Table 2. Retirement benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) All retirement benefits3 Characteristics Access All workers ............................................................. Participation Defined benefit Take-up rate Access Participation Defined contribution Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 68 54 80 28 26 90 55 38 69 83 85 82 86 73 76 72 81 88 89 88 94 43 38 45 73 39 35 41 68 92 90 92 94 64 75 59 36 48 61 43 19 75 81 72 54 95 78 45 79 70 67 73 69 91 66 30 63 54 43 60 56 96 84 67 80 77 64 83 82 89 40 17 52 23 11 29 30 86 36 16 49 19 8 25 29 96 90 94 95 84 69 88 96 28 66 34 44 62 63 62 57 11 47 17 20 44 39 47 41 41 71 50 45 71 63 75 73 65 73 69 73 65 53 60 52 57 48 81 82 76 78 74 33 27 26 22 29 33 26 23 20 25 98 95 89 93 86 49 64 57 66 48 34 48 38 47 30 70 75 67 71 62 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 78 37 65 21 83 57 34 12 31 9 92 80 63 29 46 14 72 47 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 95 63 89 48 93 76 83 19 79 17 94 87 44 57 28 40 65 70 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 40 28 70 80 89 90 22 11 54 68 80 82 54 38 77 85 90 91 9 5 23 36 50 50 7 3 21 33 46 45 79 66 89 92 92 91 35 24 59 63 68 72 17 8 40 47 54 57 48 33 68 74 79 79 Goods-producing industries ................................... 75 61 81 25 24 93 69 52 75 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 67 76 86 90 87 68 90 91 53 65 80 86 78 54 77 87 79 86 93 95 89 79 86 96 29 43 72 84 54 23 49 85 26 40 66 81 44 21 44 82 90 93 93 96 83 92 90 95 53 50 35 25 62 60 76 35 36 33 20 9 43 42 55 17 68 66 56 38 70 70 72 50 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 2. Retirement benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) All retirement benefits3 Characteristics Access 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Participation Defined benefit Take-up rate Access Participation Defined contribution Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 50 45 65 85 80 89 36 33 46 71 61 80 72 73 71 84 76 90 10 8 16 45 28 62 9 7 15 41 25 56 90 90 90 90 89 91 45 42 56 64 67 61 31 29 36 45 46 44 68 69 65 70 68 71 68 67 70 73 67 72 68 66 65 55 55 56 58 52 57 52 51 53 81 83 81 79 77 80 77 77 82 29 33 31 27 26 31 23 22 30 26 30 28 23 22 29 21 20 28 90 91 91 86 88 92 92 91 93 53 52 58 60 59 53 57 55 48 39 36 40 43 38 36 39 38 36 73 70 68 72 64 69 68 69 74 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 The take-up rate is an estimate of the percentage of workers with access to a plan who participate in the plan, rounded for presentation. See Technical Note for more details. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Includes defined benefit pension plans and defined contribution retirement plans. Workers are considered as having access or as participating if they have access to or are participating in at least one of these plan types. 4 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 8. Defined contribution retirement plans: Selected attributes, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers participating in defined contribution plans = 100 percent) Employee contribution Characteristics Required All workers ............................................................. Not required Employee contribution option Pretax Not pretax 67 33 82 18 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 67 69 66 60 33 31 34 40 83 84 83 80 17 16 17 20 53 67 62 78 67 73 65 62 47 33 38 22 33 27 35 38 80 82 78 86 81 84 80 79 20 18 22 14 19 16 20 21 48 71 69 69 70 52 29 31 31 30 73 82 84 83 85 27 18 16 17 15 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 67 67 33 33 82 80 18 20 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 60 67 40 33 81 82 19 18 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 72 72 65 66 67 68 28 28 35 34 33 32 83 83 79 82 84 84 17 17 21 18 16 16 Goods-producing industries ................................... 66 34 82 18 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 67 61 60 52 65 61 66 60 33 39 40 48 35 39 34 40 82 80 83 81 85 80 81 83 18 20 17 19 15 20 19 17 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 8. Defined contribution retirement plans: Selected attributes, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers participating in defined contribution plans = 100 percent) Employee contribution Characteristics Required 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Not required Employee contribution option Pretax Not pretax 63 63 64 69 72 66 37 37 36 31 28 34 79 78 82 84 85 82 21 22 18 16 15 18 69 66 63 65 66 75 71 69 65 31 34 37 35 34 25 29 31 35 88 87 80 77 80 86 84 83 80 12 13 20 23 20 14 16 17 20 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 9. Healthcare benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Healthcare3 Medical care Characteristics Access All workers ............................................................. Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 72 59 81 72 54 75 88 94 86 86 76 81 74 75 86 87 86 88 88 94 85 86 69 73 68 70 79 78 79 81 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 97 81 47 70 73 62 79 79 86 67 33 61 58 46 64 64 88 83 72 87 79 75 81 81 97 81 46 70 73 62 79 79 79 60 31 58 53 43 59 60 82 74 67 83 74 69 75 77 73 84 76 84 69 60 67 63 70 56 82 80 82 83 81 73 84 76 84 69 58 63 58 64 52 79 75 76 77 75 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 88 24 73 15 83 62 88 24 67 13 77 56 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 95 69 85 54 89 79 95 68 79 50 83 73 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 38 21 78 88 94 95 25 12 62 75 82 84 65 55 80 85 87 89 38 21 78 88 94 95 23 11 58 70 75 76 60 52 74 79 80 80 Goods-producing industries ................................... 86 73 84 86 68 79 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 70 79 86 88 86 75 89 88 57 65 75 77 76 58 77 82 81 82 87 87 88 78 86 93 70 79 85 88 86 74 89 88 52 60 68 70 71 54 69 78 74 76 80 80 82 72 78 88 Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 9. Healthcare benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Dental care Outpatient prescription drug coverage Vision care Characteristics Access All workers ............................................................. Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 47 37 79 27 21 79 71 53 75 62 68 59 53 51 56 49 45 82 83 82 85 36 38 36 35 29 31 28 28 81 83 80 81 86 92 84 85 68 72 66 68 79 78 79 81 59 62 26 46 46 39 50 46 51 47 19 39 36 29 40 36 85 77 73 84 78 74 79 79 39 31 17 30 23 15 27 31 32 24 12 24 18 11 22 25 82 77 74 81 78 76 79 81 95 81 46 69 71 60 77 77 78 60 31 57 52 42 58 59 82 75 67 83 74 70 75 77 42 50 48 53 43 35 38 38 43 33 83 75 80 82 77 32 30 26 28 25 27 23 22 23 20 85 77 82 83 80 71 82 75 82 68 55 62 56 63 50 78 75 76 77 74 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 57 14 46 9 81 63 32 9 26 6 80 69 86 23 66 13 77 55 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 74 42 63 33 86 77 57 21 48 16 84 77 93 67 77 49 83 73 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 18 10 47 58 70 76 12 6 36 48 59 64 65 58 76 82 84 84 10 6 24 33 43 46 7 4 18 27 35 38 70 62 77 82 81 82 37 21 76 87 92 93 22 11 57 68 73 74 60 51 74 79 80 80 Goods-producing industries ................................... 57 47 83 33 27 84 84 66 79 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 45 48 53 53 57 44 70 62 35 38 44 44 47 34 56 55 79 80 83 84 84 77 80 89 26 27 34 35 33 23 38 45 20 21 26 27 25 18 29 39 78 78 78 79 76 77 78 87 69 78 84 86 86 73 89 86 51 59 67 69 71 53 69 76 74 76 80 80 82 72 77 88 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 9. Healthcare benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Healthcare3 Medical care Characteristics Access 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 58 54 70 86 83 89 44 41 54 73 67 78 76 76 76 84 81 87 57 53 70 86 83 89 41 38 50 66 62 70 72 72 71 77 75 79 73 72 74 70 73 77 73 70 71 59 60 58 57 58 62 59 56 61 82 83 79 81 80 82 80 80 85 73 72 73 70 73 76 73 69 71 52 56 53 51 54 60 55 51 56 72 77 72 73 74 78 75 74 79 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... See footnotes at end of table. Table 9. Healthcare benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Dental care Outpatient prescription drug coverage Vision care Characteristics Access 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 30 26 43 62 55 69 23 20 31 50 44 56 77 78 73 80 79 82 17 13 28 36 28 44 13 10 21 29 22 35 76 77 75 80 80 80 56 52 69 84 81 88 40 37 49 65 61 70 72 72 71 77 75 79 51 50 49 47 42 38 38 48 55 41 41 38 37 32 28 30 38 46 79 82 78 78 76 74 78 80 83 19 32 26 21 23 17 18 25 43 14 26 19 16 17 14 15 20 35 75 83 76 77 73 82 82 79 83 69 71 72 68 71 74 72 68 70 49 55 52 50 53 58 54 50 55 71 77 72 73 74 78 75 73 78 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 The take-up rate is an estimate of the percentage of workers with access to a plan who participate in the plan, rounded for presentation. See Technical Note for more details. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Healthcare is a collective term for the following benefits: medical, dental, and vision care benefits; and outpatient prescription drug coverage. If workers have access to or participate in at least one of these benefits, they are considered as having access to or participating in healthcare. 4 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 10. Medical care benefits: Share of premiums paid by employer and employee, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (In percent) Single coverage Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Employer share Family coverage Employee share Employer share Employee share 81 19 69 31 82 81 83 87 18 19 17 13 70 70 70 67 30 30 30 33 87 80 80 85 78 72 81 82 13 20 20 15 22 28 19 18 66 71 64 74 67 62 69 69 34 29 36 26 33 38 31 31 84 80 80 79 80 16 20 20 21 20 71 67 72 73 71 29 33 28 27 29 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 81 74 19 26 69 64 31 36 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 87 79 13 21 80 65 20 35 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 75 72 79 81 83 83 25 28 21 19 17 17 59 57 66 70 73 74 41 43 34 30 27 26 Goods-producing industries ................................... 81 19 74 26 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 81 83 85 86 85 81 82 88 19 17 15 14 15 19 18 12 67 66 66 64 71 67 74 77 33 34 34 36 29 33 26 23 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 10. Medical care benefits: Share of premiums paid by employer and employee, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (In percent) Single coverage Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Employer share Family coverage Employee share Employer share Employee share 79 80 78 81 79 83 21 20 22 19 21 17 63 63 64 72 68 74 37 37 36 28 32 26 78 83 80 81 79 80 80 82 82 22 17 20 19 21 20 20 18 18 74 75 74 67 64 61 62 68 69 26 25 26 33 36 39 38 32 31 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 11. Medical care benefits, single coverage: Employer and employee premiums by employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with single coverage medical care benefits = 100 percent) Employee contribution not required Total Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Employee contribution required Average Average Average Average Percent of Percent of Percent of flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly participating participating participating employer employer employer employee employees employees employees premium premium premium contribution 100 $387.58 19 $492.33 81 $362.85 $111.00 100 100 100 100 408.20 389.34 416.69 461.16 20 15 22 32 477.39 483.66 475.43 502.49 80 85 78 68 391.21 372.58 400.31 441.99 109.29 108.37 109.74 113.98 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 465.45 399.34 373.73 439.13 358.94 299.39 383.73 417.69 33 10 19 24 16 10 19 29 502.59 512.43 476.95 506.68 458.73 385.38 474.81 590.67 67 90 81 76 84 90 81 71 446.94 386.37 348.90 418.16 339.75 289.98 362.74 346.61 118.46 108.46 105.37 103.86 114.50 122.67 110.73 117.89 100 100 100 100 100 460.93 383.54 379.42 374.52 384.97 39 21 17 14 20 637.77 521.49 509.67 516.06 504.56 61 79 83 86 80 346.62 346.60 353.13 351.36 355.28 116.78 118.57 110.48 110.50 110.46 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 100 100 391.18 330.92 19 17 495.56 434.56 81 83 366.31 309.90 109.27 137.33 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 100 100 491.72 359.78 36 15 572.20 440.88 64 85 447.37 345.79 113.25 110.54 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100 324.54 310.42 363.03 398.09 421.08 426.46 15 16 17 20 22 21 421.95 458.28 459.19 494.95 528.88 522.33 85 84 83 80 78 79 307.00 282.93 344.02 373.39 391.55 400.79 119.20 124.58 109.41 109.90 110.07 108.34 Goods-producing industries ................................... 