Date: Fri 17-Jul-1998
Date: Fri 17-Jul-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-car-insurance-rates
Full Text:
ED INK: Our Rising Car Insurance Rates
Here in Connecticut, we are used to paying a premium for everything from movie
tickets to housing. We are reminded on our out-of-state summer vacation
travels that not everyone is paying what we do for gas, groceries, restaurant
meals, clothing, and entertainment. When the cash register tolls in
Connecticut, it tolls for thy bank account.
So it should come as no surprise that Connecticut motorists pay the fifth
highest rate for automobile insurance in the nation. The typical car owner in
Connecticut paid $899 for insurance last year -- unless, of course, he or she
didn't have a lot of money and lived in one of the state's inner cities. Then
the rate jumped to $1,100. (Their neighborhoods aren't "nice," which
automatically costs them a couple of hundred bucks, even though they may be
safe drivers and never file a claim.)
Connecticut's high-profile attorney general, Richard Blumenthal, wondered why
the rates were climbing so high when the state's baby boomers were compiling
much better driving records as they aged and the cars themselves were becoming
safer with air bags and better braking systems. He commissioned a study by an
industry expert of insurance company profit margins and claim pay-outs since
1996. The results of that study make the insurance companies look greedy.
Private passenger auto insurance providers in Connecticut posted profits of 17
percent statewide in 1996, compared to the nationwide average of 12.1 percent.
In 1997, they dipped a little deeper into Connecticut's wealthy pockets,
boosting their profit margin to 21.5 percent. The insurance company expert who
conducted the study noted that the target profit margin for companies should
be 15 percent at most.
We have seen car insurance rates become a hot political topic in New Jersey,
and this latest study should help it become one in Connecticut, especially
since its release was timed to coincide with the beginning of the state
election campaigns. We would like to hear from the insurance company
executives why they feel they need to rake extra profits from Connecticut
premium holders when lower rates seem to suffice for other areas of the
country. Legislative hearings on this issue are in order.
We hope all the debate and posturing that is likely to occur on this issue
this campaign season yields a more sensible rate structure on the part of the
insurance companies, and lower rates for Connecticut drivers.