Monitoring Availability and Affordability of Auto Insurance, 38277-38281 [2015-16333]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 127 / Thursday, July 2, 2015 / Notices
Director for Regulatory Affairs, tel.: 202–
622–4855, Assistant Director for
Sanctions Compliance & Evaluation,
tel.: 202–622–2490, Office of Foreign
Assets Control, or Chief Counsel
(Foreign Assets Control), tel.: 202–622–
2410, Office of the General Counsel,
Department of the Treasury (not toll free
numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Iranian Financial Sanctions
Regulations Report on Closure by U.S.
Financial Institutions of Correspondent
Accounts and Payable-Through
Accounts.
OMB Number: 1505–0243.
Abstract: Section 561.504(b) of the
Iranian Financial Sanctions Regulations,
31 CFR part 561 (the IFSR), specifies
that a U.S. financial institution that
maintained a correspondent account or
payable-through account for a foreign
financial institution whose name is
added to the part 561 List on OFAC’s
Web site (www.treasury.gov/ofac) as
subject to a prohibition on the
maintaining of such accounts must file
a report with OFAC that provides full
details on the closing of each such
account within 30 days of the closure of
the account. This collection of
information assists in verifying that U.S.
financial institutions are complying
with prohibitions on maintaining
correspondent accounts or payablethrough accounts for foreign financial
institutions listed on the part 561 List.
The reports will be reviewed by the U.S.
Department of the Treasury and may be
used for compliance and enforcement
purposes by the agency.
Current Actions: There are no changes
being made to the notice at this time.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Affected Public: U.S. financial
institutions operating correspondent or
payable-through accounts for foreign
financial institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
The likely respondents and recordkeepers affected by this collection of
information in § 561.504(b) are U.S.
financial institutions operating
correspondent accounts or payable
through accounts for foreign financial
institutions. Since the date this
reporting requirement was added to the
IFSR (February 27, 2012) through June
18, 2015, OFAC added the names of two
foreign financial institutions to the part
561 List, of which one remains. The
number of respondents to this collection
has been zero. For future notices, OFAC
will continue to report retrospectively
on the number of respondents during
the reporting period.
Estimated Time per Respondent: 2
hours per response.
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Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: Because the § 561.504(b)
reporting requirement applies to those
U.S. financial institutions that operate
correspondent or payable-through
accounts for a foreign financial
institution whose name is added to the
part 561 List, OFAC cannot predict the
response rate for the § 561.504(b)
reporting requirement at this time. Since
the date this reporting requirement was
added to the IFSR (February 27, 2012)
through June 18, 2015, the number of
respondents to this collection has been
zero. For future notices, OFAC will
continue to report retrospectively on the
response rate during the previous
reporting period.
The following paragraph applies to all
of the collections of information covered
by this notice:
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number.
Books or records relating to a collection
of information must be retained for five
years.
Request for Comments
Comments submitted in response to
this notice will be summarized and/or
included in the request for OMB
approval. All comments will become a
matter of public record. Comments are
invited on: (a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information has practical utility; (b) the
accuracy of the agency’s estimate of the
burden of the collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology; and (e) estimates of capital
or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
John E. Smith,
Acting Director, Office of Foreign Assets
Control.
[FR Doc. 2015–16370 Filed 7–1–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AL–P
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38277
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Monitoring Availability and
Affordability of Auto Insurance
Federal Insurance Office,
Departmental Offices, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice; Request for Information.
