Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., cited our report that minority neighborhoods pay higher car insurance premiums than white areas with the same risk.
by Julia Angwin
by Julia Angwin
This story was co-published with Consumer Reports.
Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., introduced legislation last week requiring federal authorities to examine racial disparities in auto insurance premiums, citing a story co-published by ProPublica and Consumer Reports last April.
The legislation, which has six Democratic co-sponsors, is in part a
rebuke to the Trump administration for seeking to shift the mission of
the Treasury Department’s Federal Insurance Office from being a watchdog
agency tasked with studying auto insurance pricing into an industry
booster.
The bill calls for the office to collect ZIP-code level claims
data from insurers across the nation, and use the information to study
whether higher prices in minority neighborhoods are justified by the
risk of bigger payouts in those areas.
“The lack of transparency in the auto insurance market makes it
impossible to understand and address potential racial disparities,”
Takano said in a press release announcing the bill. “This legislation is
an important step to determining whether minority drivers are being
unjustly overcharged for insurance premiums because of reasons unrelated
to risk. Given that auto insurance is a requirement for drivers, and
that driving is a necessity for many Americans, there is a strong public
interest in studying and addressing discrimination in the auto
insurance market.”
The insurance industry responded that there is no need for a federal
study. “This [legislation] is a solution in search of a problem,” said
David Snyder, a vice president at the Property Casualty Insurers
Association of America. “There is no need for this duplicative and
costly layer of federal involvement. For more than 150 years, the states
have been effective in regulating insurers to protect consumers, foster
competitive insurance markets and prevent unfair discrimination.”
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Source: ProPublica
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