by a
third party to the employment relationship--a coemployer PEO. The PEO does
not provide workers to employers but merely provides human resource services
to the employers’ existing workforces.Mr. Yager cited results of a survey
of his member firms showing that prior to establishing the PEO relationship
only 4% of client firms offered 401(k) savings plans. After establishing the
relationship 90% of the covered workers had access to 401(k)s, although
rates of actual participation were not cited. Likewise, over 98% of NAPEO
members offer health care, although the rates of copay and participation
were not cited.
Mr. Yager stressed that the average number of employees per client firm
of NAPEO members was only 16, and that the establishment of the PEO
relationship can enhance, not diminish access to employee benefits.
In response to a question from the Working Group, Mr. Yager cited
research by Bankers Trust that projects that the PEO industry can expect to
continue to grow at the rate of 30% for the next 5 to 10 years.
Meeting of September 8, 1999
Testimony of Dr. Susan N. Houseman
W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research
There is widespread perception that the number of workers in nonstandard
employment arrangements is large and growing. This has raised concern for
several reasons: (1) often workers in these arrangements don’t receive
much in the way of benefits, (2) there is concern that firms sometimes use
workers in these arrangements to circumvent ERISA and other laws governing
benefits and labor standards, and (3) there’s concern that the laws were
written primarily with the full- time employee in mind, and therefore do not
adequately protect or cover workers in other types of arrangements.Dr.
Houseman discussed a couple of issues that have caused confusion. One issue
is the term “contingent.” Another is the contention by some (including
some of our previous witnesses) citing Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS),
that the contingent workforce phenomenon is small and therefore does not
merit much policy attention. On the first issue, Dr. Houseman scrupulously
avoids the word contingent. She prefers other terms like nonstandard work
arrangements, flexible staffing arrangements or alternative work
arrangements. With respect to the BLS, there are some problems with the
data. The BLS surveys defined contingent workers as those whose jobs were
expected to end in a relatively short period of time. Several examples were
cited where workers were not counted as contingent workers by the BLS
because of this definition — on-call workers, temporary help agency
workers, and many independent contractors — which is a very large
category. In most of these instances these workers are certainly contingent
from the employer’s perspective. In Dr. Houseman’s view, the Bureau of
Labor Statistics on contingent work, and their definition, isn’t
particularly relevant for our work group. Rather, a broad set of employment
arrangements beyond regular full-time employees are appropriate. The reason
is two-fold: (1) these workers outside of regular full-time employment
arrangements are much less likely to receive benefits; and (2) because the
law governing benefit regulations are written primarily with the full-time
employee in mind.Dr. Houseman referred to several tables and discussed the
percentage of workers in flexible staffing arrangements and trends. Table 1,
Distribution of Employment by Work Arrangement (1997), indicates that
workers in flexible staffing arrangements or alternative work arrangements
(agency temporaries, on-call or day laborers, independent contractors,
contract company workers and other direct-hire temporaries) accounted for
12.5% of the total workforce. Other self-employed account for another 5.1%.
It was noted that agency temporaries only show up as being one percent of
the workforce in the CPS household survey, but they are about double that in
the establishment survey. You may question the accuracy of the other
figures, but it was observed that they are the only numbers we have. We know
very little about trends in employment in these arrangements. However, via
the current establishment survey, we do have trend figures on temporary help
agency workers. Employment of these agency temporaries has increased from
about half a percent of general employment in 1982 to about 2.3 percent a
year or so ago. We also have data on all self-employed workers and on all
part-time workers. Neither has increased much in recent years. There isn’t
any hard data on the other categories, but several surveys have asked
businesses if they have increased their use of these various types of
employment arrangements in the last five or 10 years and do they expect to
increase them in the future. The responses suggest that these types of
arrangements have been growing.Dr. Houseman’s research clearly indicates
that with respect to whether an employee receives benefits doesn’t have to
do with the workers themselves, as some may think, but rather with the type
of employment arrangement. For example, workers who are not full-time
regular employees account for about 31% of the workforce, but they also
account for about half of those with no health insurance and about half of
those with no retirement plans. Another misconception is that workers in
these other arrangements may be concentrated in companies that don’t offer
benefits to anyone. Not true. The data shows that of companies that hire
direct-hire temporaries, almost 94% offered benefits to their regular
full-time employees. Less than 10% of these companies offered benefits to
their direct-hire temporaries. It’s important from a policy standpoint to
understand that it is very difficult for a company to discriminate among
different sets of full-time employees with respect to benefits, but they are
using these alternative employment arrangements to determine benefit
eligibility. In her survey, when companies were asked whether they are using
these other employment arrangements to save on benefit costs, very few said
they are. But, when asked do you actually save on wage and benefits costs
even though it’s not an important motivation for using these workers, the
answer was definitely yes.Meeting of September 8, 1999
Testimony of Dr. Paul Osterman
Sloan School at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Dr. Osterman took a different approach, and stepped back from the issue
of contingent workers and benefits to give his view of the fundamental
changes that are going on in the labor market, how contingent work fits into
that, and what the broader policy implications might be. He conducted a
survey about contingent work in 1992 that was repeated in 1997 on a random
sample of American establishments in the private sector with 50 or more
employees. Two kinds of contingent work were covered—temporary help firms
and on-call contingent workers. Fifty percent of the firms surveyed used
temps, and 13% use on-call workers. When used, temps represented 5.7% of the
payroll, and totaled 2.7%. Contingent on-call represented 13.5%, and totaled
2.4%. What’s really striking is that temporary help agencies are new labor
market institutions and perform functions that had never been performed.