100 393.99 19 565.07 81 354.97 107.42 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 386.17 417.67 444.81 454.50 431.63 393.07 420.83 477.82 19 21 27 31 18 16 14 27 476.89 483.60 494.93 500.51 483.93 465.73 518.58 529.43 81 79 73 69 82 84 86 73 364.59 399.92 425.99 433.83 420.44 379.55 405.50 458.66 111.79 109.31 111.97 117.85 97.94 107.22 108.25 94.35 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 11. Medical care benefits, single coverage: Employer and employee premiums by employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with single coverage medical care benefits = 100 percent) Employee contribution not required Total Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Employee contribution required Average Average Average Average Percent of Percent of Percent of flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly participating participating participating employer employer employer employee employees employees employees premium premium premium contribution 100 100 100 100 100 100 $369.87 371.43 366.01 397.65 374.69 418.07 24 25 22 16 14 18 $486.58 484.31 493.07 497.16 491.83 500.98 76 75 78 84 86 82 $332.95 333.76 331.04 378.28 354.90 399.96 $118.05 116.61 121.46 107.35 110.52 104.41 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 416.00 422.76 390.53 369.63 366.29 353.95 358.63 390.88 408.03 12 26 17 18 13 13 21 23 24 584.29 509.82 489.31 484.61 470.59 461.04 434.77 469.28 529.08 88 74 83 82 87 87 79 77 76 393.29 391.85 370.92 343.92 351.16 337.28 338.33 367.90 368.75 124.33 115.91 106.76 100.57 111.52 100.73 109.52 110.39 116.30 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 12. Medical care benefits, single coverage: Employee participation by type of contribution, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with contributory coverage = 100 percent) Single coverage Characteristics Total with contributory coverage Flat dollar amount Composite rate2 Flexible benefits4 Varies3 Percent of earnings Exists, but unknown Other 100 71 (5) 15 1 (5) 12 (5) 100 100 100 100 72 74 71 74 (5) – 1 – 15 13 15 16 1 2 1 1 (5) – 1 1 11 11 11 6 (5) (5) 1 – 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 74 65 73 77 65 57 69 75 – – – – (5) (5) (5) – 14 20 11 11 22 30 17 8 – 1 1 3 1 – 1 – 2 – 1 2 (5) – (5) (5) 7 11 12 7 11 12 11 15 – – – – (5) – (5) 1 100 100 100 100 100 75 75 75 77 74 – – – – – 9 8 8 9 7 – – (5) – – – (5) – – – 12 16 15 13 18 – 1 – – – Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 100 100 72 60 (5) – 14 24 1 (5) (5) – 12 13 (5) – Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 100 100 73 71 – – 10 15 2 1 2 – 11 12 – (5) Average wage within the following categories:6 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100 70 82 69 73 72 71 – – – – (5) – 18 7 17 12 14 14 – – 1 1 1 1 – – – 1 1 1 12 11 13 12 11 12 – – (5) – 1 – Goods-producing industries ................................... 100 76 – 10 (5) – 12 – Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 70 71 72 75 69 70 64 74 (5) – – – – – – – 16 17 19 15 27 15 21 12 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 1 1 2 – – – 2 12 9 5 6 3 12 11 5 (5) – – – – – (5) – All workers ............................................................. Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 12. Medical care benefits, single coverage: Employee participation by type of contribution, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with contributory coverage = 100 percent) Single coverage Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Total with contributory coverage Flat dollar amount Composite rate2 Varies3 Flexible benefits4 Percent of earnings Exists, but unknown Other 100 100 100 100 100 100 74 74 75 69 71 68 – – – 1 1 – 9 9 8 17 17 18 (5) (5) – 1 – 2 – – – 1 1 1 15 16 14 11 11 10 1 1 – (5) – – 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 82 68 71 63 75 74 71 67 69 – – – – – – – – – 8 14 15 13 14 16 17 17 14 – (5) 5 ( ) – – – – 1 3 – 3 – – – – – – – – 13 13 22 10 9 11 15 10 – – ( ) – – – – – 1 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 A composite rate is a set contribution covering more than one benefit area, for example, healthcare and life insurance. Cost data for individual plans cannot be determined. 3 Based on worker attributes. For example, employee contributions may vary based on earnings, length of service, or age. 4 Amount varies by options selected under a "cafeteria plan" or employer-sponsored reimbursement account. 5 Less than 0.5. 5 6 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 13. Medical care benefits, family coverage: Employer and employee premiums by employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with family coverage medical care benefits = 100 percent) Employee contribution not required Total Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Employee contribution required Average Average Average Average Percent of Percent of Percent of flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly participating participating participating employer employer employer employee employees employees employees premium premium premium contribution 100 $901.06 9 $1,164.15 91 $874.44 $442.55 100 100 100 100 952.61 962.92 947.97 920.38 8 7 9 13 1,234.18 1,328.05 1,200.73 1,228.72 92 93 91 87 926.91 935.10 923.14 875.58 441.09 426.27 447.90 519.91 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 909.25 991.54 819.94 1,014.50 845.08 720.06 897.02 909.77 15 4 9 9 7 5 8 17 1,227.53 1,214.85 1,120.26 1,183.27 1,003.16 860.50 1,039.75 1,245.15 85 96 91 91 93 95 92 83 853.68 982.16 790.74 998.20 832.45 712.43 884.03 839.29 551.76 419.15 490.98 – 447.66 454.43 444.75 464.24 100 100 100 100 100 926.89 896.11 929.63 944.06 913.08 25 11 10 8 13 1,234.12 1,264.73 1,173.26 1,195.56 1,157.83 75 89 90 92 87 824.31 849.39 902.53 923.18 877.46 464.19 464.27 385.89 367.27 408.50 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 100 100 910.66 751.52 9 10 1,193.19 740.48 91 90 882.20 752.72 439.50 490.23 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 100 100 1,102.64 847.24 25 5 1,194.11 1,124.90 75 95 1,072.58 832.51 385.56 454.60 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100 693.27 619.94 835.41 928.65 1,004.74 1,047.71 6 8 7 9 12 12 803.09 638.39 1,083.72 1,115.14 1,301.11 1,309.71 94 92 93 91 88 88 686.64 618.30 816.28 909.09 965.04 1,011.51 526.89 – 446.41 423.49 423.60 405.63 Goods-producing industries ................................... 100 962.77 12 1,216.47 88 926.59 377.00 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 887.68 892.17 893.02 871.69 966.83 891.38 1,057.23 1,066.46 8 8 10 12 4 7 5 10 1,147.45 1,144.46 1,240.29 1,253.29 1,200.92 1,022.41 1,267.03 1,115.78 92 92 90 88 96 93 95 90 863.62 869.52 855.99 817.90 958.13 881.59 1,046.26 1,061.22 456.13 489.38 507.65 553.96 401.22 473.07 398.53 355.56 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 13. Medical care benefits, family coverage: Employer and employee premiums by employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with family coverage medical care benefits = 100 percent) Employee contribution not required Total Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Employee contribution required Average Average Average Average Percent of Percent of Percent of flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly flat monthly participating participating participating employer employer employer employee employees employees employees premium premium premium contribution 100 100 100 100 100 100 $798.59 793.47 811.24 957.91 892.89 1,015.21 11 12 8 8 7 10 $1,123.20 1,125.99 1,113.14 1,193.19 1,135.65 1,227.11 89 88 92 92 93 90 $759.76 749.22 784.79 936.45 875.69 991.94 $497.01 501.98 485.23 413.09 438.23 390.13 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 1,052.17 1,035.86 968.76 859.18 817.18 761.48 784.69 867.45 925.24 9 19 11 8 3 5 3 8 12 1,248.87 1,226.42 1,130.91 1,101.17 1,178.96 1,228.67 998.03 1,020.48 1,155.65 91 81 89 92 97 95 97 92 88 1,033.86 989.93 948.34 839.37 804.06 739.17 777.60 853.92 894.53 398.33 416.96 381.20 431.64 471.46 465.85 487.49 447.02 462.68 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 14. Medical care benefits, family coverage: Employee participation by type of contribution, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with contributory coverage = 100 percent) Family coverage Characteristics Total with contributory coverage Flat dollar amount Composite rate2 Varies3 Flexible benefits4 Percent of earnings Exists, but unknown Other 100 71 (5) 14 1 (5) 12 (5) 100 100 100 100 73 74 72 76 (5) – 1 – 14 12 14 14 1 2 1 1 (5) (5) 1 1 11 11 11 7 (5) – (5) – 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 76 66 75 79 66 56 70 75 – – – – (5) (5) (5) – 12 20 11 9 21 30 17 8 – 1 1 3 1 – 1 – 1 – 1 2 (5) – (5) (5) 8 11 12 6 12 13 12 15 – – – – (5) – (5) 1 100 100 100 100 100 75 74 73 73 74 – – – – – 9 8 10 12 7 – – (5) – – – (5) – – – 13 17 16 14 18 – 1 – – – Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 100 100 72 63 (5) (5) 13 23 1 (5) (5) – 12 13 (5) – Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 100 100 72 71 – – 11 15 2 1 2 – 12 13 – (5) Average wage within the following categories:6 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 100 100 100 100 100 100 70 81 68 74 73 72 – – – – (5) – 17 7 17 11 13 13 (5) – 1 1 1 1 – – – 1 1 1 12 12 13 13 12 12 – – (5) – 1 – Goods-producing industries ................................... 100 74 – 11 (5) – 13 – Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 71 73 75 77 72 71 66 74 (5) – – – – – – – 15 15 16 13 24 15 20 12 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 (5) 1 1 1 – – – 2 12 9 6 7 3 12 11 7 (5) – – – – (5) – – All workers ............................................................. Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 14. Medical care benefits, family coverage: Employee participation by type of contribution, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with contributory coverage = 100 percent) Family coverage Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Total with contributory coverage Flat dollar amount Composite rate2 Varies3 Flexible benefits4 Percent of earnings Exists, but unknown Other 100 100 100 100 100 100 75 74 77 70 71 69 – – – (5) 1 – 8 9 8 17 16 18 (5) (5) – 1 (5) 2 – – – 1 1 1 16 17 14 11 11 10 (5) (5) – (5) (5) – 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 83 68 71 63 76 75 73 69 69 – – – – – – – – – 7 14 16 14 13 15 15 14 14 – 1 ( ) – – – – 1 3 – 3 – – – – – – – – 13 13 22 10 9 11 16 12 – – ( ) – 1 – – – – Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 A composite rate is a set contribution covering more than one benefit area, for example, healthcare and life insurance. Cost data for individual plans cannot be determined. 3 Based on worker attributes. For example, employee contributions may vary based on earnings, length of service, or age. 4 Amount varies by options selected under a "cafeteria plan" or employer-sponsored reimbursement account. 5 Less than 0.5. 5 5 6 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 15. Medical care benefits: Monthly employee contributions for single and family coverage, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (Includes workers participating in medical care benefits with flat dollar amount contributory coverage) Single coverage2 Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Family coverage2 50th 50th 10th 25th 75th 90th 10th 25th 75th 90th percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile (median) (median) $33.52 $59.80 $94.42 $135.21 $197.62 $139.44 $233.69 $363.44 $566.47 $844.04 31.88 37.18 28.46 22.76 56.46 61.69 54.94 46.41 92.20 98.74 88.53 82.23 133.10 132.36 133.58 139.34 200.40 190.65 202.71 227.94 145.48 157.87 144.02 138.36 239.00 250.80 233.55 241.00 366.96 363.70 373.14 459.17 569.31 540.47 577.75 667.00 848.76 791.60 865.00 991.44 22.76 37.22 29.26 – 34.98 39.88 32.71 37.99 44.24 62.83 54.16 52.39 60.00 70.43 55.57 62.83 84.15 88.01 89.31 85.00 98.50 104.99 95.00 97.29 142.32 132.72 133.02 125.10 136.22 150.00 133.00 152.37 235.00 190.94 181.99 181.11 197.77 216.33 190.00 217.73 122.88 144.02 147.63 130.20 136.54 154.32 136.54 144.57 244.32 237.30 246.98 209.65 240.43 256.09 235.46 237.24 491.00 352.60 383.32 306.56 370.97 370.97 370.92 383.00 737.01 496.13 622.51 449.44 559.00 574.97 558.02 633.15 1045.41 802.02 887.42 709.24 845.24 811.88 848.00 864.08 38.00 36.83 38.01 38.00 38.50 60.00 66.00 62.83 61.75 65.00 92.35 100.00 94.80 97.50 91.91 142.33 159.00 134.44 135.81 132.54 217.73 220.45 189.42 187.81 194.77 161.49 129.99 120.98 129.99 116.53 236.00 238.32 203.13 203.11 204.53 352.85 407.74 318.00 314.11 330.00 589.01 643.02 480.96 452.19 523.95 801.60 886.20 767.79 697.61 843.30 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 34.62 31.17 59.90 53.96 94.24 99.69 134.06 174.03 192.83 265.08 141.24 96.47 234.91 213.96 362.50 386.26 557.02 636.12 841.50 909.35 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 30.33 34.67 54.11 60.22 83.87 96.63 132.54 135.68 192.79 197.81 95.66 155.58 171.04 253.29 272.11 378.92 460.61 584.39 811.16 848.00 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 32.00 31.43 35.00 32.50 34.67 35.00 59.68 62.21 60.22 59.00 59.00 58.31 99.48 108.00 93.51 91.29 94.96 96.35 151.46 171.63 132.98 133.02 134.92 136.87 217.74 233.98 197.69 191.02 195.66 202.26 169.09 175.96 140.00 136.49 138.00 138.36 273.74 268.77 232.35 225.49 228.06 224.98 449.90 451.67 364.33 351.00 351.00 343.75 673.23 663.00 572.72 536.27 526.49 506.47 960.26 1024.01 841.77 805.00 824.50 767.78 Goods-producing industries ................................... 