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Triple-I Outlook: Insurance Economic Drivers Could Outperform U.S. Economy By 2025 But Major Hurdles Remain

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For immediate release
New York Press Office, Michael Barry, 917-923-8245, michaelb@iii.org

NEW YORK, Oct. 18, 2023鈥擳he听economic drivers of the U.S. property/casualty (P/C) insurance industry听could cumulatively expand faster than the nation鈥檚 gross domestic product (GDP) in 2024 and may outperform the overall U.S. economy by 2025, according to the Insurance Information Institute鈥檚 (Triple-I) latest Insurance Economics Outlook.

鈥淕rowth drivers specific to P/C performance have been improving faster in 2023 than the rest of the U.S. economy, after underperforming the wider economy three years in a row,鈥 writes听Michel L茅onard, Ph.D., CBE,听chief economist听and data scientist, Triple-I, in听the organization鈥檚 Q4 2023听Outlook. 鈥淲e forecast P/C growth of 2.1 percent in 2023, slightly above our earlier expectation of 1.9 percent. This confirms our expectation from January 2023 that the gap between P/C and overall growth would continue to narrow this year. P/C underlying economic growth should continue to improve over the next three years, potentially outperforming the wider economy by 2025.鈥

The underlying economic growth of P/C insurers, who write and sell auto, home, and business insurance, is impacted by replacement costs (e.g.,听the prices of听construction materials, auto parts), consumer and corporate spending, interest rates, and U.S. employment trends, among other variables.听The Federal Reserve is projecting the听U.S.听GDP听will听grow 1.5 percent in 2024 and 1.8 percent in 2025.

Between 2020 to 2023, P/C replacement costs increased an average of 45 percent听whereas inflation for the overall U.S. economy increased 15 percent within that same timeframe. Increases in P/C replacement costs should continue to slow down faster than overall inflation over the next three years, Triple-I projects. However, it will take 10 years of normal inflation for insurance replacement costs to process pandemic-related increases, the Outlook states. Normal inflation is defined as 2 percent per year.

The speed and scale of inflation鈥檚 decrease validates the Federal Reserve鈥檚听hawkish monetary policies,听states Insurance Economics Outlook, Q4 2023, a Triple-I members-only publication.听But the Federal Reserve鈥檚听inflation reduction remedies,听the听Outlook听says, did not match the cause of higher prices, which stemmed in large part from the supply chain disruptions which are now easing in the pandemic鈥檚 aftermath.

鈥淭he U.S economy remains strong regardless of the Federal Reserve鈥檚 monetary tightening which we continue to see as excessive,鈥 the听Outlook听states. Triple-I鈥檚 analysis听envisions consumer and corporate spending could pick up in the second half of 2024, depending on the Federal Reserve鈥檚 actions, as Americans wait for lower interest rates to finance auto and home purchases and renovations. 听

The Federal Reserve听raised听interest听rates in July 2023 from 5.25听percent听to 5.5 percent听and kept them unchanged in September 2023. Two more听interest听rate increases are expected between now and March 2024, most Wall Street analysts anticipate, the听Outlook听says. However, L茅onard points out, a little noticed change by the Fed to its policy expectations may indicate that rates will continue to increase until 2025.

Triple-I expects听the U.S. unemployment rate to听end 2024 at 3.9 percent, below the Federal Reserve鈥檚听2024 forecast of 4.1听percent. Regardless of low unemployment and improving economic fundamentals, public sentiment about the economy remains negative, the Triple-I听Insurance Economics Outlook听notes. This perception is largely driven by real wages increasing by less than 1 percent听between 2020 and 2023. Without above-average pandemic inflation, real wages would have increased by 13 percent.

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