They are job-matchers. In fact, about 23% of temporary help agency workers
are eventually hired as full-time employees and about 44% of on-call workers
were eventually hired. The main advantages cited by employers for using
contingent workers were peak load and flexibility. Savings in benefits as a
reason was relatively low. The disadvantages of using these workers are they’re
not committed to the employer, they don’t care whether they’re using
good product or not and their job skills are often inadequate.Professor
Osterman focused on what’s fundamentally different about the labor market
today. The rules have changed. In his view we are in a transition period
from the old long-term stable employment system that lasted from about the
end of World War II until about 1982. Some new labor market institutions are
being created, and it is unclear what the new rules are going to be. He
believes it is important not to be overwhelmed and roped into the notion
that markets, whether we talking about competitiveness, efficiency or
globalization, dictate the outcome.How does the old labor market compare
with the current one? The old one has blown apart. Instead of the firm as
family, you have reengineering. Instead of emphasis on pay equity, you’ve
got pay for performance. You clearly don’t have career jobs any more as
was the case with the old system. This is where contingent work fits in, and
the growth of nonstandard workers is a symptom of the changing nature of
careers and work.There are two policy-setting implications as a result of
this new labor market. One is how to deal with mobility or turnover. The
other is the growing imbalance of power between employers and employees. In
a world of high turnover it creates problems with respect to unemployment
insurance, where there’s a minimum number of hours for eligibility, and
benefits. In Professor Osterman’s view, policies need to be rethought not
in the context of contingent or nonstandard work, but to deal with higher
rates of turnover and mobility which, if put into place would benefit
contingent workers as well as others. With respect to the balance of power
issue, power in the labor market has shifted way from employees in favor of
employers. This trend is less relevant to contingent work, and has more to
do with the need for labor law reform in order to provide workers with a
voice.The fundamental lesson Professor Osterman wants to leave with our work
group is that he would think about the problem of nonstandard work in the
context of the broader changes in the labor market. It may lead us in some
directions that we would not have otherwise gone.
Meeting of September 8, 1999
Testimony of David F. Stobaugh, Esq.
Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong
An employee by another name is still an employee. Mr. Stobaugh’s entire
practice has consisted of representing people who are called something they’re
not, contingent workers. He believes that a lot of people are mislabeled
because employers want to deny them benefits and be relieved of certain
laws. This is true both in the private and public sectors. ERISA has been
seriously undermined because of this practice of employers pretending that
their employees are not their employees. According to Stobaugh, we are
heading in the direction of “virtual companies” where the companies only
hire the owner and outsources all of the other functions. It makes one
wonder whether mandating benefits for contingent workers may be
necessary.Mr.
Stobaugh’s experience in this area is based on cases, and he has litigated
almost every type of nonstandard worker, temporary employees who are not
temporary, on-call workers who are not on-call, etc. Several cases that they
have tried were reviewed to illustrate his point. One example was a case
against the Seattle Public Library, and their scheme was to count only
authorized hours. So, nineteen hours was authorized and the benefits
threshold was twenty. Another example was a case brought against King
County, where their scheme was to call everybody temporary. You were
temporary unless you had a position in the budget. They had long-term
temporaries, i.e. people who had been there 10-15 years. A more recent case
is the one against Microsoft. They hired some people as free-lancers. At
Microsoft free-lancer meant that you had a different colored badge and you
filled out invoices to get paid, but otherwise you’re exactly the same as
any full-time regular employee. In their particular division they made up
40% of the workforce. What really galled his clients is that they weren’t
really part of the team and didn’t get the employee recognition they
thought they deserved. They raised the issue with management to be
reclassified so that they could get benefits. Management was not responsive.