36.94 61.75 95.33 135.00 189.42 133.94 216.65 316.97 478.56 705.48 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 32.50 25.00 22.48 22.03 22.76 33.06 37.60 22.76 58.02 51.67 43.76 41.92 46.06 56.97 56.15 46.30 94.24 86.66 79.26 81.22 77.00 88.83 85.85 72.76 135.28 133.02 136.04 140.72 125.98 131.18 125.66 108.09 200.40 204.90 218.00 235.00 189.35 190.94 193.96 152.36 140.82 139.60 138.36 120.62 173.13 141.46 132.57 115.78 238.32 247.98 246.08 255.54 232.00 249.94 236.11 186.48 373.58 409.57 441.50 501.30 377.24 376.62 340.57 295.36 585.54 666.18 667.00 714.00 548.71 626.90 452.04 449.44 865.00 961.25 925.00 1006.65 667.00 1000.51 684.06 657.53 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 15. Medical care benefits: Monthly employee contributions for single and family coverage, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (Includes workers participating in medical care benefits with flat dollar amount contributory coverage) Single coverage2 Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Family coverage2 50th 50th 10th 25th 75th 90th 10th 25th 75th 90th percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile percentile (median) (median) $40.00 38.59 43.33 31.25 32.50 28.43 $66.75 65.00 74.08 54.17 57.50 52.32 $102.72 101.76 104.60 89.31 92.94 85.23 $146.70 144.98 151.66 128.85 132.43 125.62 $213.49 209.00 219.28 186.32 189.26 182.50 $165.64 159.00 173.32 130.00 134.00 121.87 $267.15 262.56 277.68 215.68 224.97 209.65 $413.97 411.84 416.79 339.47 355.17 326.00 $661.26 673.98 642.56 506.47 540.44 476.58 $935.76 954.88 892.52 743.11 771.00 692.74 43.55 42.21 39.61 37.82 29.32 20.00 36.60 33.16 29.24 75.12 71.69 61.75 61.10 55.57 42.17 62.21 51.70 52.75 110.03 97.72 91.48 90.54 94.79 86.66 95.00 87.00 89.10 159.74 140.82 127.82 123.88 134.73 129.22 136.87 129.00 136.16 224.16 217.23 188.99 174.00 196.60 182.81 187.48 200.00 202.61 133.55 141.18 122.12 146.48 145.48 151.83 172.75 148.83 116.71 237.21 227.48 209.65 238.03 238.32 262.12 277.50 230.75 222.00 350.17 334.68 316.44 358.00 389.74 431.46 409.57 358.18 365.26 503.18 540.47 489.44 540.49 623.45 667.00 596.06 576.00 573.62 675.95 865.00 754.22 756.09 946.70 779.60 860.00 834.00 892.96 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles designate position within each published series. For example, at the 50th percentile or median, half of participating workers pay the same as or more than the premium shown, and half pay the same as or less than the premium shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of participating workers pay the same or less than the premium shown. The remaining percentiles follow the same logic. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 16. Insurance benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Life insurance Characteristics Access All workers ............................................................. Participation Short-term disability Take-up rate Access Participation Long-term disability Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 60 59 97 37 36 98 33 32 96 79 86 76 74 78 85 75 72 98 99 98 97 45 59 39 22 44 58 39 22 98 99 98 99 53 62 49 39 51 61 47 38 96 98 96 97 82 76 34 70 59 47 65 61 81 76 33 67 57 44 64 60 98 99 96 96 96 93 97 97 20 36 21 28 36 28 41 38 19 36 20 27 35 27 40 38 98 99 96 96 97 95 97 99 39 50 12 22 33 20 41 29 38 48 12 22 32 18 39 28 98 96 96 96 96 92 97 98 55 67 65 72 58 53 66 62 69 56 97 98 96 96 96 34 42 46 53 40 34 41 45 52 39 100 99 98 99 98 22 35 29 33 26 21 34 28 32 25 98 97 97 97 97 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 75 15 73 13 98 88 44 15 43 14 98 95 42 5 41 5 97 94 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 86 56 85 54 98 97 48 35 48 34 98 98 34 33 33 32 97 96 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 26 12 63 76 86 89 23 11 61 74 85 88 91 89 97 98 99 99 18 14 36 47 52 55 17 13 35 46 51 55 95 96 97 99 99 99 8 2 30 44 57 60 8 2 29 42 55 58 96 92 96 97 97 97 Goods-producing industries ................................... 73 71 97 53 52 99 36 35 97 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 58 68 76 76 83 62 86 83 57 66 74 75 80 61 85 82 97 98 98 98 96 98 98 99 34 28 24 21 31 30 45 27 33 27 24 21 30 29 44 26 97 98 99 99 99 97 98 99 33 37 40 35 55 35 61 31 32 36 39 35 52 34 58 30 96 96 96 97 95 96 96 96 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 16. Insurance benefits: Access, participation, and take-up rates,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Life insurance Characteristics Access 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Participation Short-term disability Take-up rate Access Participation Long-term disability Take-up rate Access Participation Take-up rate 40 36 55 79 73 85 39 34 53 77 70 83 97 96 97 97 97 98 28 26 35 45 43 47 27 25 34 44 42 47 98 98 97 98 97 99 22 19 30 44 38 50 21 18 29 42 36 48 97 97 97 96 97 96 61 59 66 59 60 67 63 59 53 59 58 64 57 59 64 60 57 52 97 99 97 96 97 95 96 97 98 39 69 40 32 33 29 28 27 24 39 69 39 31 32 28 27 26 24 98 99 97 97 97 97 97 98 98 37 32 37 38 34 30 31 37 28 36 30 35 37 33 29 30 35 27 97 96 97 98 96 97 96 95 97 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 The take-up rate is an estimate of the percentage of workers with access to a plan who participate in the plan, rounded for presentation. See Technical Note for more details. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 17. Life insurance plans: Employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with basic life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Employee contribution required Employee contribution not required 6 94 5 4 5 9 95 96 95 91 9 2 8 10 6 8 6 7 91 98 92 90 94 92 94 93 6 8 4 4 4 94 92 96 96 96 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 6 5 94 95 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 6 6 94 94 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 8 7 6 6 5 5 92 93 94 94 95 95 Goods-producing industries ................................... 4 96 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 6 6 9 9 3 2 10 94 94 91 91 97 98 90 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 17. Life insurance plans: Employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with basic life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Employee contribution required Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Employee contribution not required 7 7 6 5 5 5 93 93 94 95 95 95 9 4 6 4 6 13 5 7 4 91 96 94 96 94 87 95 93 96 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 18. Life insurance plans: Method of benefit payment, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with basic life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Basic life insurance method of payment Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Fixed multiple of annual earnings Variable multiple of annual earnings Flat dollar amount Variable dollar amount Other 56 2 39 3 1 63 70 60 38 2 2 2 1 31 25 34 54 2 2 2 5 1 1 1 2 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 32 74 46 38 61 58 61 38 1 2 1 3 2 – 2 1 60 23 49 54 34 35 34 56 5 – 3 4 2 3 2 4 2 – 1 1 (2) – (2) 1 21 50 46 45 47 – 1 1 1 – 72 45 47 47 47 4 4 6 7 4 – (2) (2) (2) – Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 56 55 2 2 39 38 3 4 1 1 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 37 61 1 2 52 35 9 1 1 1 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 47 32 52 54 62 65 – – 1 2 3 3 51 65 42 40 31 29 2 2 3 3 3 2 – – 1 1 (2) (2) Goods-producing industries ................................... 45 2 47 5 (2) Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 58 53 42 32 60 63 79 36 2 1 1 1 2 – 2 3 37 42 51 60 33 34 18 53 3 3 4 4 4 1 1 7 1 1 2 2 1 – 2 ( ) 2 Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 18. Life insurance plans: Method of benefit payment, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with basic life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Basic life insurance method of payment Characteristics Fixed multiple of annual earnings 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Variable multiple of annual earnings Flat dollar amount Variable dollar amount Other 46 45 48 60 59 61 1 1 1 2 2 3 50 51 49 33 36 31 2 2 2 4 3 4 1 1 (2) 1 (2) 1 New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 64 59 50 58 61 57 52 55 51 – – – 1 2 – – – 3 32 33 44 37 33 39 44 43 43 3 5 4 4 2 2 2 – 3 – – – (2) 2 – – – (2) 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Less than 0.5. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Employee Compensation - March 2013." Geographic areas Costs for NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 19. Life insurance plans: Fixed multiple of annual earnings benefit formulas, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with fixed multiple of annual earnings formula life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Multiple of annual earnings amounts2 Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Less than 1.0 times earnings 1.0 times earnings Over 1.0 and under 2.0 times earnings 2.0 times earnings Mean multiple of annual earnings Greater than 2.0 times earnings Median multiple of annual earnings 1 61 13 22 4 1.3 1.0 1 1 1 – 58 57 58 49 13 10 14 24 24 26 23 23 5 5 4 – 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.0 1.0 1.0 – – – 1 – (3) – 1 1 48 75 63 57 66 78 61 61 28 10 14 19 10 8 11 15 23 10 19 17 20 11 24 20 2 – 3 7 4 3 4 3 1.4 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.4 1.3 – 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 – 1 (3) – 1 58 61 64 59 69 16 15 15 14 16 23 19 18 25 12 2 3 2 – 2 1.4 1.3 1.3 1.4 1.2 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 1 1 61 74 13 10 22 9 4 6 1.4 1.3 1.0 1.0 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 1 (3) 64 61 17 12 13 23 5 4 1.3 1.4 1.0 1.0 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ – – 1 1 1 1 68 70 66 61 58 54 11 – 13 13 13 13 18 – 19 22 24 27 – – 2 3 5 6 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 Goods-producing industries ................................... – 53 13 28 – 1.4 1.0 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 1 1 1 – 2 1 2 – 63 62 48 45 51 71 73 59 13 15 21 28 14 11 12 18 20 19 26 25 28 15 11 17 4 3 4 2 4 2 1 – 1.3 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.2 1.2 1.4 1.0 1.0 – 1.5 – 1.0 1.0 1.0 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 19. Life insurance plans: Fixed multiple of annual earnings benefit formulas, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with fixed multiple of annual earnings formula life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Multiple of annual earnings amounts2 Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Less than 1.0 times earnings 1.0 times earnings Over 1.0 and under 2.0 times earnings 2.0 times earnings Mean multiple of annual earnings Greater than 2.0 times earnings Median multiple of annual earnings – – – 1 – 1 61 66 53 61 63 60 12 10 16 13 12 14 21 18 27 22 22 21 – – – 3 – 3 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.3 1.4 1.3 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1 1 – – – – – – – 65 56 60 54 64 56 63 75 63 13 18 14 17 11 9 11 12 7 17 19 24 23 22 30 23 12 23 4 6 – – – – – – – 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.3 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.4 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Includes participants in plans in which insurance equaled a multiple of earnings plus or minus a specified amount. 3 Less than 0.5. 4 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 20. Life insurance plans: Maximum benefit amounts, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with fixed multiple of earnings formula life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. With maximum benefit amount Maximum benefit amount2 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile $500,000 $1,000,000 With no maximum benefit amount 74 $50,000 $50,000 $200,000 26 75 80 72 59 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 100,000 100,000 – 50,000 250,000 300,000 250,000 100,000 600,000 750,000 500,000 250,000 1,000,000 – 1,000,000 400,000 25 20 28 41 49 69 68 49 79 83 77 67 – 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – – – 300,000 – – 200,000 – 200,000 200,000 – 500,000 500,000 280,000 500,000 500,000 500,000 – 300,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 – 1,000,000 1,000,000 – 2,000,000 51 31 32 51 21 17 23 33 59 69 68 65 71 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – – – 100,000 – 170,000 200,000 200,000 250,000 100,000 – – 500,000 500,000 400,000 – 2,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 – 41 31 32 35 29 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 74 69 50,000 50,000 50,000 – 200,000 – 500,000 500,000 1,000,000 850,000 26 31 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 61 76 50,000 50,000 50,000 – 100,000 245,000 300,000 500,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 39 24 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 70 75 77 73 74 76 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 75,000 100,000 100,000 – – 150,000 200,000 300,000 300,000 500,000 – 500,000 500,000 750,000 750,000 1,000,000 – 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 – 30 25 23 27 26 24 Goods-producing industries ................................... 68 50,000 100,000 300,000 700,000 – 32 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 75 69 63 48 78 73 70 49 50,000 50,000 50,000 – 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – 100,000 50,000 200,000 200,000 100,000 – – 250,000 350,000 100,000 500,000 500,000 250,000 200,000 – 500,000 500,000 200,000 1,000,000 – 500,000 300,000 500,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 500,000 25 31 37 52 22 27 30 51 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 20. Life insurance plans: Maximum benefit amounts, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with fixed multiple of earnings formula life insurance coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... With maximum benefit amount Maximum benefit amount2 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 76 77 73 73 79 68 $50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – – $100,000 50,000 50,000 100,000 $200,000 200,000 245,000 200,000 200,000 250,000 73 73 65 66 74 83 78 82 79 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – – 100,000 – – – – 50,000 50,000 200,000 200,000 250,000 245,000 250,000 – 250,000 – 200,000 75th percentile 90th percentile $500,000 $1,000,000 500,000 1,000,000 500,000 – 500,000 1,000,000 500,000 1,000,000 750,000 1,000,000 With no maximum benefit amount 24 23 27 27 21 32 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles designate position within each published series. For example, at the 50th percentile or median, half of the participating workers receive the same as or more than the benefit shown, and half receive the same as or less than the benefit shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the participating workers receive the same or less than the benefit shown. The remaining percentiles follow the same logic. