Property and Casualty Insurance: Where Does Idaho Rank?

Published May 26, 2009

Consumers in Idaho enjoy more attractive homeowners insurance at better prices than citizens in most other states, according to a new report card jointly released by The Heartland Institute and Competitive Enterprise Institute.

Like homeowners in Vermont, Utah, and Arizona, those in Idaho enjoy lower premiums for broader and more predictable coverage, earning the state an “A” grade on the Heartland/CEI report card.

Consumers in Florida, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, and New York–whose states earned “F” grades–pay more for homeowners coverage that is inferior to the coverage available in states with positive insurance climates.

“On balance,” writes Eli Lehrer, the report’s lead author, “states with less-regulated insurance markets provide more consumer choice, more predictable rates, and insurance premiums that better reflect actual risk than do states with heavily regulated markets.”

The Property and Casualty Insurance 2009 Report Card focuses on homeowners and automobile insurance, the two types of insurance Americans typically are required to purchase. State laws in 46 states mandate the purchase of auto insurance, and nearly all mortgage lenders require their clients to secure homeowners coverage.

There are at least 11 key variables for evaluating P&C insurance markets. Among the most important are the size of the state’s residual markets, level of political oversight, loss ratio stability, rate regulation, and territorial rating.

Idaho received the report card’s third highest raw score, with a total of 25 points. “Idaho has an open and competitive insurance environment that benefits consumers, agents, and insurers alike,” comments Lehrer. The remaining A-graded states earned raw scores of 28 (Vermont), 27 (Utah), and 23 (Arizona). Louisiana received the worst raw score, with -37 points.

The Property and Casualty Insurance 2009 Report Card is available online at http://www.heartland.org/policybot/results/25091/


Editors: Report author Eli Lehrer, a senior fellow with the Competitive Enterprise Institute and Heartland Institute, is available for comment on this study. To communicate with him, contact Dan Miller, publisher/executive vice president or Tammy Nash, media relations specialist, at The Heartland Institute at 312/377-4000 or by email at [email protected] and [email protected].

The Heartland Institute is a 25-year-old national nonprofit organization based in Chicago, Illinois. The Competitive Enterprise Institute, also founded in 1984, is headquartered in Washington, DC. Both are tax-exempt under Section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code. Nothing in this news release or the report it describes is intended to influence the passage of pending legislation.