There is a whole industry out there trying to transfer employees from the
payroll of the real employer to that of the agency. Microsoft was also “payrolling”
employees.Other examples of cases where Mr. Stobaugh represented contingent
workers were reviewed. The common thread through all of these from his
vantage point is that employers were systematically and intentionally
setting up employment arrangements, and mislabeling employees to avoid
paying benefits to these workers. The additional examples: (1) LA
County—payrolled
many lawyers, who did the same job as regular full-time lawyers, by setting
up their own payroll service agency; (2) Arco—payrolled some shift workers
that did exactly the same work as other employees, and took them out of the
benefits plan. Arco used several payroll service agencies. And even where
these payroll service agencies had their own 401(k) plan, there were minimum
service requirements that the employees could never meet to participate
because Arco kept switching them to another agency before they met the
minimum service requirement.The proliferation of PEO’s was addressed. He
does not believe that PEO’s really do anything, and that it’s just a
scheme to shift employees from the “real” employer and again allowing
the real employer to avoid paying benefits. There are a number of other
motivations why employers do these misclassification schemes. It allows them
to avoid other legal responsibilities because a whole host of laws depend on
the employment relationship. It allows them to hide the true size of their
workforce. The ideal company would have no jobs because jobs are just
costs.In response to a question about suggestions, Mr. Stobaugh said his
suggestion would only address perma-temps (people who are given an improper
label, but really work very long periods of time), and not “real
contingent workers” (i.e. short-termers). With respect to perma-temps, he
thinks that both the Treasury and DOL could make clear in regulations that
you can’t take somebody out of a plan by calling them something that they’re
not. You could also have a similar approach with legislation. It was also
noted that there are absolutely no penalty now for doing what these
employers are doing, no consequences. There is no remedy. It would be
helpful to just get the plans enforced, and not let employers exclude people
by pretending that they are something that they are not.VII.
EXHIBITS AND WRITTEN MATERIALS RECEIVED
1999 Index
Advisory Council on Employee Benefit and Pension Plans
(Actual Transcripts/Executive Summaries for the Council’s full meetings
and working group sessions are available — at a cost — through the
Department of Labor’s contracted court reporting service, which is
Executive Court Reporters at 301-565-0064/301-589-4280FAX.)April 6, 1999:
Working Group Studying Benefit Implications of a Contingent Workforce
Agenda
Official Transcript
Executive Summary of Transcript
Contingent Workers and Workers in Alternative Work Arrangements” by
Craig Copeland, Paul Fronstin, Pamela Ostuw and Paul Yakoboski, Employee
Benefit Research Institute, March 1999. “Contingent Work: Results From the
Second Survey” by Steven Hipple, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S.
Department of Labor, November 1998.
1) “Workers in Alternative Employment Arrangements: A Second
Look” by Sharon R. Cohany, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. DOL, November
1998.
2) “Temporary Workers as Members of the Contingent Labor
Force, a Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress, prepared
by Linda Levine, Specialist in Labor Economics, Domestic Social Policy
Division, dated February 16, 1999.May 5, 1999:Working Group Studying Benefit
Implications of a Contingent Workforce
Agenda
Official Transcript
Executive Summary of Transcript
The Nonstandard Work Arrangements and Pension Coverage: Confusion Over
Definition and Trends” presentation paper by Edith Rasell, Economic Policy
Institute, at the meeting, as well as Nonstandard Work, Substandard Jobs:
Flexible Work Arrangements in the U.S. by Arne L. Kalleberg, Edith Rasell,
Naomi Cassirer, Barbara F. Reskin, Ken Hudson, David Webster, Eileen
Appelbaum, Robert M. Spalter-Roth from the Economic Policy Institute Women’s
Research and Education Institute, 1997.
Section V. Contingent Workers, excerpted from the Dunlop Commission
Report of 1994, prepared for the U.S. Department of Labor.
