state regulation of insurance


SUBMITTED BY: L319A

DATE: Sept. 28, 2016, 5:26 p.m.

FORMAT: Text only

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  1. state regulation of insurance
  2. The complexity and cost variations of insurance stems directly from state
  3. regulation of the industry. Unlike the securities and banking industries, the
  4. insurance industry does not have a strong federal oversight role. Instead,
  5. through the 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act, the domestic industry faces 55 sets
  6. of overseers (the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin
  7. Islands, Guam and American Samoa). With so many different sites of
  8. regulation, and so many sources of local sales outlets for insurance policies,
  9. it’s not surprising that insurance policies are hardly the standardized
  10. commodities that you find when trading stocks or opening a bank account.
  11. This is particularly true in property/casualty coverage and less so in life
  12. insurance. Added to the maze of different products is the fact that state-
  13. based regulation means that insurers may base their rates in each state on
  14. their business profile in that state. Auto rates, for example, reflect accident
  15. and theft trends in local territories. The upshot is that there is great pricing
  16. variation along with lots of different types of policies. Lastly, insurers have
  17. increasing freedom to price their policies for whatever the market will bear.
  18. Even if an insurer has to file its rates in your state, you shouldn’t assume that
  19. state regulators are poring over the rates to review their fairness.

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