Chronic lifestyle disease sufferers will have few
future full-time job options.
"an ageing workforce and medical cost inflation in Singapore are
projected to drive up average medical costs per employee by 108 per
cent to S$1,973 per year in 2030, representing a mounting financial
burden for employers.... ....What is worth noting is that 60 per
cent of all medical claim costs will be attributable to 10 per cent
of claimants, said Mercer..."
Means
that HR will also require submission of smoking status,
waist-height ratio/BMI, impedance tested muscle to fat
ratio https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4842420/,
IPPT / 2.4km run timing score, pre-IPPT SAF FFI results by
interested candidates to qualify for job interview since a sickly
employee can easily cause company purchased employee healthcare
insurance premiums to rise stratospherically (~$12k p.a. /pax
upwards) if insurance actuaries determine the employee population
to be high healthcare service consumption risk at application /
annual renewal of healthcare insurance
policy.
Productivity
loss (average $2-4000/pax p.a.) due to drowsiness @work or sick
leave would also be high for employees with diabetes, hypertension,
obstructive sleep apnea, high cholesterol, smokers
etc.
Personal
health will be one key employee selection criteria towards the
provision of future full-time job /employment.
=========
Singapore
productivity loss due to sick leave may hit $3.3b by 2030: Mercer
study
The
study reveals that an ageing workforce and medical cost inflation
in Singapore are projected to drive up average medical costs per
employee by 108 per cent.
The
study reveals that an ageing workforce and medical cost inflation
in Singapore are projected to drive up average medical costs per
employee by 108 per cent.PHOTO: ST FILE
PUBLISHED.
OCT 25, 2017, 10:46 AM SGT
Ann
Williams
SINGAPORE
- Singapore productivity loss due to sickness absenteeism may reach
S$3.3 billion by 2030, says Mercer in a study released on Wednesday
(Oct 25).
The study reveals that an ageing workforce and medical cost
inflation in Singapore are projected to drive up average medical
costs per employee by 108 per cent to S$1,973 per year in 2030,
representing a mounting financial burden for
employers.
Mercer,
together with Marsh & McLennan Companies' Asia Pacific Risk
Centre (APRC), issued the report on Aging Workforce: Cost And
Productivity Challenges Of Ill Health In
Singapore.
The
segment of Singapore employees aged over 50 is projected to
increase by 55 per cent, and to represent 40 per cent of the
workforce by 2030. With an increase in demand for medical services,
the ageing demographic will contribute to 41 per cent of the
escalation in medical costs, as it will drive a rise in the
utilisation of healthcare services, which together with healthcare
cost inflation, will result in a significant surge in overall
costs.
"With
improved management of health conditions permitting individuals to
stay in the workforce longer, increasing financial needs in
retirement, as well as more flexible employment options, such as
working from home, and on-demand jobs in the gig economy, there is
a growing trend for Singapore employees to postpone their
retirement," said Neil Narale, Singapore business leader for Mercer
Marsh Benefits.
"However,
health risks increase with age, ranging from diminishing motor and
sensory functions to a greater incidence of chronic diseases, which
will create challenges for employers."
In
Singapore, societal ageing is estimated to drive the prevalence of
chronic diseases such as cancer and diabetes by up to 200 per cent
by 2030, which means Singapore will face the challenges of
stagnating productivity growth through increasing rates of
absenteeism and presenteeism, said the report.
Based
on current trends, productivity loss due to sickness absenteeism
per employee is projected to increase by 25 per cent based on GNI
(gross national income). With an ageing workforce, at the national
level this represents a cost of S$3.3 billion by 2030, a 43 per
cent increase from 2016.
What is worth noting is that 60 per cent of all medical claim costs
will be attributable to 10 per cent of claimants, said
Mercer.
This
highlights the value of interventions for high-risk groups, such as
health and wellness programmes to reduce the incidence of disease,
and screening for earlier detection of disease, it
added.
But
while an ageing workforce may present challenges related to higher
healthcare needs, older workers are associated with advantages such
as greater firm-specific knowledge and lower turnover rates, Mercer
noted.
"If
managed properly, diversity of age at work can serve to improve
productivity and reduce the need for governments to tax corporates
and the next generation to support the elderly," said Mr
Narale.
http://www.straitstimes.com/business/economy/singapore-productivity-loss-due-to-sick-leave-may-hit-s33b-by-2030-mercer-study