“Independent Contractors: A Briefing Paper” presented by Larry
Engelstein, Associate General Counsel, AFL-CIO. Also distributed Part-Time
Work: Full-time Bills: The Problems of Part-Time Employment” at the
meeting.
Synopsis of Testimonies made at the April 6, 1999 working group session,
prepared by Judith Calder.June 8, 1999: Working Group Studying Benefit
Implications of a Contingent Workforce
Agenda
Official Transcript
Executive Summary of Transcript
Several May 14, 1999 news articles including: “Microsoft Loses Ruling
Over Temporary Workers” by Ralph T. King, Jr., Wall Street Journal; “Temps
Win Case for Microsoft Benefits” by Timothy Burns, Washington Times;
Excerpt from daily items on the business page of the Washington Post
regarding the issue; “Temporary Microsoft Workers Win Stock Ruling” by
Tina Kelley, New York Times; “The Growth of Part-time Employment Has
Already Peaked,” a letter to the editor by Max Lyons, economist,
Employment Policy Foundation, which appeared in the Washington Times, May
15, 1999.
Written Testimony of Marc Machiz, Associate Solicitor of Labor, Plans
Benefits Security Division, plus various court documents related to the
Department’s case, Herman v. Time Warner Inc. et al 98 Civ. 7589.July 13,
1999: Working Group Studying Benefit Implications of a Contingent Workforce
Agenda
Official Transcript
Executive Summary of Transcript
“Nonstandard Work is Preferred by Most ?Contingent’ Workers” by Max
R. Lyons, issued by the Economic Policy Institute.
“Contingent Workforce: Bills Seek Parity for Full-Time Temporaries to
Prevent Firms From Denying Benefits” by Colleen T. Congel, BNA Pension
& Benefits, June 28, 1999; “Union Asks Temporary Employment Agencies
for Recognition of Microsoft Bargaining Unit” by Nan Netherton, May 17,
1999.
“America Wants Flexible Work” by Timothy J. Bartl, a public policy
publication of the Labor Policy Association, 1998.
“Who’s an Independent Contractor? Who’s an Employer” by Myra H.
Barron, Esq., a partner in Weinberg & Jacobs, LLP, Rockville, Md. from
the Labor Lawyer, Vol. 14, N. 3, Winter/Spring/1999.
Summary of June 8 testimony of Deborah Walker and Bill Bortz, Department
of the Treasury, and of Marc Machiz, Associate Solicitor of Labor.
Written Statement by Edward A. Lenz, Senior Vice President, Public
Affairs and General Counsel, National Association of Temporary and Staffing
Services (NATSS). Plus “Long-Term Temps: A Rare Breed” by Max Lyons for
the Employment Policy Foundation, July 8, 1999.
Written Statement of Marc D. Freedman, Special Counsel of the National
Technical Services Association (NTSA).
Free Agents by Choice” by Carl A. Camden, Executive Vice President,
Field Operations, Kelly Services, Inc. for the New Democrat, March/April
1998 issue entitled “Why America Needs a New Labor”. Plus a promotional
handout on Kelly Services.
Written Statement of Milan Yager,Executive Vice President of the National
Association of Professional Employer Organizations (NAPEO).
“What a PEO Can Do For You”by Bruce E. Katz from the Journal of
Accountancy, July 1999.September 8, 1999:Working Group Studying Benefit
Implications of a Contingent Workforce
Agenda
Official Transcript
Executive Summary of Transcript
Written Testimony before the Working Group by Susan N. Houseman, Senior
Economist, W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, September 8 1999.
Plus a Draft of “Flexible Staffing Arrangements, a Report on Temporary
Help, On-Call, Direct Hire Temporary, Leased, Contract Company and
Independent Contractor Employment in the United States, prepared by the
Department of Labor in June 1999 and copies of her slides for a July 21
presentation at DOL.
Written Testimony from Dr. Paul Osterman, Sloan School, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, September 8, 1999. (Receipt Pending)
Written Testimony from David F. Stobaugh, Bendich, Stobaugh & Strong,
P.C. on September 8, 1999.
“Revolt of the Worker Bees: ?Permatemps’ sue employers over benefits,
stock options” by Patricia Barnes, American Bar Association Journal,
September, 1999.
Summary of testimony of Edward A. Lenz, Marc Freedman, Milan P. Yager and
Carl Camden, who all appeared at the July meeting of the Working Group.