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings 500,000 500,000 500,000 500,000 – 500,000 750,000 500,000 500,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 1,000,000 – 1,000,000 1,000,000 27 27 35 34 26 17 22 18 21 both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 21. Life insurance plans: Flat-dollar amount benefit formulas,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (Includes workers participating in life insurance plans with flat-dollar amount formulas) Flat dollar amounts3 Characteristics All workers ............................................................. 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile $10,000 $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $50,000 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 10,000 10,000 – – – 15,000 10,000 10,000 25,000 25,000 20,000 25,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – – – 5,000 – – – 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 25,000 – 15,000 15,000 20,000 15,000 20,000 20,000 50,000 – 25,000 25,000 25,000 25,000 25,000 25,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 – 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 15,000 10,000 20,000 – 20,000 20,000 20,000 25,000 – 25,000 30,000 25,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 10,000 5,000 10,000 5,000 20,000 10,000 30,000 20,000 50,000 50,000 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 5,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 20,000 20,000 40,000 25,000 50,000 50,000 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 5,000 5,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 – – 15,000 – 20,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 20,000 20,000 25,000 – 50,000 50,000 30,000 25,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 Goods-producing industries ................................... 10,000 15,000 20,000 30,000 50,000 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... – – 5,000 – 5,000 – 5,000 5,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 15,000 20,000 20,000 30,000 – 45,000 50,000 30,000 25,000 25,000 25,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 21. Life insurance plans: Flat-dollar amount benefit formulas,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (Includes workers participating in life insurance plans with flat-dollar amount formulas) Flat dollar amounts3 Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile $10,000 10,000 10,000 5,000 10,000 5,000 $10,000 – 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 $20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 $25,000 25,000 25,000 35,000 25,000 40,000 $50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 5,000 5,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 5,000 10,000 5,000 – 10,000 15,000 15,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 – 10,000 20,000 – 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 20,000 50,000 40,000 25,000 – 25,000 25,000 25,000 – 40,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 50,000 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes participants in plans providing a fixed benefit amount. Dollar amounts can be a flat amount or can vary by the employee’s earnings or length of service. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles designate position within each published series. For example, at the 50th percentile or median, half of participating workers receive the same as or more than the amount shown, and half receive the same as or less than the amount shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of participating workers receive the same or less than the amount shown. The remaining percentiles follow the same logic. 4 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 22. Short-term disability plans: Method of funding, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Noncommercially insured2 Commercially insured Legally required Other 45 37 16 1 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 50 52 49 45 36 36 36 37 – 11 13 16 – 1 2 2 43 52 33 38 47 47 47 42 40 31 31 43 35 33 36 44 14 – 35 – 17 19 16 11 3 – 1 – 1 1 1 2 35 47 43 38 49 48 42 43 51 33 13 – 13 10 16 4 – 2 1 2 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 46 40 39 18 14 40 1 2 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 47 45 34 38 15 17 4 1 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 32 29 43 46 52 53 32 – 41 39 35 33 35 49 16 – 12 13 1 – 1 – 2 2 Goods-producing industries ................................... 41 47 10 1 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 46 42 46 40 62 39 55 52 34 35 36 44 23 35 28 37 18 21 14 10 – 24 15 9 1 2 4 6 – 1 1 2 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 22. Short-term disability plans: Method of funding, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics Noncommercially insured2 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Commercially insured Legally required Other 31 31 34 53 44 61 40 38 45 35 44 27 28 31 21 10 11 10 1 1 1 2 1 2 54 20 56 53 48 61 52 52 45 24 40 47 50 39 47 36 – 56 – – – – – 12 – 1 4 1 – – 1 1 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Employer assumes all risks and expenses of providing the benefit. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 23. Short-term disability plans: Employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Employee contribution required Employee contribution not required 18 82 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 13 10 14 13 87 90 86 87 11 16 36 21 19 24 17 15 89 84 64 79 81 76 83 85 15 14 17 14 21 85 86 83 86 79 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 16 37 84 63 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 17 18 83 82 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 40 51 18 15 12 12 60 49 82 85 88 88 Goods-producing industries ................................... 12 88 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 20 21 9 7 9 28 19 18 80 79 91 93 91 72 81 82 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 23. Short-term disability plans: Employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Employee contribution required Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Employee contribution not required 26 29 20 14 16 11 74 71 80 86 84 89 4 47 7 7 8 5 5 13 96 53 93 93 92 95 95 87 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 24. Short-term disability plans: Method of benefit payment, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Flat dollar amounts Fixed percent of annual earnings Dollar amount varies Percent varies by annual earnings Other 6 2 70 22 1 2 2 1 – 1 1 1 – 67 59 71 84 30 37 25 8 1 1 1 2 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. – 2 4 – 3 4 3 16 – – 1 – 1 – 1 – 85 83 88 82 68 71 68 60 6 13 6 14 27 25 28 18 – – 1 – 1 – 1 – 29 7 16 18 13 – – – – – 54 64 69 62 76 8 25 11 13 8 – – – – – Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 6 4 2 – 68 85 23 10 1 – Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 17 3 7 1 62 71 13 24 1 1 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 5 1 7 7 4 2 2 – 1 2 2 1 84 94 74 68 62 62 9 4 17 22 31 33 1 – 1 (3) 1 2 Goods-producing industries ................................... 17 – 59 18 – Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 3 4 4 – 1 4 1 2 1 1 – – – – – – 72 85 86 89 82 85 82 84 23 9 8 4 16 10 14 12 1 2 – 2 – – – – Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 24. Short-term disability plans: Method of benefit payment, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics Flat dollar amounts Fixed percent of annual earnings Dollar amount varies Percent varies by annual earnings Other 6 6 6 6 7 4 2 – – 2 1 3 75 74 77 66 71 62 16 17 14 25 20 29 (3) – – 1 (3) 2 New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 5 4 11 6 9 6 4 2 – – 4 1 – – – 2 65 85 60 68 65 58 68 69 27 10 25 25 21 34 27 24 – – (3) 3 ( ) – – – 3 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." 3 Less than 0.5. 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Geographic areas NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 25. Short-term disability plans: Duration of benefits, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Number of weeks2 Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Fixed duration 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile Duration varies 92 12 21 26 26 26 8 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 90 92 89 83 12 12 12 12 18 18 20 22 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 52 10 8 11 17 80 93 95 92 93 91 93 90 88 92 92 93 13 12 13 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 22 18 26 24 18 13 20 24 24 25 – 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 – 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 52 26 52 26 26 26 26 36 – 26 26 26 20 7 5 8 7 9 7 10 12 8 8 7 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 91 95 12 18 20 26 26 26 26 26 26 52 9 5 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 87 93 13 12 26 18 26 26 26 26 52 26 13 7 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 94 97 94 92 88 87 12 21 12 12 13 12 25 26 20 20 22 21 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 – 52 26 26 26 26 6 3 6 8 12 13 Goods-producing industries ................................... 92 13 24 26 26 26 8 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 92 91 84 78 91 95 92 87 12 12 13 13 18 12 12 – 21 21 22 21 26 18 20 24 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 – 26 26 26 26 26 26 52 52 26 26 26 52 8 9 16 22 9 5 8 13 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 25. Short-term disability plans: Duration of benefits, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Number of weeks2 Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Fixed duration 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile Duration varies 94 94 93 91 94 88 12 12 12 13 12 13 18 21 13 22 13 25 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 6 6 7 9 6 12 90 93 87 95 94 94 94 12 21 13 12 11 12 12 13 26 20 – 12 13 – 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 – 26 26 26 10 7 13 5 6 6 6 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles designate position within each published series. For example, at the 50th percentile or median, half of the participating workers receive the same as or more than the benefit shown, and half receive the same as or less than the benefit shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the participating workers receive the same or less than the benefit shown. The remaining percentiles follow the same logic. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 26. Short-term disability plans: Fixed percent of annual earnings, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with fixed percent of annual earnings short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Fixed percent of annual earnings Characteristics All workers ............................................................. 51 to 59 percent Greater than 69 percent Median fixed percent of annual earnings Less than 50 percent 50 percent 1 19 2 39 26 13 62.7 60.0 1 1 1 – 19 17 20 28 2 2 2 4 39 41 39 30 21 20 21 16 18 19 17 22 63.7 64.5 63.3 64.6 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60 percent 61 to 69 percent Mean fixed percent of annual earnings Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. – 2 – – 1 1 1 1 34 21 27 41 19 16 20 16 3 2 – – 2 2 2 1 27 51 33 29 36 39 35 44 16 15 33 25 28 29 28 28 20 9 4 4 14 13 14 9 62.5 60.0 60.1 58.6 62.8 63.0 62.7 62.2 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 – – – – – 14 18 15 13 16 – – – – – 37 48 44 43 45 35 23 26 27 25 – 7 14 14 13 64.2 61.0 63.2 62.6 63.8 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 1 – 19 24 2 – 40 32 25 35 14 5 63.0 61.1 60.0 60.0 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 1 1 18 19 5 1 32 40 33 25 10 14 61.8 62.9 60.0 60.0 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ – – 1 1 1 1 22 24 19 21 17 18 – – 2 2 2 2 33 29 40 39 40 38 35 42 26 23 23 20 5 2 12 14 18 21 61.0 60.9 62.5 62.5 64.1 64.9 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 Goods-producing industries ................................... 1 12 1 44 24 17 63.9 60.0 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 1 1 – – – 2 2 – 21 27 32 37 24 23 22 29 2 4 8 4 12 2 3 – 38 36 26 29 21 42 48 31 26 19 12 13 9 23 18 32 12 13 22 17 33 8 8 5 62.5 61.5 63.8 61.1 69.4 60.1 59.8 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 26. Short-term disability plans: Fixed percent of annual earnings, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with fixed percent of annual earnings short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Fixed percent of annual earnings Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 51 to 59 percent Greater than 69 percent Median fixed percent of annual earnings Less than 50 percent 50 percent 1 – – 1 1 1 23 23 23 17 12 21 1 – – 2 2 3 36 33 43 40 47 34 30 33 22 24 24 23 9 8 11 16 14 18 61.6 61.6 61.5 63.5 63.0 64.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 – 1 – – – – – – 8 31 13 19 15 9 7 12 – 1 – – – – – 14 60 16 48 52 55 58 51 42 – 46 20 9 11 14 23 20 21 5 17 18 – 17 19 – 65.1 61.2 63.1 62.6 64.4 64.3 65.2 61.3 60.0 66.