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For immediate release
Contact: Loretta Worters Insurance Information Institute (Triple-I), 917-208-8842,聽lorettaw@iii.org
NEW YORK, Sept. 13, 2022 -- Risk-based pricing 鈥 a method insurers use to set prices based on the risk they assume 鈥 allows insurers to offer the lowest premiums to policyholders with the most favorable risk factors, while at the same time offering higher premiums for less favorable risks, according to an Issues Brief released today by the Insurance Information Institute (罢谤颈辫濒别-滨).听
鈥淩isk-based pricing has many benefits,鈥 said Dale Porfilio, FCAS, MAAA, Chief Insurance Officer, Triple-I. 鈥淭he price reflects risk, helps align premium paid with risk assumed, expands availability of coverage and promotes a competitive marketplace.鈥
The risk-based pricing concept also incorporates actuarially sound rating factors such as credit-based insurance scores, geography, home ownership and motor vehicle records. These variables improve the accuracy of insurance prices for auto and homeowners insurance, Triple-I鈥檚 Issues Brief explained.
鈥淐onfusion around insurance pricing is understandable, given the government-regulated models used to assess risk,鈥 added Porfilio. 鈥淭o navigate this complexity, teams of actuaries and data scientists are hired by insurers to quantify and differentiate among a range of risk variables while avoiding unfair discrimination.鈥澛犅
The Triple-I鈥檚 Issues Brief noted algorithms and machine learning hold great promise for ensuring equitable insurance pricing, but research has shown these tools also can amplify any biases in the underlying data. The actuarial profession continues to research and attempt to address these concerns, the Issues Brief stated.
The Brief also addressed concerns regarding the use of gender as a rating factor. Six states currently ban insurers from using gender as a factor when pricing personal auto insurance. Gender and age have long been reliable predictors of the likelihood a prospective policyholder will file an auto insurance claim. Denying insurers access to actuarially sound rating tools would force them to price risk less precisely, causing lower-risk drivers to subsidize the riskiest ones, the Triple-I noted.
鈥淭here is no place in today鈥檚 insurance market for unfair discrimination,鈥 Porfilio stated. 鈥淚n addition to being illegal, discrimination based on any factor that doesn鈥檛 directly affect the insured risk would be bad business in today鈥檚 diverse society.鈥