Auto Insurance Price Surge Pushes Some To Drive Uncovered
January 21 2009 - 9:30AM
Dow Jones News
An 8% surge last year in the cost of auto insurance, plus
growing economic woes, has led a fourfold increase in drivers
letting their policies lapse, according to a Web site that tracks
insurance price quotes.
"There's clearly a correlation between the sharp increase in
car-insurance rates last year and consumers letting their insurance
policies lapse - and unfortunately, rates went up just as the
economy started to suffer," said Sam Belden, vice president of
strategic alliances at Insurance.com., a price-shopping Web site
operated by ComparisonMarket Inc. He said that nearly 40% of
customers who contact Insurance.com's call center for a price quote
have let their policy lapse, up from less than 10% a couple of
years ago.
Last year, soaring gasoline prices forced many drivers to leave
their cars in the garage more often, which cut the overall number
of miles driven. But the rising number of drivers going without
insurance - which is illegal in most states - indicates a high
degree of desperation among economically pinched drivers.
Consequences of driving without a license range from a fine in some
states to being required to post a cash bond. Some states penalize
uninsured drivers with penalty points on their license equivalent
to being found guilty of a serious driving offense, such as driving
under the influence of alcohol.
The survey has some limits to how comprehensive it is.
Insurance.com offers price quotes from around a dozen member
insurers, including third-largest insurer Progressive Corp. (PGR),
but not the two largest insurers, State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co. and Allstate Corp. (ALL).
Insurance.com measured a more drastic increase than the Consumer
Price Index published last week by the U.S. Department of Labor. It
noted a 2.5% increase in the cost of motor-vehicle insurance in
2008, which was less than the overall Consumer Price Index increase
of 3.8% for the year.
Beldon said the difference comes from the way information is
collected in the surveys. The Consumer Price Index comes from a
wide-ranging survey of a variety of drivers, including many who
aren't shopping for insurance, and includes many drivers who have
held the same policy for years, which sometimes earns customers
discounts. Insurance.com's survey is of customers who are actively
shopping for a new price quote.
Belden said the two trends - drivers in a cash crunch and
insurers raising prices - reinforce each other in a troubling
spiral. "Increasing rates and the falling economy are clearly
driving more consumers to let their policies lapse," he said. Once
the consumers decide to reinstate their coverage, they are likely
to get an unpleasant surprise in the form of an even bigger price
hike.
Insurance.com's RateWatch found an annual increase of 8% in 2008
to an average annual cost of $1,954, the first yearly increase it
recorded since 2003. Rates varied by state, with Washington D.C.
posting the biggest jump at 10.5%, to an average $2,952. The
average price in Utah rose 10.2%, to $1,861. The most-expensive
state was New York, where the average price rose 7.6% in 2008, to
$3,200. Rates fell in several states. The least-expensive state to
insure a car in 2008 was Iowa, where the rate dropped 1.5% to
$1,287 last year.
Belden said one factor pushing up prices is that after five
years of generally soft prices, some insurers needed to increase
prices to stay profitable.
But economic problems that have pushed some drivers into
unemployment or even bankruptcy have taken a toll on credit scores,
which also factor strongly into the rates insurers charge
customers.
Insurers also penalize customers who let their policies lapse
and drive without insurance for a few months, said Beldon.
He said that when people are forced to cut costs, many choose to
let their insurance go, seeing it as a less "tangible" benefit than
their cable bill, for example. He calls that a costly
miscalculation that likely will boost their new insurance quote by
25% to 50% over the price they paid before.
"People assume they will let it lapse for a month or two, drive
very carefully," and then reinstate the coverage when times get
better, Belden said. "People don't realize the importance of
it."
-By Lavonne Kuykendall, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4141;
lavonne.kuykendall@dowjones.com
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