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60 percent 61 to 69 percent Mean fixed percent of annual earnings Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 27. Short-term disability plans: Maximum benefit amounts, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with fixed percent of annual earnings short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. With maximum benefit amount Maximum weekly benefit amount2 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile With no maximum benefit amount 75 $170 $300 $572 $1,000 $2,307 25 71 73 71 73 170 170 170 170 500 500 – 500 692 750 692 692 1,500 1,500 1,500 831 2,500 2,500 2,500 1,500 29 27 29 27 73 59 85 76 76 77 76 76 170 170 170 135 170 170 170 200 500 – 200 185 250 – 220 500 692 600 524 – 561 561 572 572 831 – 584 – 1,250 1,500 1,155 1,000 – 2,800 1,300 2,500 2,500 4,615 2,309 – 27 41 15 24 24 23 24 24 74 77 73 68 78 200 200 170 170 170 500 500 300 250 385 550 584 500 515 500 – 1,000 600 – 584 1,500 1,730 1,500 1,500 1,385 26 23 27 32 22 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 74 86 170 170 350 170 584 – 1,200 572 2,310 584 26 14 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 79 75 170 170 200 315 500 584 584 1,155 1,385 2,310 21 25 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 85 94 75 74 72 70 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 – 300 300 500 – 546 546 561 572 600 692 584 584 1,000 1,100 1,500 1,500 1,300 750 2,000 2,308 2,500 2,500 15 6 25 26 28 30 Goods-producing industries ................................... 68 170 350 572 1,000 2,000 32 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 77 70 67 70 58 72 61 72 170 170 170 185 170 170 170 135 300 300 – 500 185 300 – 200 572 584 692 692 584 561 700 584 1,000 1,000 831 831 1,000 1,000 1,500 – 2,309 2,307 1,500 – 1,500 2,308 2,423 1,662 23 30 33 30 42 28 39 28 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 27. Short-term disability plans: Maximum benefit amounts, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with fixed percent of annual earnings short-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... With maximum benefit amount Maximum weekly benefit amount2 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile With no maximum benefit amount 83 85 79 70 75 65 $170 170 170 170 170 170 – – $300 350 315 350 $559 559 546 584 584 584 – $750 1,000 1,500 1,500 1,200 $1,731 1,500 2,300 2,400 2,400 2,350 17 15 21 30 25 35 71 90 51 74 70 72 84 250 170 200 300 250 – 170 500 170 350 500 500 500 – 1,000 546 577 750 692 1,000 – 1,000 584 1,250 1,500 – – 2,000 2,308 831 2,308 2,500 2,300 2,500 2,350 29 10 49 26 30 28 16 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. South Atlantic ........................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles designate position within each published series. For example, at the 50th percentile or median, half of the participating workers receive the same as or more than the benefit shown, and half receive the same as or less than the benefit shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the participating workers receive the same or less than the benefit shown. The remaining percentiles follow the same logic. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 28. Long-term disability plans: Employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with long-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Employee contribution required Employee contribution not required 10 90 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 10 8 12 18 90 92 88 82 21 11 13 20 9 9 9 10 11 6 7 5 79 89 87 80 91 91 91 90 89 94 93 95 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 10 7 90 93 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 13 9 87 91 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 11 6 9 9 10 10 89 94 91 91 90 90 Goods-producing industries ................................... 8 92 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 10 12 17 20 13 8 10 17 90 88 83 80 87 92 90 83 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 28. Long-term disability plans: Employee contribution requirement, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with long-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Employee contribution required Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Employee contribution not required 7 6 8 11 9 12 93 94 92 89 91 88 5 8 12 9 10 8 9 6 95 92 88 91 90 92 91 94 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 29. Long-term disability plans: Method of benefit payment, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with long-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Fixed percent of annual earnings Percent varies by annual earnings Flat dollar amounts Other 95 4 1 1 96 96 96 97 4 4 4 2 – (2) – – – (2) – – Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 97 98 95 94 95 90 96 91 – 2 3 5 4 10 3 6 2 – – – 1 – 1 2 – – – – (2) – (2) 2 89 92 91 90 93 7 5 3 2 4 – 1 4 6 2 – 2 2 2 2 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 95 88 4 9 1 – 1 – Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 85 96 6 3 6 (2) 3 (2) Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 95 87 95 94 95 95 4 – 3 4 4 5 – – 1 2 1 – – – 1 1 (2) – Goods-producing industries ................................... 91 3 4 1 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 95 97 96 97 96 98 97 93 4 2 2 – 4 2 2 6 1 – – 1 (2) – – – (2) – – – – – – – Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 29. Long-term disability plans: Method of benefit payment, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with long-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Fixed percent of annual earnings Percent varies by annual earnings Flat dollar amounts Other 95 95 96 94 95 94 4 4 2 4 4 4 1 – – 1 1 2 (2) – – 1 1 1 96 94 92 95 96 93 97 95 94 4 3 4 3 4 6 3 5 4 – – 3 – – – – – 1 – – 1 – – – – – 1 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Less than 0.5. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 30. Long-term disability plans: Fixed percent of annual earnings, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with a fixed percent of annual earnings long-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Fixed percent of annual earnings Characteristics Greater than 67 percent Median fixed percent of annual earnings Less than 60 percent 60 percent 22 61 8 7 2 58.6 60.0 23 23 23 14 58 61 56 47 10 7 11 20 8 9 8 14 2 1 2 6 58.6 58.5 58.6 61.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 16 45 26 19 24 22 24 18 38 48 59 56 60 67 59 66 24 5 9 13 8 5 8 8 16 – 4 – 7 4 8 5 6 – 2 – 1 2 1 3 61.2 55.2 58.4 59.9 58.4 58.6 58.4 59.1 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 22 16 18 17 20 63 68 71 70 71 – 7 5 5 4 – 6 5 7 – – 4 1 1 – 58.7 59.4 58.5 58.9 58.1 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 22 29 61 50 8 – 7 7 1 – 58.6 58.5 60.0 60.0 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 26 22 50 62 10 8 10 7 4 1 59.1 58.5 60.0 60.0 Average wage within the following categories:2 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 24 28 22 21 24 25 64 63 63 62 58 59 6 – 9 9 8 8 5 – 6 7 8 8 1 – 1 1 2 2 58.1 58.3 58.5 58.6 58.6 58.3 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 Goods-producing industries ................................... 19 70 5 6 1 58.7 60.0 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 23 24 13 16 10 33 46 19 59 56 50 38 68 61 50 45 9 10 19 25 12 3 2 22 7 7 12 15 7 – – 12 2 2 5 6 3 – – 3 58.5 58.5 60.9 61.3 60.2 56.5 54.9 60.3 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 All workers ............................................................. 61 to 66 percent Mean fixed percent of annual earnings 67 percent Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 30. Long-term disability plans: Fixed percent of annual earnings, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with a fixed percent of annual earnings long-term disability coverage = 100 percent) Fixed percent of annual earnings Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 61 to 66 percent Mean fixed percent of annual earnings Greater than 67 percent Median fixed percent of annual earnings Less than 60 percent 60 percent 18 20 15 25 18 29 67 66 67 58 66 52 6 6 7 9 7 11 7 7 9 7 6 7 2 1 2 1 2 1 59.1 58.8 59.8 58.3 58.7 58.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 20 23 27 15 23 23 23 19 23 69 62 61 65 58 63 68 54 53 4 5 4 7 14 – 4 16 12 5 9 6 9 4 6 5 – 11 1 1 2 3 1 – 1 – 1 58.6 58.9 58.0 59.9 58.1 57.9 57.7 59.6 59.1 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0 67 percent Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 31. Long-term disability plans: Maximum benefit amounts, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers participating in fixed percent of annual earnings long-term disability plans = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. With maximum benefit amount Maximum monthly benefit amount2 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile With no maximum benefit amount 83 $3,000 $5,000 $7,500 $10,000 $15,000 17 83 87 80 70 3,000 3,900 3,000 – 5,000 5,000 5,000 3,900 8,000 10,000 7,500 5,000 10,000 12,250 10,000 7,000 15,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 17 13 20 30 65 88 80 73 87 91 85 83 – – 3,000 – 3,000 4,000 3,000 3,000 3,900 5,000 5,000 – 5,000 5,000 5,000 4,000 5,000 7,500 6,000 5,000 8,000 7,500 8,000 5,000 6,000 10,000 10,000 8,000 12,000 12,000 11,200 10,000 8,000 15,000 10,000 10,000 20,000 20,000 17,500 15,000 35 12 20 27 13 9 15 17 76 86 83 82 84 – 3,000 – 2,500 – – 4,000 5,000 5,000 3,000 5,000 6,000 6,000 7,000 5,000 – 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 15,000 12,500 15,000 15,000 13,000 24 14 17 18 16 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 84 76 3,000 2,500 5,000 5,000 7,500 6,000 10,000 10,000 15,000 15,000 16 24 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 73 85 – 3,000 3,000 5,000 5,000 7,500 7,500 10,000 10,000 15,000 27 15 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 85 84 83 83 83 3,000 3,000 3,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 7,000 8,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,500 12,500 15,000 15,000 15,000 16,000 20,000 15 16 17 17 17 Goods-producing industries ................................... 83 3,000 5,000 7,000 10,000 15,000 17 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 84 82 71 66 79 90 89 65 3,000 2,500 – – – 3,000 3,000 – 5,000 5,000 3,900 3,900 5,000 5,000 5,000 3,333 7,500 6,000 5,000 5,000 7,000 6,000 7,000 5,000 10,000 10,000 7,500 6,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 6,000 15,000 12,500 10,000 8,000 14,000 15,000 15,000 9,000 16 18 29 34 21 10 11 35 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 31. Long-term disability plans: Maximum benefit amounts, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers participating in fixed percent of annual earnings long-term disability plans = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... With maximum benefit amount Maximum monthly benefit amount2 10th percentile 25th percentile 50th percentile (median) 75th percentile 90th percentile With no maximum benefit amount 88 89 84 82 87 77 $3,000 3,000 – 2,917 3,000 2,500 $5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 $7,000 – 7,500 7,500 7,500 7,500 $10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 12,000 $15,000 15,000 15,000 15,000 15,000 16,000 12 11 16 18 13 23 92 86 77 74 86 90 78 84 3,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 2,500 3,000 3,000 3,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 4,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 7,500 6,000 6,000 7,500 7,500 7,500 7,500 10,000 11,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,208 15,000 15,000 15,000 16,000 15,000 15,000 20,000 17,300 8 14 23 26 14 10 22 16 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles designate position within each published series. For example, at the 50th percentile or median, half of the participating workers receive the same as or more than the benefit shown, and half receive the same as or less than the benefit shown. At the 25th percentile, one-fourth of the participating workers receive the same or less than the benefit shown. The remaining percentiles follow the same logic. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 32. Leave benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Paid holidays Paid Paid sick Paid personal leave vacations leave Paid funeral leave Paid jury duty leave Paid military leave Family leave2 Paid Unpaid 76 65 74 41 64 66 39 12 87 79 95 73 34 85 89 84 85 75 95 68 17 58 59 58 63 82 85 81 81 84 87 83 87 56 54 56 64 19 24 17 16 92 92 92 93 29 82 57 83 80 67 87 85 95 79 47 74 67 52 75 57 12 80 58 81 79 68 86 82 73 64 26 45 42 34 47 30 87 84 41 73 65 52 72 55 94 85 46 75 67 55 73 57 68 54 25 56 37 28 42 31 18 23 8 13 13 8 15 9 97 93 80 91 88 87 89 81 77 92 84 92 76 44 68 55 55 56 71 92 82 91 74 21 38 33 31 36 42 65 62 67 58 43 68 65 68 63 25 37 34 34 33 7 11 7 8 6 79 83 85 87 84 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 88 38 78 26 87 34 49 17 74 31 76 35 46 18 15 5 90 77 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 81 75 84 62 75 74 59 38 87 60 90 62 62 35 15 12 94 85 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 51 37 84 90 82 81 34 21 69 79 87 90 51 39 83 89 79 78 19 10 42 49 60 61 35 23 66 76 85 88 39 28 68 79 86 90 18 11 37 48 58 64 5 4 11 15 20 22 79 75 86 90 93 93 Goods-producing industries ................................... 