Reducing Overpayments and Increasing Quality in the Unemployment System


Book Description

Reducing overpayments and increasing quality in the unemployment system: hearing before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, One Hundred Eleventh Congress, second session, May 25, 2010.




Reducing Overpayments and Increasing Quality in the Unemployment System


Book Description

Reducing overpayments and increasing quality in the unemployment system : hearing before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, One Hundred Eleventh Congress, second session, May 25, 2010.
















UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE: Enhanced Focus on Program Integrity Could Reduce Overpayments


Book Description

Our work shows that of the $30 billion in Ul benefits paid in calendar year 2001, Labor estimates that this includes about $2.4 billion in overpayments, including $560 million attributable to fraud or abuse. Labor's analysis also suggests that the states could have detected and/or recovered about $1.3 billion of the total overpayments given their current policies and procedures. Labor based these estimates on data from its quality assurance system, which involves an in-depth analysis of individual Ul claims in each state. Labor's quality assurance data document numerous categories of overpayments, including individuals who work while receiving benefits, or misrepresent their identity. Other sources of overpayments include agency errors and inaccurate or untimely information provided by employers. Our work shows that management and operational practices at both the state and federal level contribute to overpayments in the Ul program. At the state level, many states place a higher priority on quickly processing and paying Ul claims than on taking the necessary steps to adequately verify claimants' initial and continued eligibility for Ul benefits. As a result, we found that many states do not adequately verify information reported by claimants. At the federal level, we found that Labor's policies and directives emphasize quickly processing and paying claims, with only limited attention given to payment accuracy. While we recognize the importance of paying benefits to individuals in a timely manner, Labor's performance measurement system does not provide sufficient incentives and sanctions for states to balance the need for payment timeliness with the need for payment accuracy.




Unemployment Insurance


Book Description

Unemployment Insurance: Increased Focus on Program Integrity Could Reduce Billions in Overpayments




An Incentives Approach to Improving the Unemployment Compensation System


Book Description

A study addressed the issue of overpayments and other quality problems in the unemployment compensation (UC) program and was current as of June 1987. Principal findings are as follows: (1) overpayments constituted a major problem for the UC system as a whole; (2) high overpayment rates were symptomatic of fundamental problems including difficulties posed by system complexity, adverse incentives for system participants, and the difficulties state agencies have in monitoring claimant compliance with weekly eligibility criteria; (3) the UC system appeared to be excessively complex; (4) federal performance criteria neglected many important aspects of state UC program quality and tended to create adverse incentives by overemphasizing the speed versus the quality of claim processing and payments; (5) adverse incentives within state UC systems typically did not discourage and may even have encouraged ineligible claimants to file for benefits; (6) tax incentives for individual employers to engage in monitoring of individual claimant compliance with eligibility criteria were quite weak; (7) state agency personnel typically had very limited incentives to prevent either underpayments or overpayments or to detect or recover overpayments; and (8) the interaction of excessive program complexity, limited administrative funding, and adverse incentives made it extremely difficult for state agencies to monitor effectively claimant compliance with many UC program requirements, especially those that were to be met on a weekly basis. (A 13-page bibliography is included.) (CML)