|
Many people believe auto insurance would be cheaper because it
doesn't have to make a profit. A new study from the United States
by Conning Research & Consulting notes that while U.S. drivers
may be overpaying for insurance by ten to fifteen per cent, the
situation cannot and will not continue due to the need to make a
profit. Many insurance companies have naively assumed that, when
two vehicles collide, the same amount of damage will be done to
one another. Overall, they wanted to avoid the higher administrative
costs of creating a new pool of insured drivers and they didn't
want to annoy their more affluent customers. The equal damage theory
is hardly true. However, as more drivers choose significantly larger
passenger vehicles, such as light trucks and SUVs, insurance companies
have been forced to adjust to this new reality. Studies note that
companies covering about thirty per cent of the personal car insurance
market do now make a distinction between smaller and bigger vehicles.
Other companies are considering it, though they feel that certain
car makes less likely to be in accidents. Still, the math will be
decisive.
United State premiums average between eight hundred and nine hundred
dollars. Half of that amount for liability insurance. If companies
believe that cars, such as SUV’s carry more risk, car drivers
could save up to one hundred dollars by switching to a firm which
differentiates between bigger and smaller cars. If a company fails
to do so, it will lose customers and suffer lower profits. Shareholders
may promptly file suit in order to win back customers. Governments
can attempt to legislate to lower premiums without doing anything
about the payments, but this could drive private companies away,
leaving the public sector to take over. Governments would be forced
to hide the real, (high) cost of premiums by subsidizing the state
insurer from tax dollars, (including those from non-drivers) or
let the state insurer do a cheaper, careless repair job which would
drive away consumers with other choices. Ultimately, it is the market,
not government, which will find an efficient solution that is most
reasonable to consumers
Copyright
© 2010 Car Insurance Information by Writers Opinion LLC |
 |