read Read

e-mail E-mailprint Print

NAMIC Official Says More Regulator Leadership Needed on Personal Lines Reform

INDIANAPOLIS (June 16, 2004)--The top state government affairs official for the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies (NAMIC) encouraged insurance regulators to exert leadership in their states to achieve personal lines rate modernization as the key to achieving fundamental reform for the property/casualty insurance industry.

"When regulators say personal lines rating can be done on a competitive basis, their legislatures listen, laws are changed and markets improved," said Roger H. Schmelzer, NAMIC Senior Vice President for State and Regulatory Affairs during a session of the summer National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) meeting Saturday in San Francisco.

Schmelzer spoke in response to the NAIC's release of recommendations to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee Roadmap for Reform of the American insurance industry first announced by Congressman Michael Oxley, R-Ohio, at the March NAIC meeting.

Schmelzer noted that NAMIC is committed to reform state regulation; however, the organization also supports Oxley's efforts because he seeks a state-based solution, dismisses the prospect of a federal regulator, and endorses the concept of pricing freedom for personal lines carriers.

Schmelzer said that Congressman Oxley's effort "is serious and should be treated as such, which means that regulators, legislators and industry should be feeling the pressure to make changes in the states that would make federal intervention unnecessary. That is exactly how we have taken it at NAMIC."

While the NAIC recommendations include language that encourage "a movement toward various forms of competitive rating where feasible," state regulators need to come out strongly in favor of specific ratemaking reforms governing personal lines carriers in their state, he said.

Schmelzer suggested that regulators ask themselves "what value is added by requiring prior approval of insurance rates" and to consider successes in Illinois and South Carolina as well as competitive rating laws enacted in Louisiana and New Jersey.

NAMIC supports a "reformed, state-based system of insurance regulation in which property/casualty companies can compete openly to the benefit of their customers," said Schmelzer, the cornerstone of which is rate modernization.

"The evidence is clear that where competitive rating is permitted, consumers benefit. If that wasn't the case, states such as Louisiana and New Jersey wouldn't pass these laws," he said.

"The NAIC and its members have taken strong positions in favor of reforms for the life industry and commercial carriers. We agree those are essential to creating a world-class regulatory climate, but is only part of the job," said Schmelzer. "Approval of the interstate compact for life products and commercial lines reform in every state is an incomplete public policy fix for the U.S. insurance industry and merely opens the door for the Congress to do it instead."


For further information contact:
Robert Detlefsen at rdetlefsen@namic.org
or (317) 875-5250

powered by Google

Latest Financial News

Hurricanes and Climate Change: Intensive Study Launched into Future Hurricane Risk (10/9/2008)

New Study Shows Unintended Consequences of First-Party Bad Faith Liability (10/9/2008)

North Carolina: First ‘Beach Plan’ Meeting Revolves Around Comparisons with Other Coastal States (10/7/2008)

More...

Receive State-specific Updates

Receive e-mail updates from NAMIC Online regarding the states of most interest to you. You will only receive an e-mail when new stories are posted, and only for those states you select. No new news...no e-mail.

RSS

Archives 

Publications