Insurance Industry Profits Skyrocket 320%
So-Called "Tort Reforms" Unnecessary
Lawmakers Should Focus on Rate Regulation
NEWS RELEASE
Posted on Mon, Jan 07, 2004
CONTACT: Doug Heller
310-392-0522 x309
Santa Monica, CA -- The insurance industry
registered a 320% increase in net income for the first nine months of 2003 as
compared to 2002, according to a recent study by the Insurance Services Office
(ISO) and the National Association of Independent Insurers.
Throughout the year insurance companies
have argued that they cannot be profitable unless lawmakers around the country
limit the rights of consumers to file insurance claims. This new profit data
proves that the industry can be wildly profitable without further limits on the
legal rights of injured consumers. "The insurance industry has told every
lawmaker in the country that it cannot be profitable without restrictions on the
legal rights of consumers, but this data showing a 320% increase in profit
proves that the industry has been lying," said Douglas Heller, senior consumer
advocate with the nonprofit, nonpartisan Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer
Rights (FTCR).
"This information should put an end to all
talk of so-called 'tort reform' and open up a new discussion about regulating
insurance rates." Consumer advocates have called on lawmakers around the country
to implement a system of insurance rate regulation based on California's 1988
voter initiative known as Proposition 103. That law requires insurance companies
to justify rates to the Insurance Commissioner prior to implementing any rate
hikes. It also allows the public to participate in the ratemaking process and
scrutinize insurance company books. The law has been a major success, with auto
insurance rates, for example, declining over the past 15 years in the state,
even as they've risen everywhere else in the nation.
According to FTCR, there are two primary
reasons for the recent jump in profits nationwide: massive rate increases and an
improved investment climate. Insurance rates, which have been increasing at an
unprecedented clip in recent years, far outpaced the increase in overall claim-
related costs, according to the study. Some of the most dramatic data were in
the area of investments: the value of insurers investments swung dramatically in
the industry's favor during 2003. "The real story the insurance industry has
faced recently has nothing to do with claims and lawsuits, but with investment
income. The past few years have been very tough on anybody with investments,
including insurers. But unlike most Americans, who had to tighten their belts
during the economic downturn, insurance companies refused and instead tightened
the noose around consumers to squeeze huge profits out of policyholders," said
Heller.