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Today's Diverse Workforce Leading to Dramatic Change in Employee Benefits Industry.


Unum, LIMRA LIMRA Life Insurance and Market Research Association (now LIMRA International, Inc.)  report highlights HR trends and implications

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- For the first time in history, America's workforce is composed of four distinct generations - just one of many trends propelling pro·pel  
tr.v. pro·pelled, pro·pel·ling, pro·pels
To cause to move forward or onward. See Synonyms at push.



[Middle English propellen, from Latin
 the benefits industry towards consumer choice and driving the growth in voluntary employee benefits, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a report released today by benefits leader Unum (NYSE NYSE

See: New York Stock Exchange
: UNM UNM University of New Mexico
UNM UnumProvident Corporation
UNM Under New Management
UNM United Nations Medal
UNM User Name Mapping
) in conjunction with LIMRA International.

"HR Trends and Challenges: The Changing U.S. Demographic, Economic and Social Landscape of the Workplace" provides a comprehensive review of studies from Unum, LIMRA, Society of Human Resource Management and other trade, business and government research. The result is an overview of key issues facing the benefits world:

* A multi-generational workforce. For the first time in history, employers may have as many as four distinct generations in the workforce - each with its own set of values, communication styles and attitudes about work-life balance The expression work-life balance was first used in 1986 in the US (although had been used in the UK from the late 1970s by organisations such as New Ways to Work and the Working Mother's Association) to help explain the unhealthy life choices that many people were making; they were .

* An evolving American household. Single Americans now outnumber out·num·ber  
tr.v. out·num·bered, out·num·ber·ing, out·num·bers
To exceed the number of; be more numerous than.


outnumber
Verb

to exceed in number:
 married couples with children; nearly 30 percent of all children live with a single parent; and many adults are caring for children, spouses or aging parents.

* An aging workforce. The aging of baby boomers See generation X.  will have a profound impact on the workplace - whether they retire in mass numbers or stay in the workplace beyond traditional retirement age.

* Ethnic diversity. The growth rate of certain ethnic groups, particularly Hispanics and Asians, will significantly impact the composition of the labor force.

* Rising healthcare costs. In 2006 these costs grew at twice the rate of inflation and twice the growth of workers' earnings.

"Today's benefits professionals are trying to navigate (1) "Surfing the Web." To move from page to page on the Web.

(2) To move through the menu structure in a software application.
 through this mosaic of diversity, while balancing pressures of cost and increased competition for labor," said Mike Simonds, senior vice president of product development and marketing for Unum US. "The one-size-fits-all benefits plan of the past is no longer the best option. Today's employees need more of an a la carte selection of benefits so that coverage can be tailored more precisely to the needs of each individual."

"HR Trends and Challenges" discusses the evolution of the benefits industry, providing a glimpse into the flexible benefit offerings of the future, rather than the uniform benefits packages of the past. It draws parallels to the changes that began nearly 20 years ago in the retirement market in which defined-pension plans began to give way to the defined-contribution and employee-participation plans of today. The same factors are fueling the growth of consumer-driven health plans and the voluntary benefits market.

"More and more, employers are providing a base of insurance coverage for their employees and then providing access to an array of voluntary benefit choices," Simonds said. "This flexibility of choice enables younger employees to pursue coverage that is most relevant to them - like disability or accident insurance, while older workers may want to examine long term care or supplemental health options."

"HR Trends and Challenges" notes that this shift in benefits decision-making highlights a critical issue for the insurance industry: a lack of employee awareness and understanding of the benefits available to them. Research confirms a lack of the basics of insurance benefits -- from the types of coverage available, to its relevance to life situations, to adequate coverage amounts.

"As employers shift these decisions to employees, it is imperative that we educate our workers about these products and the value of coverage," Simonds said. "Otherwise, we'd be handing over the keys to the car without teaching them how to drive. And this decision is too important to risk a financial wreck WRECK, mar. law. A wreck (called in law Latin, wreccum maris, and in law French, wrec de mer,) signifies such goods, as after a shipwreck, are cast upon land by the sea, and left there within some county, so as not to belong to the jurisdiction of the admiralty, but to the common law. ."

Unum presents "HR Trends and Challenges" as a white paper and booklet. The research also forms the basis for www.employeebenefits-101.com, the third in a series of websites patterned after www.disability-101.com and www.longtermcare-101.com.

About Unum

Unum (www.unum.com), formerly UnumProvident, is one of the leading providers of employee benefits products and services, and the largest provider of group and individual disability income protection insurance in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and the United Kingdom. Through its subsidiaries, Unum provided $6.2 billion in total benefits to customers in 2006.

About LIMRA

LIMRA is a worldwide association providing research, consulting and other services to more than 800 insurance and financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Jul 26, 2007
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