Europe Just Cost Women a Bunch of Money on Their Car Insurance By Switching to Gender Equality

Males have by and large run this planet since Neanderthals were drawing on walls in caves. So when we talk about improving gender equality, we are generally talking about things that are immediately beneficial to women. A recent ruling by the European Court of Justice, however, is likely going to cost female drivers some money.

The court has found that tying insurance rates to gender goes against Europe’s Fundamental Charter of Rights. So come December 2012, insurers will no longer be able to do it. The actuarial science regarding male and female drivers, particularly those under 25 years old, couldn’t be clearer. Young men get into more and more expensive accidents than your women. Still, while the numbers don’t lie, I have always wondered why that fact makes it OK to discriminate.

Apparently the court agreed.

Claire Wilkinson of III’s Terms + Conditions blog explains the likely fallout.

In the past, insurers relied on a 2004 directive that recognized the strength of the evidence for gender-based rates. The average claim for an 18-year-old male in the U.K. totals £4,400 ($7,160), vs. £2,700 ($4,390) for an 18-year-old female.

The net effect: Women will be subsidizing men for auto insurance. One British insurer estimated that women under 25 years could pay 25% more per year – perhaps £400 ($650).

The ruling affects other types of insurance, too. Women live longer, so they traditionally paid lower rates for life insurance. (The insurer could earn more investment income off the premium while waiting for the woman’s demise.) So women will see life insurance rates rise, perhaps by 20%.

This issue is obviously a thorny one.

On the one hand, equality is good. On the other, the insurance industry just lost a major, effective way to underwrite risks and properly price rates. Claire brings up the notion of credit ratings being used as a rate-setting metric as well, another thing that always struck me as irrelevant to car-driving ability. Again, the numbers there show some pretty definitive trends but, logically, the connection seems like one inappropriate to the policies that drivers are purchasing.

But what do I know?

I take the subway to work and have never even owned a car.

UPDATE: Canadian Underwriter ran a good piece on this development that includes the following insights about the marketplace uncertainty the decision has created.

The court’s decision will create some uncertainty in the market during the transitional period, says Noleen John, a legal consultant for international legal practice Norton Rose LLP.

“Insurers will from December 2012 need to apply unisex rates,” said John. “This transitional period is less than that recommended by the Advocate General and means that insurers will need to review their policies and practices as soon as possible.

“It also seems likely, in view of the length of the transitional period, that insurers may need to use uncertainty premiums until they have sufficient data in relation to the carrying on of business on this new basis. This could result in higher premiums or lower benefits for certain policyholders (female motorists and male annuitants).”

The decision also may create some uncertainty about the future of other established actuarial factors used to establish insurance premiums.

“There is going to be uncertainty in the insurance market for some time as a result of this decision,” says Ashley Prebble, insurance partner at Norton Rose LLP. “It is likely that the decision will require the European Commission to clarify the position with regards to other potential areas of discrimination, particularly age and disability.”

We shall see.

No More Bees, No More Man?

Though there has been widespread media coverage of the massive die-offs of birds and fish throughout parts of the United States, there has also been a die-off of another species that has received less attention. The bumblebee population, not only in North America but around the world, has been dropping drastically since the mid 1990s. According to a three-year study of 73,000 museum specimens performed by the National Academy of Sciences, the population of four species of bumblebees has declined up to a worrying 96%.

Bees, who needs them? Everyone, actually. We are dependent on the buzzing creatures to pollinate the world’s food crops. “If the bee disappeared from the surface of the globe, then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.” It has been said that Albert Einstein was the source of that dread-filled quote, though others argue its merits.

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The source of the quote may be arguable, but what’s not arguable is the situation the world would be in if bees even come close to making the endangered species list.

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Like honeybees, bumblebees rely on pollen as a source of protein and are widely used, and favored as opposed to honeybees, as pollinators for several multibillion-dollar commercial crops, such as blueberries, apples and tomatoes, along with various nuts and grains. Crops used as cattle and pig feed are also dependent on bees. In fact, bees are vital to the success of approximately 90 crops worldwide and one-third of the food we eat.

The problem is, researchers are unable to pinpoint a direct cause of the die-off. Some have pointed to the increasing use of pesticides, while others blame an exotic disease or a genetic malfunction. For the agriculture industry, the best risk management for now may be to put their resources towards finding the cause of the declining bee population and a possible solution . . . and fast.

Risk Management in the News

Some days there are a plethora of risk management topics in the news, other days, not so much. Today we are in luck as I’ve come across quite a few risk management-related news stories that I hope you find interesting.

As risk management continues to evolve, we will continue to see compelling news articles focusing the various ideologies encompassing the discipline. More discourse regarding risk management means more thought about the topic and, hopefully, more real-world implementation.

Insuring Charlie Sheen

By now, you have probably heard that, most of the time — and this includes naps — Charlie Sheen is an F-18, bro, that will destroy you in the air and deploy his ordinances to the ground. In common English, what this means is that the star of the top-rated U.S. television show has increasingly appeared unhinged of late, following up a long, decadent stint of heavy drug use and extravagant partying with a series of interviews in which his barrage of non-sequiturs and eccentric philosophizing has led many to think he has lost his mind.

So, as with some other troubled celebrities we have profiled in the past, the insurance-related question becomes: is Charlie Sheen insurable?

The antics of major Hollywood actor Charlie Sheen have resulted in the cancellation of a multimillion-dollar production and put an entire cast and crew out of work, begging the question: Can this actor still be insured?

Broker to the stars Lorrie McNaught, vice president with Aon/Albert G.

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Ruben, the retail entertainment division of Aon Corporation, located in Sherman Oaks, Calif., responded.

“The short answer is yes, absolutely.

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Everything is insurable and it usually comes down to two things: price and the experience of the broker helping to underwrite the exposure.”

All a carrier need do, then, is find a broker capable of underwriting Vatican assassin warlocks with battle-tested bayonets. Good luck with that.