| May
19, 2003
National
Federation of Independent Business Executive Director Speaks
Out on Insurance Modernization Effort
"Between
now and the end of the legislative
session, we’re going to hear
a lot more rhetoric about how we
must bring the heavy hammer of
government regulation down on the
backs of the insurance industry.
These arguments can’t be
based on promoting competition
or reducing prices, because we’ve
already seen that government mandates
frequently wind up stifling competition,
limiting choices and driving up
the cost of a product. When has
government over-regulation ever
lowered prices?"
-
Jeff Clark
NFIB State Executive Director
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Free Market-Based Insurance Reform Will Benefit Consumers
Lubbock Avalanche Journal
Opinion-Editorial by Jeff Clark
May 18, 2003
With
strong voices, we Texans have been calling for help in
reducing our rapidly
rising homeowner-insurance prices.
Our Legislature is working to respond’ and many state
legislators are working hard to solve this problem and reform
our insurance system to provide us with more affordable insurance
rates.
Unfortunately, some voices have been incorrectly suggesting
that if insurance reform also benefits insurance companies
then it has to be bad for consumers. Belief in this myth
has led some legislators to propose over-regulating insurance
companies in ways that will actually make things worse for
Texas homeowners and small businesses.
Between
now and the end of the legislative session, we’re
going to hear a lot more rhetoric about how we must bring
the heavy hammer of government regulation down on the backs
of the insurance industry. These arguments can’t be
based on promoting competition or reducing prices, because
we’ve already seen that government mandates frequently
wind up stifling competition, limiting choices and driving
up the cost of a product. When has government over-regulation
ever lowered prices?
While it might look good on paper, insurance reform legislation
passed by the Texas state Senate, and a modified version
House members will be voting on, actually hurt both consumers
and the insurance marketplace because neither version addresses
the underlying problems creating our current instability.
If it becomes law, Senate Bill 14 will limit choices for
Texans and make affordable insurance coverage even harder
to find, because it fails to address the lack of competition
in the insurance market.
This
pending legislation ignores what legislators in Louisiana,
New Jersey, South
Carolina and other states have learned
the hard way–that over-regulation like rate rollbacks,
prior approval systems and arbitrary price controls do not
lower rates. It’s a fact that over-regulation will
not encourage existing insurance companies to stay in Texas
and sell policies at competitive prices. It weakens competition
and does nothing to attract new providers to the state.
While
some Texas lawmakers are leading us toward the New Jersey
model, legislators
in these states are taking steps
to make it easier for insurance companies to compete with
one another by loosening the regulatory noose, which has
strangled competition and made it harder for consumers to
find affordable insurance. Three years ago, South Carolina,
decided to let the open market–not a state bureaucrat–regulate
auto-insurance rates. In that state, consumers have seen
a dramatic increase in new companies entering the market
and the citizens of that state have benefited from insurance
rates that reflect the benefits of that competition.
Lawmakers
in these states understand that when insurance companies
have the
flexibility to compete, more providers
will want to enter the market, and we all benefit from greater
competition. We as consumers will benefit from more affordable
rates, additional policy options and improved service by
insurance companies vying for customers. Unfortunately, back
home our Texas legislators appear to believe the same myth
New Jersey lawmakers took as fact more than a decade ago
when they reformed their state’s auto-insurance market.
They believed they could lower prices by relying on state
government rather than the free-market to regulate rates.
With
days to go before the end of the legislative session, Texas
lawmakers
need to act quickly to get Texas’ insurance
market moving in the right direction. Elected officials still
have time to get it right by giving Texans an insurance system
focused on competition and consumer-protection. We should
protect consumers by regulating the behavior of companies
when servicing claims and should use the power of state regulation
to ensure that carriers’ financial resources pay claims.
These
important consumer protections, combined with the power
of free market
competition, will provide us the protections
we need at a price we can afford. This kind of regulation
can attract new insurance companies to Texas and provide
consumers, as well as insurers, with the full benefits of
a competitive market. We need lower insurance rates, and
we hope our state’s lawmakers will be wise enough to
craft legislation to create a competitive marketplace in
which consumers can benefit.
Jeff
Clark is the state executive director of NFIB/Texas.
The National
Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) is
the nation’s largest small-business advocacy group.
A nonprofit, nonpartisan organization founded in 1943, NFIB
represents the consensus views of its 35,000 members in Texas
and 600,000 members in Washington and all 50 state capitals.
More information is available on-line at www.nfib.com/TX.
About
TCAIS: TCAIS member companies include: Allstate Insurance
Company, American Insurance Association, Nationwide Insurance,
State Farm Insurance Companies and USAA. Click
here for more information on TCAIS solutions: seven guidelines
for insurance reform in Texas. |