User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
FromNoun
- A recovery of what had been lost.
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Recoupment is the practice, common in the
music
industry, of claiming an advance provided to an artist back
from that artist rather than (or, as well as) from related sources.
Many record
labels practice recoupment, and most new artists have little
choice but to accept it since they lack the negotiating power to
obtain a better contract. Recoupment is also a common practice
within the insurance industry. It means virtually the same thing,
but generally occurs when an insurance company has paid the
benefits to a hospital and then takes back that money when they
have determined that those benefits should not have been
given.
Example
Suppose that a label gives a band $250,000 to record an album. They agree to do so in return for 90% of the sales. The album is recorded, and sells 200,000 copies at $10 each, yielding $2m. The record company takes 90% of this as agreed, leaving the band with $200,000 of their own. This is the situation without recoupment.With recoupment, the label gives the band
$250,000 as before. The album again sells 200,000 copies at $10
each, yielding $2m. The record company takes 90% of this as before,
leaving the band with $200,000 - but the record company no longer
considers the 90% of sales as repayment of the advance. Instead,
the band is required to pay the record company back the advance
from their own cut, leaving them in $50,000 debt to the record
company - even though the record company has gained $1.8m from the
sales percentage.
Suppose a patient has visited the hospital and
has given the hospital their insurance information. Once the visit
is complete the hospital will bill the patients insurance company.
The insurance company will then pay based upon a determined amount
of benefits due the patient. Many times insurance companies,
especially in the case of Medicare and Medicaid, will later
determine that the patient was not eligible for those benefits and
will recoup (take back) that money from the hospital.