AGENCY:
The Federal Insurance Office
(FIO) of the Department of the Treasury
(Treasury) issues this notice pursuant to
its authority to monitor the extent to
which traditionally underserved
communities (including rural areas) and
consumers, minorities, and low- and
moderate-income (LMI) persons
(collectively ‘‘Affected Persons’’) have
access to affordable personal auto
insurance. In particular, FIO seeks
comments from state insurance
regulators, consumer organizations,
representatives of the insurance
industry, policyholders, academia, and
others regarding: FIO’s proposed
working definition of ‘‘affordability’’ in
relation to personal auto insurance
(which, at this stage, is solely for the
purpose of inviting further comment);
the key factors FIO proposes to use to
calculate an affordability index for
Affected Persons (e.g., premium,
income, and other metrics); and how
best to obtain appropriate data to
monitor effectively the affordability of
personal auto insurance for Affected
Persons.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received on
or before August 31, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Please submit comments
electronically through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov or by mail (if hard
copy, preferably an original and two
copies) to the Federal Insurance Office,
Attention: Lindy Gustafson, Room 1319
MT, Department of the Treasury, 1500
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20220. As postal mail may be subject
to processing delay, it is recommended
that comments be submitted
electronically. All comments should be
captioned with ‘‘Monitoring Availability
and Affordability of Auto Insurance.’’
Please include your name, group
affiliation, if any, address, email address
and telephone number(s) in your
comment. In general, comments
received will be posted on https://
www.regulations.gov without change,
including any business or personal
information provided. Comments
received, including attachments and
other supporting materials, will be part
of the public record and subject to
public disclosure. Do not enclose any
information in your comment or
supporting materials that you consider
DATES:
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confidential or inappropriate for public
disclosure.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lindy Gustafson, Federal Insurance
Office, 202–622–6245 (not a toll free
number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Background
Subtitle A of Title V of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act established FIO and
provides it with the authority to monitor
the extent to which Affected Persons
have access to affordable insurance
products, other than health insurance.1
For this purpose, FIO is monitoring
the availability and affordability of
personal auto insurance for Affected
Persons due to several factors, namely:
1. Nearly all jurisdictions of the
United States generally require a driver
or owner of a motor vehicle to maintain
auto liability insurance or financial
security that may be satisfied by auto
liability insurance and is applicable at
the time of an accident, while operating
a motor vehicle, or at the time of
registering a motor vehicle.
2. On a nationwide basis, the
percentage of uninsured motorists was
approximately 14 percent between 2002
and 2009 dropping to 12.3 percent in
2010, 12.2 percent in 2011, and 12.6
percent in 2012; however, in 2012, a
significantly higher percentage of
uninsured motorists resided in 10
states.2
3. Owning an automobile gives lowincome commuters greater access to jobs
since public ‘‘transit only enables [lowincome commuters] to reach less than
one-third of metro-wide jobs within 90
minutes while the automobile enables
them to reach all jobs in the 51 largest
metropolitan areas within 60
minutes.’’ 3
4. Insurance industry representatives
assert that auto insurance has become
more affordable over time, but
representatives for consumers assert that
auto insurance has become less
affordable for LMI consumers and for
minorities.
In April 2014, FIO issued a notice
inviting comments regarding: (1) A
reasonable and meaningful definition of
affordability of personal auto insurance;
and (2) the metrics and data FIO should
1 31
U.S.C. 313 (c)(1)(B).
specifically, in these 10 states the
percentage of uninsured motorists ranged from
about 16 percent to 26 percent. See Insurance
Research Council (IRC), Uninsured Motorists: 2014
Edition, at 8, 10 (August 2014).
3 Clifford Winston, ‘‘On the Performance of the
U.S. Transportation System: Caution Ahead,’’
Journal of Economic Literature, Vol. 51, No. 3 at 805
(2013).
2 More
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use to monitor the extent to which
Affected Persons have access to
affordable personal auto insurance
(2014 Affordability Notice).4 Eighteen
individuals and organizations submitted
comments in response to the 2014
Affordability Notice. Three respondents
offered the following specific
definitions of affordability: (1) Auto
liability insurance is affordable if its
price does not preclude a person or
family from the purchase of other
necessities; 5 (2) auto liability insurance
is affordable if its price does not impose
any financial difficulties greater than
the costs of other necessities; 6 and (3)
affordable means being within the
financial means of most people.7
Three respondents to the 2014
Affordability Notice cautioned that any
definition of affordable personal auto
insurance is subjective.8 One
respondent noted that a single, widelyaccepted methodology for defining or
determining affordability does not exist
and, of the methods available to develop
a definition, each has its drawbacks.9
For example, affordability could be
defined: (1) Using a normative standard,
establishing a specific amount or
percentage of income individuals
believe others should pay for personal
auto insurance; (2) using an external
benchmark as is done with the housing
affordability index of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD); or (3) based on the
price at which at least 50 percent of
individuals with certain socio-economic
characteristics purchase a personal auto
insurance policy.10
Others encouraged FIO, when
defining affordability, to: (1) Recognize
flexibility and consumer choice; 11 (2)
4 Monitoring Availability and Affordability of
Auto Insurance, 79 FR 19,969 (Apr. 10, 2014).
