Consumers Union
President Jim Guest:
Factoring Credit Scores Into Auto
Insurance Premiums is "High-Rate Robbery"
In his "Memo to Members" in the October 2002 issue of Consumer Reports, Consumers Union President Jim Guest calls for every state to ban insurance companies from using credit scores to set rates. "Recently, while researching the causes behind soaring auto-insurance rates, Consumer Reports found that the most controversial new addition to the rate-setting formula is your credit score," states Mr. Guest. "For decades, auto insurers have focused on identifying drivers at higher risk of filing a claim and have charged higher premiums to those at higher risk. While risk-based pricing has problems, it's basically a fair system."
A New Way to Raise Your Rates: "Now,
however, insurers have discovered a new formula that can double your insurance
premiums, even if your driving record is pristine. It's called the insurance
score, and it's based on the premise that bad credit makes you a risky driver.
"There is no standard mathematical model for this, and the social implications
are unsettling. One insurance commissioner told us that insurers use credit
scores to do what is otherwise illegal - discriminate against low-income and
minority consumers. Down-on-their-luck consumers, who may have skipped a payment
or two because of layoffs, medical problems, or divorce, could find that a less-than-perfect
credit score is driving their auto-insurance rates through the roof, even if
they have always paid their auto-insurance bills on time and have had no accidents
or speeding tickets."
What You Can Do: "When shopping
for a new policy, demand that insurers tell you how your credit score will affect
your premium.
Examine your credit reports for errors, and have mistakes
corrected as quickly as possible. Pay bills on time, don't apply for instant
credit, and don't max out on credit cards. Shop around; you may save by switching
companies or consolidating all your insurance coverage with one firm. And complain
to your state insurance commission."
What States Should Do: "Consumers Union has long recommended that states
require insurers to fully disclose their loss data so that independent analysts,
and consumers, can learn what's really driving rates. The insurance industry
has resisted that recommendation every step of the way.
"States can fight back, and their victories can set precedents that affect
rates across the country. In Maryland, for example, companies are not permitted
to use credit scores when you renew your policy - only when you apply for a
new one. They can impose a surcharge but, if you ask, must tell you how much
you'd pay without it. Companies are required to review your credit every two
years, or when you ask them to, and to adjust your premium if your credit has
improved.
"Even those steps don't go far enough. Every state should ban companies
from using credit scores to set rates.
We will continue to fight any
tactics that prevent consumers from buying coverage under fair terms."
The entire text of Jim Guest's column
"High-Rate Robbery" can be found on p. 7 of the October issue of Consumer
Reports magazine or at www.ConsumerReports.org.
For free reprint permission to run Mr. Guest's column as an op-ed, or to schedule
an interview with Mr. Guest, contact: Linda Wagner (914) 378-2433, wagnli@consumer.org;
or Gene Lomoriello (914) 378-2417, lomoge@consumer.org
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