Archive for the Finance Category
Written on March 2, 2010 by admin
Filed Under: Finance
There are many different types of policy you can buy when insuring your vehicle. Because of the rapidly rising cost of the premiums, many more people are driving either underinsured or uninsured. It’s therefore wise to add the relevant coverage. In most clauses you can expect to see a promise to pay the damages for bodily injury or property damage which a covered person can recover from whoever owns or drives an uninsured motor vehicle. For these purposes, a “covered person” is you, a family member or anyone else inside your vehicle when the accident occurs. If you have the right to sue the owner or driver of the other vehicle, your own insurance company will pay the damages you recover (assuming that owner or driver does not have the money to pay you in full). The key consideration is the limit on the amount you can recover. All insurers put a limit on liability. This is usually a maximum and a provision to prevent you from being paid twice. So, if there’s another possible claim you could make under a workers’ compensation law or something similar, you must use that remedy first and only claim the additional amount from your own insurer. Read More
Written on March 2, 2010 by admin
Filed Under: Finance
Welcome to 2010. Look around the states. Yes, they all have different perils for drivers to face. For some, it’s the weather with snow and ice making driving dangerous during winter. In others, it’s hurricanes and tornados. But leaving aside all the different types of peril, there’s one big problem for everyone with a vehicle on the road. All the major insurers are pressing for rate hikes. State Farm, Allstate and Geico have been leading the charge. And we are not just talking hikes of one or two percent. In Florida, for example, State Farm is raising rates by an average of 9.2%, while Allstate went for a shock-and-awe average of 16%. Even though the recession is slowly easing, the US is facing the highest levels of unemployment seen for decades. Rate increases like these hurt everyone struggling to make ends meet. Is this just gouging by the insurers? Like the Wall Street bankers, are they only interested in their bonuses? Should we think of insurance companies as the new carpetbaggers, using political influence to their own crooked ends? Just why are the insurers making such egregious demands for more money when most of us are down and out? Read More
Written on February 26, 2010 by admin
Filed Under: Finance
Looking round the US right now, the recession continues and unemployment is not getting any better. For the insurance industry, this makes for hard times. With more people out of work, fewer people can afford policies. To maintain their profits, the insurers should increase the premiums, but that would only drive more people away. The middle class is struggling as it is. If premiums were to rise again, too many would drop by the wayside. That leaves only one choice. To keep the dividends flowing to the stockholders, the insurers must reduce payments out. By fair means (and foul), expensive policy holders are encouraged to cancel. Applicants with pre-existing conditions are turned away. Claims are delayed, are settled for less, or rejected. In this dog-eat-dog world, it’s more profitable for the insurance companies to let you die. That’s the bad news. So what options do you have for finding cover? Read More