5 Center for Economic Justice (CEJ), at 5, (June 9,
2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0014.
6 Property Casualty Insurers (PCI), (June 9, 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0020.
7 IRC, (June 6, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0007.
8 See National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC), (June 9, 2014) available at
https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0018;
Allstate, (May 29, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0006; and Insurance Information
Institute (III), (June 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0016.
9 Insurance Information Institute, (June 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0016.
10 Id. at 3–4.
11 See Financial Services Roundtable (FSR), (June
6, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0019
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base the definition on premiums
charged to lower income drivers; 12 (3)
base the definition on the cost of
mandatory personal injury protection,
bodily injury, and property damage
coverages; 13 (4) recognize that insurers
may not charge a premium that is
excessive, inadequate, or unfairly
discriminatory; 14 (5) include premium
and finance charges; 15 or (6) recognize
auto insurance should not claim more
than two percent of a low-income
family’s take-home pay.16
Respondents identified a number of
metrics FIO could use to monitor the
extent to which Affected Persons have
access to affordable auto insurance.
These suggested metrics include: (1)
Competitiveness of the auto insurance
market; 17 (2) market share of the
residual market, which is the insurance
market for individuals denied a policy
by one or more auto insurers; 18 (3)
unemployment rate; 19 (4) injury
compensation system; 20 (5) uninsured
motorists; 21 (6) various service
measures such as cancellations,
retention, claims payment data, and
agent location; 22 (7) the ratio of average
auto insurance expenditure (premium)
to median household income; 23 (8) the
and American Insurance Association (AIA), (June 9,
2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0015.
12 Consumer Federation of America (CFA), (June
9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0011.
13 PCI, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0020, III, (June 2014), available at
https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0016.
14 AIA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0015.
15 CEJ, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0014.
16 Vehicles for Change, (June 9, 2014), available
at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0013,
and CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0011.
17 NAIC, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0018.
18 Allstate, (May 29, 2014) available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0006; and IRC, available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0007.
19 III, (June 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0016.
20 Id.
21 CEJ, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0014, and IRC, available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-000.
22 Id.
23 IRC, at 5 (June 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0007.
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ratio of premium paid by LMI drivers to
household income of LMI drivers; 24 (9)
consumer views of affordable insurance
premiums as measured by surveys; 25
(10) quote prices; 26 (11) payment
options; 27 and (12) percent of income
spent on other goods and services.28
State insurance regulators and
industry representatives generally
suggested that FIO rely on existing data
sources to monitor the extent to which
Affected Persons have access to
affordable auto insurance. Existing data
sources include: the Bureau of Labor
Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey
(CES); the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners (NAIC);
statistical agents that collect and
aggregate data from insurers; and data
collected by certain states, such as
California. In addition, these
respondents noted that FIO should
review studies conducted by others
such as the NAIC, individual states, the
Insurance Research Council (IRC), and
the Insurance Information Institute (III).
By contrast, consumer organizations
urged FIO to collect transactional data
directly from insurers relating to auto
insurance policies or, indirectly, from
price information on the insurers’ Web
sites and/or from third-party vendors.
Consumer organizations also noted that
state insurance regulators could collect
from insurers the premiums charged by
those insurers, and organize that
premium data based on the ZIP codes of
the insureds.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
II. Proposed Working Definition of
Affordable Personal Auto Insurance
This section sets out to derive a
proposed working definition of
affordable personal auto insurance
based on an affordability index. To do
so, it sets out in sequence: (1) A
definition of affordability; (2) a
24 CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0011; Ways to Work, (June 9, 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0010;
IRC, (June 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0007; and AIA, (June 9, 2014)
available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0015.
