State Insurance Regulators to Study Rising Rates, Impact
of Terrorism
Associated Press
September 5, 2002
State insurance regulators plan to examine recent increases in insurance
prices including whether the Sept. 11 terror attacks triggered unjustified
rate hikes.
The National Association of Insurance Commissioners said Thursday that
beginning next week it would study recommendations made by Americans
for Insurance Reform, a coalition of consumer groups. The coalition
says it wants stronger state regulations to protect people from excessive
insurance rates.
In a July letter, the coalition urged state insurance commissioners to
investigate how the economy affects insurance rates and whether insurers
are price-gouging consumers. The group said it was particularly concerned
about recent increases in homeowner and medical malpractice insurance
and wants those rates frozen.
The group said that while rates were already rising before Sept. 11, "the
price increases were sped up by the terrorist attack, collapsing two years
of anticipated increases into a few months."
NAIC, which represents state insurance regulators, said it was not surprised
by rate increases after the attacks.
"Insurance markets are unquestionably stressed," the regulators
said in a letter last Thursday to the consumer group. The regulators said
insurers respond to hard times in "rather predictable ways
increasing rates, canceling insurance contracts and introducing coverage
limitations."
. . .
The state regulators said they have already begun a study of rising malpractice
insurance costs. The study of the consumer coalition's recommendations
should be completed within six months, the regulators said.
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