GRiD Highlights Issues Re Employee Benefits

Some thoughts from GRiD on employee benefits and how businesses in the UK will be looking at the value later in 2025;

Employee benefits will come under increased scrutiny in 2025 as the cumulative effect of pressures from 2024’s Autumn Budget start to bite, according to GRiD the industry body for the group risk sector. The National Insurance (NI) employer tax rise and the increase in the minimum wage must be factored into budgets from April 2025, which means that all areas of expenditure, including employee benefits, will be closely monitored.

GRiD points out that as a consequence, employers will demand more value from their employee benefits spend. Where benefits clearly demonstrate good utilisation rates, staff engagement, and an obvious benefit to the business itself, they will be retained – or introduced – but it warns that the opposite is also true: benefits will be at risk when they are not understood, utilised or providing value.

Katharine Moxham, spokesperson for GRiD, said: “We would urge all employers to ensure they fully understand the benefits that they currently offer, to monitor their use, and ensure employees are aware of the breadth and depth of support available. Where benefits are shown to be effective they will be retained. However, many companies will be looking to make savings to account for the increased costs of employing staff. As a result, benefits will be at risk if there is not sufficient evidence to support their continuation.”

GRiD also predicts that benefits which clearly offer value will be some of the most sought-after in 2025. This will include group risk benefits (employer-sponsored life assurance, income protection and critical illness), as not only are they valued for the financial payment to employees in times of need, but also for the increasingly enhanced embedded benefits which support a return to work, prevention, and early intervention across physical, mental and financial health.

Katharine Moxham: “HR teams should start to gather the data they need now, to put forward the business case for the benefits that support the welfare of staff. They need to show not only uptake of benefits, but also the positive impact on the business itself. However, this also represents a great opportunity for the HR department to demonstrate its accountability and commerciality.”

INDUSTRY COMMENT
Liz Walker, COO at Unum UK comments:
“Group Risk benefits and associated added-value services offer a significant positive impact on employee health and happiness. In turn, this boosts workplace productivity, demonstrating how benefits make good business sense. However, financial pressure on businesses may increase when the National Insurance and minimum wage rises come into effect next year. If hiring people and offering benefits becomes more expensive for employers, they may begin to question the costs.
 
To combat this, it’s imperative to provide clear evidence of the true value of employee benefits as, once their impact and effectiveness is clearly established, it’s less likely that the important support they offer will suffer from cost-cutting measures.
 
One way to achieve this is by boosting employee awareness of available benefits, including clear signposting of how to access them, wherever the employee is located. When more employees engage with their benefits — particularly proactively, before health conditions can escalate or even occur in the first place — employers will likely see results indicating real underlying value.
Providers should make it as easy as possible to demonstrate the value of their products to employers. For example, engagement with added-value services from Help@hand, the health and wellbeing app, can be tracked through consolidated insight reports, including utilisation by health issue, services accessed and number of sessions used.
 
Employee benefits are integral to defining company values and helping employees to thrive. We therefore hope employers continue to see the value of benefit packages as we move closer to April 2025 and keep providing them to their people to use when it matters most.”

About alastair walker 19323 Articles
20 years experience as a journalist and magazine editor. I'm your contact for press releases, events, news and commercial opportunities at Insurance-Edge.Net

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