25 CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0011.
26 CEJ, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0014.
27 Id.
28 AIA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0015; III, available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0016; and National Association of
Mutual Insurance Companies (NAMIC), (June 9,
2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0009.
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definition and calculation of an
affordability index; (3) a calculation of
average premium; (4) a definition of the
market scope for an affordability index;
and (5) a definition of Affected Persons.
At this time, FIO does not have access
to information sufficient to establish a
final definition of affordable personal
auto insurance for Affected Persons
based on a normative standard, external
benchmark, or percentages of
individuals purchasing personal auto
insurance. However, a working
definition of affordability is needed to
guide further analysis of the cost of
personal auto insurance in order to
monitor access to that line of insurance
for Affected Persons.
FIO considered the definitions of
affordability submitted by three
respondents to the 2014 Affordability
Notice and proposes adopting the
definition of affordable derived from a
dictionary and submitted by one
respondent: Affordable means being
within the financial means of most
people. As the respondent observed,
this common sense definition may be
used to develop ‘‘a practical and
effective approach to monitoring access
to affordable personal auto
insurance.’’ 29 Developing a complete
working definition of affordable
personal auto insurance also involves
identification of ‘‘the criteria used to
measure the affordability of auto
insurance and the standard applied to
determine whether auto insurance is or
is not affordable.’’ 30
Two respondents recommended that
FIO use an affordability index to
measure the affordability of personal
auto insurance. These respondents
suggested different calculations for an
affordability index: (1) The ratio of the
average insurance expenditure
(premium) to national and state median
household income 31; or (2) the ratio of
average premium paid by LMI drivers
(presumably in geographic areas where
LMI drivers reside) to median
household income of LMI drivers.32
Some federal agencies use an index to
measure other kinds of affordability. For
example, HUD has a publicly available
location affordability index that
estimates the percentage of a family’s
income dedicated to the combined cost
of housing and transportation in a given
(June 9, 2014), at 1.
at 2.
31 IRC, (June 6, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0007.
32 CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREASDO-2014-0001-0011.
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29 PCI
30 Id.,
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location.33 The Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau recently defined a
qualified mortgage based, in part, on the
ratio of the consumer’s total monthly
debt to total monthly income.34 Given
the use of indices by other federal
agencies and FIO’s statutory authority to
monitor affordability for Affected
Persons, FIO endorses the concept of an
affordability index for personal auto
insurance and proposes to calculate an
affordability index for personal auto
insurance for each type of Affected
Persons.
An affordability index for Affected
Persons may be derived from a broad set
of criteria, such as the average premium
for personal liability insurance, personal
injury protection, comprehensive
insurance, collision insurance,
uninsured motorist insurance, and
underinsured motorist insurance; or
more narrow criteria, such as the
average premium for personal auto
liability insurance for a given year.35
Two respondents suggested FIO only
consider personal auto liability
insurance when monitoring the
affordability of personal auto insurance
as states generally require only the
purchase of personal auto liability
insurance as a condition of driving or
owning a motor vehicle. FIO proposes to
accept this suggestion and limit the
calculation of an affordability index to
the average annual personal auto
liability insurance premium for Affected
Persons.
Studies of the affordability of personal
auto insurance may calculate the
average premium in one of the following
ways: (1) The total annual written
premium for all insurers writing
personal auto insurance divided by the
total number of policies; 36 or (2) the
total annual premium quoted by a
sample of insurers writing personal auto
insurance divided by the number of
insurers in the sample.37 FIO proposes
to use one or both of these metrics for
annual premium, depending on the data
sources FIO may use in future analysis
(as discussed in more detail in section
33 Location Affordability Portal available at
https://www.locationaffordability.info/lai.aspx.
34 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(iv).