91 57 89 31 66 67 37 9 86 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 73 71 52 41 78 84 91 88 67 80 86 90 85 75 87 90 72 65 40 27 67 82 90 89 43 55 59 68 44 52 70 53 63 77 82 84 87 73 89 86 66 80 88 92 89 74 88 91 39 51 67 68 74 39 58 82 13 16 15 16 13 17 25 16 87 91 93 94 95 89 96 94 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 32. Leave benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Paid holidays Paid Paid sick Paid personal leave vacations leave Paid funeral leave Paid jury duty leave Paid military leave Family leave2 Paid Unpaid 68 67 74 82 82 82 52 51 59 77 69 85 69 66 76 79 81 78 28 27 34 53 47 59 47 43 60 79 71 87 51 47 63 81 73 89 22 21 27 54 42 67 9 8 10 16 13 19 79 76 89 94 92 95 73 75 76 75 79 78 76 71 73 69 68 60 64 66 65 67 61 67 72 73 74 73 77 75 76 73 72 50 54 43 33 41 38 39 36 34 69 69 66 60 64 64 66 57 56 76 75 67 61 66 71 71 57 56 47 43 35 35 43 46 42 33 33 13 11 12 11 14 8 13 10 14 89 87 86 84 86 89 87 84 88 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The sum of paid and unpaid family leave may exceed 100 percent because some workers have access to both types of plans. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 33. Paid holidays: Number of days provided, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with paid holidays = 100 percent) Paid holidays Characteristics Less than 5 days Mean Median Greater number number 14 than 14 of days of days days days 5 days 6 days 7 days 8 days 9 days 10 days 11 days 12 days 13 days 8 3 22 12 12 9 14 8 6 3 2 2 8 8 3 1 3 8 1 1 1 2 15 10 18 10 10 9 10 6 13 15 12 6 11 12 10 10 18 23 15 13 11 11 10 12 9 9 9 8 5 4 6 7 2 2 2 6 3 3 4 12 9 9 9 10 9 10 9 10 11 5 17 3 10 21 5 5 2 – 3 (2) 2 4 2 4 15 41 26 12 26 37 21 30 6 13 13 10 14 12 15 14 – 10 9 7 12 11 12 10 7 7 6 10 8 5 9 8 11 5 7 10 14 6 17 11 12 5 6 17 6 3 7 8 5 4 5 13 4 1 6 5 – – 4 12 2 (2) 3 2 – 1 2 3 1 – 1 1 – – 2 2 1 – 2 2 10 8 7 10 8 6 8 8 10 7 7 10 7 6 8 7 7 3 6 3 8 4 4 4 3 5 30 31 22 19 25 13 15 11 9 13 11 9 16 15 17 10 7 10 13 7 10 12 14 17 11 7 8 7 9 6 5 5 5 6 4 1 2 2 – 2 (2) 1 1 – 1 1 2 2 3 1 8 8 8 9 8 7 7 8 9 7 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 5 27 2 5 21 30 12 11 13 9 10 4 15 7 8 3 6 1 4 2 2 1 2 1 9 6 8 6 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 2 9 1 3 13 24 7 13 12 12 9 9 13 14 14 7 13 5 8 3 4 1 6 2 10 8 10 8 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 23 39 7 3 2 2 5 8 3 2 1 1 33 27 28 18 13 10 14 10 13 12 10 8 9 7 13 13 13 13 5 3 8 10 12 13 6 3 13 16 19 22 3 2 6 10 10 10 2 – 5 7 9 10 1 (2) 3 4 5 6 1 – 1 2 2 2 1 – 1 3 4 4 6 5 8 9 9 10 6 6 7 9 9 10 Goods-producing industries ................................... 3 3 18 10 13 14 18 9 6 2 1 2 9 9 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 9 4 4 7 1 4 2 (2) 3 2 2 3 1 2 – (2) 23 25 6 11 1 36 40 – 13 12 3 4 2 17 15 – 12 8 7 5 9 9 11 2 8 6 8 7 8 5 7 9 13 11 14 14 12 9 7 13 7 8 12 11 15 6 – 27 6 7 10 8 13 5 8 25 4 7 11 8 14 4 6 16 2 3 8 8 9 1 (2) 5 2 6 14 14 15 2 – 1 8 9 11 11 12 8 8 11 8 8 11 10 12 7 7 11 All workers ............................................................. Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 33. Paid holidays: Number of days provided, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with paid holidays = 100 percent) Paid holidays Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Less than 5 days Mean Median Greater number number 14 than 14 of days of days days days 5 days 6 days 7 days 8 days 9 days 10 days 11 days 12 days 13 days 10 10 10 6 9 2 4 4 3 2 2 1 27 28 23 18 24 13 16 16 15 9 11 7 12 13 11 12 12 12 8 6 12 10 10 10 12 11 13 15 13 18 5 5 6 10 8 11 3 3 4 8 5 12 2 1 3 5 3 6 1 1 – 2 1 3 1 1 – 3 1 5 7 7 8 9 8 10 7 7 7 9 8 10 6 7 7 4 11 11 7 9 7 2 2 1 2 4 4 3 2 2 15 17 27 30 25 15 26 22 18 13 14 12 12 11 12 13 11 12 10 12 10 15 11 14 11 17 14 11 10 10 9 8 9 8 – 9 14 15 15 10 13 15 12 16 15 12 7 5 – 8 9 8 9 8 9 9 5 5 6 5 4 3 6 5 4 3 2 3 1 4 2 5 1 2 2 – 1 1 1 – 3 2 3 4 1 1 4 2 1 2 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 8 8 8 7 8 8 8 8 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Less than 0.5. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 34. Paid sick leave: Type of provision, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with paid sick leave = 100 percent) Sick leave provision Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Fixed number of days per year2 As needed3 As part of consolidated leave plan4 72 6 22 69 68 69 83 6 8 6 5 25 23 25 12 84 45 70 78 74 80 72 72 73 4 1 5 5 5 5 5 10 11 12 54 24 17 21 15 23 18 16 76 2 22 Full time ................................................................. 72 6 23 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 83 69 3 6 14 24 Average wage within the following categories:5 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 73 73 72 70 70 5 5 4 8 9 22 22 23 22 20 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 72 69 86 86 87 56 48 82 5 3 3 2 5 2 1 4 23 28 11 12 8 42 51 15 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 70 9 21 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving: Production .......................................................... See footnotes at end of table. Table 34. Paid sick leave: Type of provision, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with paid sick leave = 100 percent) Sick leave provision Characteristics 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Fixed number of days per year2 As needed3 As part of consolidated leave plan4 68 75 73 75 72 11 4 4 3 4 21 21 23 21 25 74 76 72 63 70 71 71 69 76 7 7 6 – 4 5 3 4 6 19 17 23 – 26 23 26 28 18 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Employees earn or accrue a specified number of sick leave days per year. This number may vary by length of service. 3 Plan does not specify maximum number of days. 4 A consolidated leave plan provides a single amount of time-off for workers to use for multiple purposes, such as vacation, illness, or personal business. 5 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 35. Paid sick leave: Number of annual days by service requirement,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with fixed number of days per year sick leave plans = 100 percent) Paid sick leave days by length of service3 Characteristics Less than 5 5 to 9 days days 10 to 14 days Mean number of days Greater than 29 days 15 to 29 days Median number of days After 1 year All workers ............................................................. 18 45 30 6 1 8 6 Full time ................................................................. 17 45 31 6 1 9 6 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 13 20 26 50 48 25 13 4 1 1 10 8 10 6 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 25 24 26 14 18 12 55 56 52 39 51 29 17 17 18 37 25 47 2 2 – 8 5 11 1 1 – 1 1 2 7 7 7 9 8 11 5 5 5 9 6 10 All workers ............................................................. 17 45 30 7 2 9 6 Full time ................................................................. 15 45 31 7 2 9 7 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 11 18 26 50 46 25 15 4 1 2 11 9 10 6 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 23 23 25 13 16 10 55 56 53 39 52 29 18 18 18 37 25 47 3 3 – 9 6 11 1 1 – 2 1 3 7 7 8 10 8 11 5 5 5 9 6 10 After 5 years See footnotes at end of table. Table 35. Paid sick leave: Number of annual days by service requirement,1 civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with fixed number of days per year sick leave plans = 100 percent) Paid sick leave days by length of service3 Characteristics Less than 5 5 to 9 days days 10 to 14 days Mean number of days Greater than 29 days 15 to 29 days Median number of days After 10 years All workers ............................................................. 17 45 30 7 2 9 6 Full time ................................................................. 15 45 31 7 2 10 7 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 11 18 26 50 46 26 15 5 1 2 11 9 10 6 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 23 23 25 13 16 10 54 55 52 39 52 29 18 18 19 37 25 46 3 3 – 9 6 12 1 1 – 2 1 3 7 7 8 11 9 12 5 5 6 9 6 10 All workers ............................................................. 16 45 30 7 2 10 6 Full time ................................................................. 15 45 31 7 2 10 7 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 11 18 26 50 46 26 15 5 2 2 12 9 10 6 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 23 23 24 13 15 10 55 55 53 39 52 29 18 18 18 37 25 46 3 3 – 9 6 12 1 1 – 2 2 3 8 7 8 11 9 13 5 5 6 9 6 10 After 20 years 1 Employees either are granted a specific number of days after completion of the indicated length of service or accrue days during the next 12-month period. The total number of days is assumed to be available for use immediately upon completion of the service interval. Periods of service are chosen arbitrarily and do not necessarily reflect individual provisions for progression. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Employees eligible for paid sick leave but who have not fulfilled the minimum service requirement are included as receiving 0 days. NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 36. Paid sick leave: Carryover provisions, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with fixed number of days per year sick leave plans = 100 percent) Carryover provision2 Characteristics Unlimited Limit on days accumulation accumulated Total All workers ............................................................. No carryover provision 56 23 33 44 65 51 71 86 32 21 37 54 33 31 34 32 35 49 29 14 88 84 58 75 52 53 52 43 44 55 29 25 49 16 10 19 16 12 33 55 33 26 36 43 33 28 32 12 16 42 25 48 47 48 57 56 33 8 26 67 Full time ................................................................. 56 23 33 44 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 72 52 41 18 32 34 28 48 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 45 55 58 60 64 12 21 24 28 31 33 35 34 32 33 55 45 42 40 36 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 59 79 87 88 89 68 85 95 25 40 55 57 54 22 31 67 35 38 32 31 35 46 54 29 41 21 13 12 11 32 15 5 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 36 11 25 64 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving: Production .......................................................... See footnotes at end of table. Table 36. Paid sick leave: Carryover provisions, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with fixed number of days per year sick leave plans = 100 percent) Carryover provision2 Characteristics Unlimited Limit on days accumulation accumulated Total 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... No carryover provision 34 41 68 63 72 11 11 30 18 40 23 31 38 45 32 66 59 32 37 28 51 51 47 58 58 68 57 67 58 17 19 18 18 27 33 21 24 27 34 31 30 40 31 36 37 44 31 49 49 53 42 42 32 43 33 42 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Plans that allow employees to accumulate unused sick leave from year to year. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 38. Paid vacations:1 Number of annual days by service requirement, civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with paid vacations = 100 percent) Paid vacation days by length of service3 Characteristics Less than 5 5 to 9 days days 10 to 14 days 15 to 19 days Mean number of days Greater than 24 days 20 to 24 days Median number of days After 1 year All workers ............................................................. 6 35 38 13 7 2 10 10 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 4 21 33 48 40 20 14 5 7 4 2 1 10 8 10 5 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 5 6 36 35 45 36 9 14 4 7 2 2 10 10 10 10 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 8 8 7 5 6 3 45 46 44 27 37 16 34 34 35 40 37 44 10 9 10 16 12 19 3 3 – 10 6 14 1 (4) – 3 2 4 9 8 9 11 10 13 8 7 9 10 10 11 All workers ............................................................. 2 9 36 35 12 6 14 15 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 1 8 7 20 35 42 37 20 13 6 7 4 15 12 15 10 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 1 2 6 9 39 35 41 34 7 13 5 7 14 14 15 15 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 2 3 1 1 1 1 13 14 10 6 7 4 41 41 42 32 39 24 33 32 35 37 34 41 8 8 9 15 13 18 3 2 4 9 5 13 13 13 13 16 14 17 11 10 13 15 15 15 After 5 years See footnotes at end of table. Table 38. Paid vacations:1 Number of annual days by service requirement, civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with paid vacations = 100 percent) Paid vacation days by length of service3 Characteristics Less than 5 5 to 9 days days 10 to 14 days 15 to 19 days 20 to 24 days Greater than 24 days Mean number of days Median number of days After 10 years All workers ............................................................. 1 6 15 42 23 12 17 15 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 1 7 5 14 14 21 43 40 24 11 13 8 17 14 15 15 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... (4) 2 3 7 10 16 56 40 22 23 9 13 17 17 15 15 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 2 3 1 1 1 1 11 12 7 3 4 2 23 24 21 9 11 7 39 38 44 45 50 39 18 17 21 26 23 30 7 7 7 16 12 21 15 15 16 19 17 20 15 15 15 18 15 20 All workers ............................................................. 1 6 12 19 36 26 20 20 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 1 7 5 12 11 16 19 22 37 25 27 18 20 17 20 16 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... (4) 2 2 6 5 13 12 20 45 34 36 24 22 19 20 20 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 2 3 1 1 1 (4) 10 12 6 2 3 1 20 21 16 6 7 4 24 25 22 15 19 10 29 26 37 41 41 41 14 13 17 35 28 43 16 16 18 22 20 23 15 15 20 20 20 23 After 20 years 1 Employees either are granted a specific number of days after completion of the indicated length of service or accrue days during the next 12-month period. The total number of days is assumed to be available for use immediately upon completion of the service interval. Periods of service are chosen arbitrarily and do not necessarily reflect individual provisions for progression. Fractional vacation amounts were rounded to the nearest full number of days. