LOUISIANA LEGISLATURE STICKS IT TO INSURANCE POLICYHOLDERS!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
LEGISLATURE
STICKS IT TO INSURANCE POLICYHOLDERS!
If there was one area of
financial help that could have and should have been addressed by the Louisiana
legislature in its recent session, it was insurance reform. After all, a Dallas-based research firm
completed a new study last month that concluded that Louisianans pay a greater
percentage of their annual income for insurance than folks in any other state. How
did the legislature respond to this dubious honor? They took quick action and
raised every Louisiana policyholder’s insurance rates.
The Dallas report found that the
average Louisianan pays 18.1 percent of their median annual earnings for insurance
-- that includes auto, homeowner’s, health and life insurance. That’s the highest rate in the nation -- well
ahead of more prosperous states like New York, Florida, Rhode Island and New
Jersey. We’ll no doubt hear that hurricanes
cause the Bayou State’s high property insurance rates, but note that all these
states behind Louisiana suffered major losses by Hurricane Sandy.
Blaming high property rates on
hurricanes is a cop out. Other Gulf Coast states have the same hurricane
exposure, yet pay significantly less as shown in the Dallas study. Our neighbors to the east and west pay a significantly
lower portion of their average median income for insurance. Texas averages 13.7%, while Mississippi
policyholders pay 14.8%.
On average, Louisianans spend $3
billion more than other policy holders though out the South. That’s $3 billion
of new spending that won’t go into the Louisiana economy.
So just what action did
legislators take to help alleviate this financial burden? First, a new law was passed that will tax
auto policyholders some $22 million dollars to pay for a 270% increase in the
cost of an insurance company obtaining a person’s driving record report from
the state police. Everyone agrees that
insurance companies will pass on the additional cost to drivers throughout the
state resulting in an increase in auto insurance premiums beginning with the
next renewal.
The legislature continued its
bilking of policyholders by taking away 28% (or $60 million) of a tax credit
homeowners have received for a number of years because of the huge debt
incurred by Citizens Property Insurance Company. For those of you not familiar with this
boondoggle, Citizens was a disaster waiting to happen from its very inception.
Created by the Louisiana
Legislature at the behest of the Insurance Department, Citizens was one of the
most poorly constructed business operations ever conceived by a state
legislature. With no capital and no surplus available to get Citizens started
on a sound footing, the company was broke from day one. It became obvious early
on that no one at Citizens had any idea of how to run an insurance company.
In addition, a mother’s mantra
of any successful insurance company is that there must be adequate reinsurance.
There must be a safety net in case a storm like Katrina comes along. The
legislature and the insurance department failed to require that Citizens have
sufficient reinsurance. And that single negligent decision stuck Louisiana policy
holders with a bill that will exceed $1 billion. By virtually every standard
that a private insurance company must measure up to, Citizens has failed
miserably.
With this new assessment now
being saddled on the backs of Louisiana property owners, the Citizens debacle
continues to get even worse. The best solution would be to shut the company
down completely. At a minimum, Citizens needs major restructuring with more
requirements for both legislative and auditor oversight.
Unfortunately for those stuck
with the bill, there seems to be little concern at the state capitol to
straighten out a broken system that has caused financial grief for so many Louisiana
policyholders. Will the coming election make any difference?
*****
“It’s
not hurricanes that are causing high insurance rates, but bad government
policy,”
Policy analyst Michelle Minton
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column
appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites
worldwide. You can read all his past columns and see continuing updates
at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
You can also hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning
from 9 am till 11:00 am, central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a
live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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