| Business Insurance Costs, Statistics, and Use Information. |
| Click on the blue button for a summary of information at the site |
| Websites liked to from this page hopefully will provide companies useful information on insurance. |
| State government sites with insurance information. |
| Federal government sites with insurance information. |
| Other sites with insurance information. |
| Insurance and risk information. |
| Insurance in Europe information. |
| A Yahoo Pipes Search Product Search Blogs for Insurance Information This Yahoo Pipes product searches several insurance blogs for results related to the terms you enter in the box. The purpose of this product is to quickly extract information from a pipe of feeds containing insurance information. Click here to go to this Yahoo Pipes product. Right clicking should lead to being able to open a new window. |
| A Management Accounting Information Center article “Finding Cost Data on the Internet (2008)” identifies ways in which the Internet can be a source of cost data for businesses. Please click the home logo at the top left of this page to access this article. |
| The graph to the right was created using Google’s charting tools.
The vertical bar graph shows the percentage of companies (also includes nonprofits) by employee size offering health insurance. The data in the graph was taken from the Kaiser Family Foundation and Health Research & Educational Trust‘s 2011 Annual Survey entitled “Employer Health Benefits”. Data on the graph, and in the survey, should be of interest to companies to compare (benchmark) their health benefit offerings to other companies. The survey can be accessed by clicking here (PDF file). |
| The graph to the right was created using Google’s charting tools.
The vertical bar graph shows the distribution of annual premiums paid by workers with only single coverage in 2011. The data in the graph was taken from the Kaiser Family Foundation and Health Research & Educational Trust‘s 2011 Annual Survey entitled “Employer Health Benefits”. Data on the graph, and in the survey, should be of interest to companies to compare (benchmark) their health benefit offerings to other companies. The survey can be accessed by clicking here (PDF file). The graph shows that a large range of premiums are paid for single coverage from less than $2,000 to more than $9,000 per year. Most premiums paid are in the $4,000 to $7,000 range. |