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Employees eligible for paid vacations but who have not fulfilled the minimum service requirement are included as receiving 0 days. Estimates include plans that are exclusively for paid vacation and vacation plans that are part of a consolidated leave plan that provides a single amount of time-off for workers to use for multiple purposes. 4 Less than 0.5. NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 39. Consolidated leave plans:1 Access, civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers with paid vacations = 100 percent) With consolidated leave plan With no consolidated leave plan Paid days by length of service (Mean number of days) Characteristics Access Paid vacation days by length of service (Mean number of days) Access 1 5 10 20 year years years years All workers ............................................................. 1 5 10 20 year years years years 25 15 20 23 25 75 8 12 15 18 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 35 30 38 21 69 25 14 23 17 26 15 17 17 17 15 18 15 15 15 12 15 11 21 21 21 18 23 20 17 20 17 20 16 24 24 24 19 26 23 21 23 20 23 19 27 26 27 21 28 25 24 25 22 26 21 65 70 62 79 31 75 86 77 83 74 85 11 11 11 13 11 7 10 8 7 9 7 14 15 14 15 15 12 13 12 11 13 11 17 17 17 16 18 14 16 15 14 15 13 20 20 20 18 20 16 19 18 17 18 16 18 14 15 17 13 11 12 11 12 10 15 17 16 16 16 18 20 19 18 19 19 23 21 22 21 82 86 85 83 87 7 8 7 7 7 11 11 11 11 11 13 14 14 14 15 14 16 18 18 18 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 26 21 15 13 20 18 23 20 25 22 74 79 9 6 13 10 15 13 18 15 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 12 27 15 15 20 20 24 23 28 25 88 73 9 8 13 12 16 15 21 17 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 20 15 23 25 31 32 13 12 15 15 17 17 17 16 19 20 21 21 20 19 22 23 24 24 22 21 25 26 26 26 80 85 77 75 69 68 6 6 8 9 11 11 11 10 12 13 14 15 13 12 15 16 17 17 15 13 17 19 20 20 Goods-producing industries ................................... 17 12 16 19 22 83 7 12 14 17 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 27 41 8 6 7 53 70 8 16 18 15 11 19 18 20 18 20 22 17 12 22 22 24 22 23 25 19 13 25 26 28 26 25 28 20 14 26 28 31 29 73 59 92 94 93 47 30 92 9 11 13 11 14 9 12 12 13 14 15 13 17 14 16 15 15 17 17 16 19 16 19 18 18 19 20 18 22 18 21 22 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 39. Consolidated leave plans:1 Access, civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers with paid vacations = 100 percent) With consolidated leave plan With no consolidated leave plan Paid days by length of service (Mean number of days) Characteristics Access Paid vacation days by length of service (Mean number of days) Access 1 5 10 20 year years years years 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... 1 5 10 20 year years years years 22 22 22 27 24 31 13 13 14 17 15 18 17 17 18 21 20 23 20 19 21 25 23 26 21 21 23 27 25 29 78 78 78 73 76 69 7 7 7 9 8 11 11 11 12 13 12 14 13 13 14 16 16 17 15 14 17 20 19 21 25 21 23 30 27 19 27 31 23 18 16 16 15 16 14 15 14 15 22 20 20 19 20 18 19 20 20 24 22 23 23 23 22 22 22 24 26 25 26 25 25 24 24 24 25 75 79 77 70 73 81 73 69 77 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 13 13 15 16 15 15 14 15 14 15 16 18 18 19 18 17 18 17 17 18 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 A consolidated leave plan provides a single amount of time-off for workers to use for multiple purposes, such as vacation, illness, or personal business. Those with no consolidated leave plan often have separate leave plans for different purposes. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 40. Quality of life benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Childcare2 Flexible workplace Subsidized commuting Wellness programs Employee assistance programs 10 6 6 38 52 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 17 19 16 13 12 18 9 3 11 15 9 6 53 56 52 48 68 69 68 65 10 23 9 10 8 4 11 6 1 5 1 3 5 3 6 2 3 9 4 10 7 3 9 3 46 68 23 42 40 39 40 28 65 77 37 62 54 53 55 41 3 9 5 6 3 2 2 2 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 20 35 30 34 26 31 49 46 48 44 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 12 6 7 1 8 3 42 25 57 36 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 15 10 2 6 9 6 50 36 78 48 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 6 6 8 11 17 18 1 – 3 7 12 15 2 1 5 9 12 14 21 15 35 43 56 59 32 24 50 59 72 76 Goods-producing industries ................................... 7 5 3 37 49 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 11 15 13 9 26 15 27 17 6 3 4 1 – 3 3 6 7 6 8 3 18 6 13 17 38 47 49 44 67 45 79 54 53 61 67 66 78 57 90 77 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 40. Quality of life benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics Childcare2 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Flexible workplace Subsidized commuting Wellness programs Employee assistance programs 4 4 5 16 9 22 4 4 4 7 5 9 3 3 3 9 5 14 18 16 26 56 46 65 29 25 42 74 63 84 New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 15 12 11 10 10 10 8 11 10 6 5 5 5 7 7 5 3 5 9 8 5 5 5 4 3 9 11 38 37 39 37 39 40 38 34 37 53 53 51 49 54 50 53 53 51 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 A workplace program that provides for either the full or partial cost of caring for an employee’s children in a nursery, day care center, or a baby sitter in facilities either on or off the employer’s premises. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." Geographic areas NOTE: Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 41. Financial benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Section 125 cafeteria benefits Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Health savings account Flexible benefits Dependent care reimbursement account Healthcare reimbursement account Pre-tax savings with Financial no employer planning contributions 21 20 38 40 24 19 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 29 37 25 20 31 32 31 33 57 60 56 49 61 64 60 57 34 29 37 52 27 32 25 19 20 24 9 18 25 23 25 17 34 38 11 24 18 9 23 16 48 68 23 45 36 29 40 27 58 69 24 47 39 31 43 31 53 32 18 39 21 15 25 20 18 25 11 20 23 22 23 15 11 21 17 18 16 12 19 15 18 13 17 35 29 32 26 20 41 31 35 27 17 22 16 16 16 9 20 13 15 10 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 24 10 24 7 44 19 48 18 27 14 22 11 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 18 21 24 19 49 36 54 38 42 20 26 18 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 9 4 22 24 30 33 7 3 19 24 32 33 18 11 34 44 60 65 18 9 38 47 64 69 14 10 22 27 34 36 10 5 18 22 29 31 Goods-producing industries ................................... 19 18 33 36 16 17 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 21 20 22 20 30 19 22 23 20 28 33 34 35 24 41 32 39 47 53 49 66 44 73 58 41 52 60 57 74 47 75 58 25 37 54 53 64 25 33 62 20 18 20 18 29 17 29 31 Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 41. Financial benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Stock options Characteristics Total2 All workers ............................................................. Performance Signing Other 7 2 1 5 Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 9 13 7 – 3 6 2 – 2 4 1 – 6 10 5 – – 2 2 2 9 9 8 5 – (3) – – 2 1 3 2 – – – – 1 1 1 – – – 2 2 7 8 6 3 2 8 7 6 7 – 4 1 2 1 – – 1 1 1 2 4 6 5 6 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 7 4 2 1 1 (3) 6 4 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 5 7 3 2 1 1 3 6 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 4 4 6 7 11 12 (3) – 2 2 4 5 – – 1 1 2 3 3 3 5 6 7 9 Goods-producing industries ................................... 7 3 1 5 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 7 1 (3) – 1 2 2 – 2 – – – – – (3) – 1 (3) (3) – 1 – – – 5 1 (3) – (3) 1 2 – Worker characteristics Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 41. Financial benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Section 125 cafeteria benefits Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Health savings account Flexible benefits Dependent care reimbursement account Healthcare reimbursement account Pre-tax savings with Financial no employer planning contributions 13 11 17 28 27 29 10 9 15 29 21 36 19 18 24 55 43 67 22 20 29 58 45 71 13 12 19 33 24 42 9 8 14 28 25 32 16 14 23 22 23 24 20 21 22 16 15 18 26 23 29 22 19 17 43 34 35 41 38 33 41 43 37 43 37 39 46 40 33 44 45 40 25 28 24 18 23 26 23 22 23 18 19 21 21 20 18 21 18 18 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... See footnotes at end of table. Table 41. Financial benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Stock options Characteristics Total2 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Performance Signing Other 4 4 6 9 8 10 1 1 1 3 2 4 1 1 1 1 1 2 3 3 5 7 6 7 7 7 7 8 6 8 6 5 7 2 1 2 2 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 1 (3) 1 1 1 1 2 6 6 5 6 5 6 5 4 4 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The sum of the individual components may be greater than the total because some employees may have access to more than one type of stock option. 3 Less than 0.5. 4 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 42. Health-related benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Long-term care insurance2 Retiree healthcare benefits3 Under age Age 65 and 65 over 18 24 22 29 34 27 26 38 36 38 62 35 33 36 56 20 26 10 18 17 11 21 13 66 23 14 47 22 15 25 20 58 18 12 41 20 14 23 18 7 19 11 10 13 19 21 18 17 20 17 20 16 15 16 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 21 8 28 12 25 11 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 24 17 59 18 52 17 Average wage within the following categories:4 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 7 5 14 21 32 37 8 5 21 29 42 45 7 5 18 26 39 42 Goods-producing industries ................................... 13 20 18 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 19 22 29 20 53 17 30 27 25 35 62 66 63 15 30 73 23 31 57 60 61 12 23 69 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 42. Health-related benefits: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Long-term care insurance2 Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Retiree healthcare benefits3 Under age Age 65 and 65 over 8 7 12 27 18 35 8 6 12 39 25 53 7 6 11 36 23 49 16 15 16 15 22 22 18 17 19 25 25 24 22 24 29 26 21 23 25 23 22 18 20 24 22 21 23 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 A health plan that provides long-term (more than 1 year) custodial care, home care, or nursing home care. The plan, although sponsored by the employer, may be fully paid for by the employee. 3 A health plan that provides coverage to a retiree beyond what is mandated by COBRA or other health continuation laws. The plan, although sponsored by the employer, may be fully paid for by the employee. 4 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 43. Nonproduction bonuses: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. All Cash Employee End-of-year Holiday nonproduction profit-sharing recognition bonus bonus bonuses2 bonus bonus Payment in Longevity lieu of benefits bonus bonus Referral bonus Other bonus3 39 4 3 9 7 6 4 5 11 45 55 41 26 6 8 5 – 5 6 4 2 10 16 7 – 5 6 4 1 9 8 10 13 2 3 2 2 7 7 6 (4) 15 18 14 10 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 29 43 26 38 42 35 47 38 – 1 1 – 4 3 5 5 2 3 2 6 3 1 4 3 – 5 5 2 10 7 12 10 – – 6 4 11 12 10 10 14 14 3 10 4 2 6 3 2 3 3 9 7 12 4 2 – 13 3 3 6 3 7 4 11 18 7 13 9 5 11 11 33 42 41 47 35 3 7 6 9 4 1 5 2 2 1 12 9 9 12 6 10 9 9 10 9 2 4 5 5 5 2 3 2 3 2 1 8 5 5 5 8 14 13 16 11 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 45 21 5 1 4 2 10 4 8 5 7 2 4 3 6 3 14 4 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 36 39 5 4 4 3 3 10 2 8 14 4 3 4 3 6 15 11 Average wage within the following categories:5 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 26 20 39 45 49 51 1 (4) 4 5 8 8 1 1 3 4 6 6 6 5 9 10 11 13 7 6 11 8 4 4 2 1 5 8 10 10 4 1 5 4 2 2 4 3 4 6 7 6 6 3 9 14 18 17 Goods-producing industries ................................... 49 10 2 14 10 5 2 5 16 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 37 32 24 25 22 38 45 40 3 1 – – – 1 2 – 3 3 2 1 4 3 3 6 8 5 1 1 (4) 9 4 1 7 4 1 1 – 6 1 2 6 9 11 13 8 8 17 15 4 2 3 3 2 2 3 9 5 5 (4) – 1 8 13 – 11 10 8 10 7 11 17 16 Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 43. Nonproduction bonuses: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... All Cash Employee End-of-year Holiday nonproduction profit-sharing recognition bonus bonus bonuses2 bonus bonus Payment in Longevity lieu of benefits bonus bonus Referral bonus Other bonus3 35 34 38 43 42 44 3 3 4 5 4 7 2 2 3 4 3 5 11 11 10 7 7 6 10 11 6 5 8 2 3 3 4 8 5 10 1 1 2 6 8 3 3 2 5 7 8 7 8 6 12 15 12 18 34 40 42 33 42 35 46 40 32 2 3 6 5 4 4 5 5 4 – 3 3 3 4 1 2 5 4 9 10 10 9 7 7 12 11 7 2 6 6 4 11 9 12 9 5 8 8 8 3 4 2 3 4 7 2 2 5 2 4 5 5 3 2 5 5 5 6 6 5 7 5 3 10 11 14 10 13 14 13 8 8 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 The sum of the individual components may be greater than the total because some employees may have access to more than one type of nonproduction bonus. 3 Includes all other bonuses provided to employees and not published separately. 4 Less than 0.5. 5 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 44. Unmarried domestic partner benefits: Access1, civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics Defined benefit retirement survivor benefits Same sex All workers ............................................................. Healthcare benefits Opposite sex Same sex Opposite sex 15 14 32 26 24 22 25 42 23 22 24 40 44 52 40 32 36 44 32 26 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. 