Memorandum Decision (98 Civ. 7589) in Herman v. Time Warner, Inc.,
September 3, 1999.
“Understanding the Microsoft Decision: Advice for Employers With Leased
Employees, by John R. Quesnel, for the Employee Benefit Plan Review, August
1999.
“Staffing Positively Impacts Economy, Industry Officials Tell DOL” by
Bruce Steinberg, July 23, 1999 issue of Staffing Industry Report.October 5,
1999:Working Group Studying Benefit Implications of a Contingent Workforce
Agenda
official Transcript
Executive Summary of Transcript
A copy of the Temporary, Part-Time and Contract Employment in the United
States: A Report on the W.E. Upjohn Institute’s Employer Survey on
Flexible Staffing Policies, prepared by
Susan Houseman under a contract to the Department of Labor.Members of the
1999 Working Group Studying the Benefit Implications
of a Contingent Workforce
MICHAEL R. FANNING
Chair of the Working Group
Central Pension Fund of the
International Union of Operating
Engineers and Participating Employers
PATRICK N. MCTEAGUE
Vice Chair of the Working Group
McTeague, Higbee, MacAdam, Case,
Watson and Cohen
ROSE MARY ABELSON
Northrop Grumman Corporation
EDDIE C. BROWN
Brown Capital Management
J. KENNETH BLACKWELL
Secretary of State, State of Ohio
JUDITH ANN CALDER
Abacus Financial Group, Inc.
THOMAS J. MACKELL, JR.
Vice Chair of the Advisory Council
MFS Institutional Advisors, Inc.
JUDITH F. MAZO
The Segal Company
REBECCA J. MILLER
McGladrey & Pullen, L.L.P.
MICHAEL J. STAPLEY
DeSeret Mutual Benefit Association
BARBARA ANN UBERTI
Chair of the Advisory Council
Wilmington Trust Company
1Report of the Working Group on the Merits of Defined Contribution vs.
Defined Benefit Plans (1997).
2Report of the Working Group on Retirement Plan Leakage: “Are We
Cashing Out Our Future?” (1998).3Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1998. “Workers
in Alternative Employment Arrangements: A Second Look,” Washington, D.C.,
U.S. Department of Labor.4Economic Policy Institute and Women’s Research
and Education Institute, 1997. “Nonstandard Work, Substandard Jobs,
Flexible Work Arrangements in the U.S.,” Washington, D.C.; and
supplemental testimony before the Working Group by Dr. Edith Rasell,
Economic Policy Institute, May 5, 1999.5W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment
Research, 1997. “Temporary, Part-Time and Contract Employment in the
United States: A Report on the W.E. Upjohn Institute’s Employer Survey on
Flexible Staffing Arrangements,” Kalamazoo, Michigan; and supplemental
testimony by Dr. Susan Houseman before the Working Group, September 8,
1999.6Employee Benefits Research Association, 1999. “Contingent Workers
and Workers in Alternative Work Arrangements”, Washington, D.C.7Economic
Policy Institute and Women’s Research and Education Institute, 1997. “Nonstandard
Work, Substandard Jobs, Flexible Work Arrangements in the U.S.,”
Washington, D.C.; and supplemental testimony before the Working Group by Dr.
Edith Rasell, Economic Policy Institute, May 5, 1999.8W.E. Upjohn Institute
for Employment Research, 1997. “Temporary, Part-Time and Contract
Employment in the United States: A Report on the W.E. Upjohn Institute’s
Employer Survey on Flexible Staffing Arrangements, “Kalamazoo, Michigan;
and supplemental testimony by Dr. Susan Houseman before the Working Group,
September 8, 1999.9Employee Benefits Research Association, 1999. “Contingent
Workers and Workers in Alternative Work Arrangements”, Washington,
D.C.10Economic Policy Institute and Women’s Research and Education
Institute, 1997. “Nonstandard Work, Substandard Jobs, Flexible Work
Arrangements in the U.S.,” Washington, D.C.; and supplemental testimony
before the Working Group by Dr. Edith Rasell, Economic Policy Institute, May
5, 1999.11W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 1997. “Temporary,
Part-Time and Contract Employment in the United States: A Report on the W.E.
Upjohn Institute’s Employer Survey on Flexible Staffing Arrangements,”
Kalamazoo, Michigan; and supplemental testimony by Dr. Susan Houseman before
the Working Group, September 8, 1999.
|