Offering rich benefits won’t be effective at reducing turnover if employers
don’t do a good job of communicating the value of the benefits, according to
Watson Wyatt.
Among employers who offer great benefits but have poor communication
strategies, the average turnover rate is 17 percent for top-performing
employees. For companies with worse benefits but better communication
strategies, turnover averages 12 percent for top performers.
Apparently, few employees know what their benefits are worth. Only 29 percent
of employees have a good understanding of the value of their total compensation
package, Watson Wyatt says. In companies where they do understand what they’re
getting, it’s often because employees receive "total compensation statements"
showing how much their corporation is spending on them.
Also, Watson Wyatt says that the more a company spends on health
benefits as a share of total pay, the higher the turnover
of top-performing employees, perhaps because there’s less money to spend on
actual wages.
Government spending up
In other health news, Reuters is reporting that health spending will "hit a
record 18.7 percent of U.S. gross domestic product by 2014, up from 15.4 percent
in 2004."
The share that the government is going to pay for health care, as compared
with the private sector, is also rising. The new data is from the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services, a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.