50 19 9 27 13 5 17 12 48 19 8 26 13 5 17 12 29 33 20 27 32 25 36 26 25 24 16 19 28 22 31 21 10 14 10 6 13 11 13 9 5 13 18 33 27 26 28 16 25 23 22 24 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 18 6 17 6 38 12 32 10 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 39 11 37 11 51 28 40 24 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 4 2 12 18 27 28 4 2 12 17 26 26 12 7 28 39 52 60 11 6 25 33 42 49 Goods-producing industries ................................... 7 6 29 25 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 16 25 43 49 36 12 23 48 16 24 42 47 35 12 23 47 32 30 34 28 49 27 34 38 27 25 28 25 38 23 25 31 Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 44. Unmarried domestic partner benefits: Access1, civilian workers,2 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics Defined benefit retirement survivor benefits Same sex 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Healthcare benefits Opposite sex Same sex Opposite sex 5 4 8 24 14 34 5 4 7 23 14 32 20 17 29 43 35 50 18 15 27 34 30 38 13 18 7 11 14 19 14 14 23 12 17 6 10 13 19 15 14 23 39 37 22 27 23 17 19 39 58 33 29 14 24 18 13 19 32 54 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 The percentage of workers with access to the benefit reflects both the availability of the benefit and the employer’s policy on providing the benefit to unmarried domestic partners. For more information, see the Unmarried Domestic Partners Benefit Fact Sheet at:www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs_domestic2012.pdf. 2 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 45. Medical care benefit combinations: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Medical care and retirement benefits Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Medical Medical care and care and no retirement retirement benefits benefits Medical care and life insurance benefits Retirement No medical benefits and no care and no medical retirement benefits care benefits Medical care and life insurance benefits Medical care and no life insurance benefits Life insurance and no medical care benefits No medical care and no life insurance benefits 62 10 6 22 59 13 1 26 80 83 78 84 8 10 7 2 3 2 4 3 9 5 11 11 78 85 75 74 10 8 11 12 1 (2) 1 (2) 11 6 13 14 94 75 37 68 62 53 68 66 – 6 9 3 10 10 11 12 – 3 8 11 8 14 5 3 2 16 46 19 19 24 17 18 82 75 32 63 58 46 65 60 15 5 14 7 15 17 14 19 – 1 2 7 1 1 1 1 – 18 52 23 26 37 21 20 61 71 64 70 59 12 13 12 14 10 4 2 4 2 6 23 15 19 14 24 54 66 64 71 57 – 18 12 12 12 – – 1 1 1 26 – 23 15 30 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 76 20 12 4 2 17 10 59 74 13 14 12 1 2 12 74 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 93 57 2 11 2 6 3 25 85 55 10 14 1 1 4 30 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 28 14 65 77 87 88 9 8 13 11 7 6 12 14 5 2 2 2 50 64 17 10 5 4 24 11 61 75 85 88 14 10 17 13 9 7 2 1 1 1 1 1 61 77 21 11 5 4 Goods-producing industries ................................... 73 13 2 12 72 14 1 13 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 61 71 83 86 85 62 87 88 9 8 2 2 2 13 2 1 6 5 3 4 2 6 3 3 24 16 11 8 11 19 8 9 57 66 75 75 82 60 85 82 13 13 11 13 4 14 3 7 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 29 20 13 11 13 24 10 11 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 45. Medical care benefit combinations: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Medical care benefits and defined benefit retirement Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Medical care benefits and defined benefit retirement Medical care benefits and no defined benefit retirement Defined benefit retirement and no medical care benefits Medical care benefits and defined contribution retirement No medical Medical Defined No medical Medical care care contribution care care benefits benefits retirement benefits benefits and no and no and no and no and defined defined defined medical defined contribution benefit contribution care contribution retirement retirement retirement benefits retirement 27 45 1 27 50 22 5 23 42 38 43 71 46 56 42 15 1 (2) 1 2 11 6 13 12 61 74 56 35 26 20 29 51 3 1 3 1 10 5 12 13 88 39 16 50 22 10 28 30 9 42 30 20 51 52 51 49 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 (2) 2 18 53 28 26 37 20 21 28 63 27 35 55 49 58 54 69 18 20 36 18 13 21 25 – 3 7 9 7 13 4 3 – 16 47 20 20 25 17 18 33 27 25 22 27 40 56 51 62 42 – – 1 – 1 – – 23 – 29 44 62 53 64 42 29 22 24 20 27 4 2 4 2 6 23 15 20 14 25 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 33 9 54 16 (2) 3 12 73 61 14 26 10 2 15 11 61 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 82 18 13 50 1 1 3 31 43 51 52 17 1 6 4 26 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 7 3 22 36 50 49 30 18 56 53 44 45 1 1 1 2 ( ) 1 (2) 61 77 21 12 6 5 24 11 54 61 67 71 14 10 24 27 27 24 11 13 4 2 2 1 51 66 18 10 5 4 Goods-producing industries ................................... 25 61 (2) 14 66 20 2 12 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 28 42 69 81 52 23 49 83 42 37 17 7 34 52 40 5 1 1 3 4 1 (2) 1 2 29 20 12 9 12 25 11 9 47 46 34 24 60 54 73 34 23 33 51 64 26 21 16 54 6 4 1 1 1 6 3 1 25 17 14 11 13 19 8 11 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 45. Medical care benefit combinations: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Medical care and retirement benefits Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Medical Medical care and care and no retirement retirement benefits benefits Medical care and life insurance benefits Retirement benefits No medical and no care and no medical retirement care benefits benefits Medical care and life insurance benefits Medical care and no life insurance benefits Life insurance and no medical care benefits No medical care and no life insurance benefits 43 38 57 80 74 87 15 15 13 6 8 2 7 7 8 4 6 2 35 39 22 10 11 8 39 35 53 77 71 84 18 19 17 9 12 5 1 1 2 1 2 1 42 46 28 13 15 10 64 61 63 64 62 67 62 60 60 9 11 10 6 11 9 11 9 11 4 6 7 9 5 4 6 6 5 23 22 20 21 22 19 21 25 24 60 58 64 58 59 66 62 58 52 13 15 9 12 14 – 11 12 19 1 1 1 1 1 – 1 1 1 26 27 26 29 26 22 26 30 28 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... See footnotes at end of table. Table 45. Medical care benefit combinations: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Medical care benefits and defined benefit retirement Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Medical care benefits and defined benefit retirement Medical care benefits and no defined benefit retirement Defined benefit retirement and no medical care benefits Medical care benefits and defined contribution retirement No medical Medical Defined No medical Medical care care contribution care care benefits benefits retirement benefits benefits and no and no and no and no and defined defined defined medical defined contribution benefit contribution care contribution retirement retirement retirement benefits retirement 10 8 15 44 27 60 48 46 55 42 55 29 (2) (2) 1 1 1 1 42 46 29 13 16 10 39 35 49 61 62 59 19 18 21 25 21 30 7 7 7 3 5 2 36 40 23 11 12 9 28 32 29 26 25 31 23 – 29 44 40 44 45 48 45 50 48 42 1 1 2 1 (2) – (2) – 1 27 27 25 28 27 – 27 30 28 50 47 53 53 54 49 51 49 44 23 25 20 18 19 28 22 20 27 3 5 6 8 5 4 6 6 4 24 23 21 22 22 20 21 25 25 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Less than 0.5. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: Because of rounding, sums of individual items may not equal totals. Dash indicates no workers in this category or data did not meet publication criteria. For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm. Table 46. Paid leave combinations: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013 (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics All workers ............................................................. Personal leave and vacation Personal leave and sick leave Sick leave and vacation Vacation and holidays Personal leave, sick leave, or paid family leave2 Personal Personal leave, sick leave, paid leave, family vacation, or leave, or holidays2 vacation2 36 36 59 70 71 82 83 46 57 42 11 54 55 54 58 70 87 62 16 73 94 65 15 90 93 88 89 93 97 91 90 90 97 88 76 8 60 23 43 41 32 46 30 71 59 22 42 37 27 43 25 12 76 42 71 64 50 73 56 10 79 50 77 75 62 83 79 98 86 51 78 72 59 80 63 98 87 64 85 83 72 89 85 82 87 67 88 85 75 90 89 20 38 31 31 32 16 33 25 22 27 41 68 53 55 51 66 90 78 89 69 50 74 65 66 64 75 93 86 92 81 83 94 89 95 83 Full time ................................................................. Part time ................................................................ 44 12 44 11 71 19 83 26 83 32 94 45 95 49 Union ..................................................................... Nonunion ............................................................... 44 35 53 33 63 58 73 69 90 68 96 80 94 82 Average wage within the following categories:3 Lowest 25 percent ............................................. Lowest 10 percent ......................................... Second 25 percent ............................................ Third 25 percent ................................................ Highest 25 percent ............................................ Highest 10 percent ........................................ 15 8 39 47 49 49 13 6 36 44 57 58 29 17 65 75 72 73 42 28 79 87 77 75 40 25 75 84 91 94 58 45 88 94 95 97 62 50 90 94 93 93 Goods-producing industries ................................... 30 23 56 86 66 91 94 Service-providing industries .................................. Education and health services ........................... Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges, colleges, and universities Healthcare and social assistance .................. Hospitals .................................................... Public administration ......................................... 37 39 23 18 34 50 67 51 38 51 56 64 41 47 64 51 59 59 39 26 66 74 86 88 67 61 37 24 65 79 89 87 72 85 90 94 88 81 93 91 81 88 90 94 89 86 94 91 82 86 82 82 86 89 94 91 Worker characteristics Management, professional, and related ................ Management, business, and financial ............... Professional and related .................................... Teachers ........................................................ Primary, secondary, and special education school teachers ........................................ Registered nurses ......................................... Service ................................................................... Protective service .............................................. Sales and office ..................................................... Sales and related ............................................... Office and administrative support ...................... Natural resources, construction, and maintenance Construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry ............................................................. Installation, maintenance, and repair ................. Production, transportation, and material moving ... Production ......................................................... Transportation and material moving .................. Establishment characteristics See footnotes at end of table. Table 46. Paid leave combinations: Access, civilian workers,1 National Compensation Survey, March 2013—Continued (All workers = 100 percent) Characteristics 1 to 99 workers ...................................................... 1 to 49 workers .................................................. 50 to 99 workers ................................................ 100 workers or more .............................................. 100 to 499 workers ............................................ 500 workers or more .......................................... Personal leave and vacation Personal leave and sick leave Sick leave and vacation Vacation and holidays Personal leave, sick leave, or paid family leave2 Personal leave, sick Personal leave, paid leave, family vacation, or leave, or holidays2 vacation2 26 25 32 45 42 48 24 22 29 47 40 54 49 47 55 67 64 71 62 60 69 77 77 76 58 55 65 83 76 90 73 71 81 90 87 94 76 74 82 90 89 91 41 48 38 28 37 32 33 31 30 44 47 36 28 36 33 34 32 32 59 61 54 57 60 57 60 55 61 69 70 70 69 72 70 72 65 67 75 75 68 70 71 70 73 65 70 83 83 82 82 84 84 85 80 79 83 83 83 82 86 87 86 83 79 Geographic areas New England ......................................................... Middle Atlantic ....................................................... East North Central ................................................. West North Central ................................................ South Atlantic ........................................................ East South Central ................................................ West South Central ............................................... Mountain ................................................................ Pacific .................................................................... 1 Includes workers in the private nonfarm economy except those in private households, and workers in the public sector, except the federal government. See Technical Note for further explanation. 2 Includes workers with access to one or more of these leave benefits. 3 Surveyed occupations are classified into wage categories based on the average wage for the occupation, which may include workers with earnings both above and below the threshold. The categories were formed using percentile estimates generated using data from the National Compensation Survey publication, "Employer Costs for Employee Compensation - March 2013." NOTE: For definitions of major plans, key provisions, and related terms, see the "Glossary of Employee Benefit Terms" at www.bls.gov/ncs/ebs/glossary20122013.htm.
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