A study commissioned by the Ontario Trial Lawyers Association found that something called the Profit Benchmark, which is used to set rates is way out of whack .
http://www.900chml.com/2015/04/13/we-were-right-auto-insurance-rates-are-too-high/
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A study commissioned by the Ontario Trial Lawyers Association found that something called the Profit Benchmark, which is used to set rates is way out of whack .
http://www.900chml.com/2015/04/13/we-were-right-auto-insurance-rates-are-too-high/
Drivers in Ontario overpaid on their auto insurance by about $3 billion over the past decade – even as accident benefits have been cut.
A lot of people have profited from Ontario’s auto insurance system over the past 25 years. Few insurance companies have exited the Ontario market in that period of time so profits must be good. In addition, there is no shortage of lawyers working in the system both on the accident benefits side and in tort. There are rehabilitation clinics dying for more referrals. Tow trucks drive around our highways ready to pounce on someone after a collision. Yet everyone complains. Drivers in this province continue to pay high premiums. They are the true victims in the system.
A recent study that concludes Ontario consumers “may have overpaid” $3 to $4 billion for auto insurance between 2001 and 2013 actually excluded the carriers with negative return on equity in Ontario auto, the Insurance Bureau of Canada and the Insurance Brokers Association of Ontario (IBAO) suggest.
Ontario consumers may have overpaid for auto insurance by $3 billion to $4 billion between 2001 and 2013, according to a study done for the Ontario Trial Lawyers Association.
In 2013 alone, they may have paid $840 million more than they should have to insure their vehicles, according to the study by Fred Lazar and Eli Prisman, professors at the York University Schulich School of Business.
The average family should have paid $100 to $120 less for auto insurance in 2013
Insurance industry representatives, with support from the IBC are doing their best to combat car insurance fraud across the country. The IBC is also negotiating a joint resolution shared among private insurers and provincial governments. If enough governments sign on, the industry may seek a national plan to combat car insurance fraud from the federal government in Ottawa.
http://www.lowestrates.ca/news/average-car-insurance-rates-rise-across-alberta-1655