35 For a detailed discussion of the calculation of
an affordability index, see IRC, ‘‘Auto Insurance
Affordability,’’ (November 2013).
36 See IRC, ‘‘Auto Insurance Affordability,’’
(November 2013) and Missouri Department of
Insurance, ‘‘Affordability and Availability of
Personal Lines Insurance in Underserved
Communities,’’ (December 2004).
37 See Paul M. Ong and Michael A. Stoll,
‘‘Redlining or Risk? A Spatial Analysis of Auto
Insurance Rates in Los Angeles,’’ Journal of Policy
Analysis and Management, Vol. 26, No. 4, 811–829
(2007) and CFA Supplemental Comments (June 9,
2014) available at https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0012.
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asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
III). Given FIO’s proposed working
definition of affordable personal auto
insurance (provided below), the metric
of annual premium should be solely
based on an annual price quote for
personal auto liability insurance or the
annual written premium for personal
auto liability insurance.
An affordability index may be
calculated for the entire market for
personal auto liability insurance or a
specific market within personal auto
insurance. Historically, the auto
insurance market has been divided into
three segments: (i) The standard market;
(ii) the non-standard market; and (iii)
the residual market. The residual market
is generally comprised of the highest
risk drivers, i.e., drivers who do not
qualify for personal auto insurance
offered in the standard market or nonstandard market. The non-standard
market is comprised of high risk drivers,
such as new drivers, drivers with
moving violations, drivers with a rare or
unusual motor vehicle, or drivers with
a high auto insurance policy
cancellation or non-renewal rate. The
standard market is comprised of all
other drivers. Generally, annual
premiums for personal auto insurance
are highest in the residual market,
followed by the non-standard market,
and the standard market.38 FIO proposes
to limit the calculation of an
affordability index for personal auto
liability insurance to the standard
market in order to diminish the impact
of the annual premiums charged to the
highest risk drivers.
In addition, any definition of
affordability must include parameters
that adequately account for Affected
Persons (i.e., traditionally underserved
communities and consumers,
minorities, and LMI persons). In the
1990s, the NAIC studied the availability
and affordability of personal auto
insurance and noted ‘‘[t]here is
considerable evidence that residents of
some urban communities, particularly
low-income and minority
neighborhoods, face greater difficulty in
obtaining high quality auto and
homeowners insurance coverage
through the voluntary market than
residents of other areas.’’ 39 FIO
38 In 2011, of the 330 insurers that wrote personal
auto insurance in either the standard and nonstandard market, 95 wrote personal auto insurance
in the non-standard market. Of the 95 insurers in
the non-standard market, 15 also wrote in the
standard market. See StoneRidge Advisors, LLC,
‘‘Non-Standard Auto Insurance Market Overview &
M&A Trends,’’ View from the Ridge, August 2012,
at 1, available at https://
www.stoneridgeadvisors.com/Content/
View_From_The_Ridge_August_2012.pdf.
39 NAIC, ‘‘Improving Urban Insurance Markets: A
Handbook on Available Options,’’ NAIC Insurance
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proposes to use ‘‘urban area’’ as the
proxy for traditionally underserved
communities and consumers, following
the U.S. Census Bureau (Census Bureau)
definition of urban area, as densely
developed territory that encompasses at
least 2,500 people of which at least
1,500 reside outside institutional group
quarters.40
The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) defines low-income
as ‘‘individuals and geographies having
a median family income less than 50
percent of the area median income’’ and
moderate income as ‘‘individuals and
geographies having a median family
income of at least 50 percent and less
than 80 percent of the area median
income.’’ 41 The area median income is:
(1) The median family income for the
[metropolitan statistical area]; or (2) the
statewide non-metropolitan median
family income, if a person or geography
is located outside a [metropolitan
statistical area].’’ 42 FIO proposes to
adapt this definition based on the
general use of median household
income, as defined and identified by the
Census Bureau,43 in studies of
affordability of personal auto insurance.
For the purposes of FIO’s working
definition, LMI persons are individuals
living in areas where the annual income
of the geographic area is less than 80
percent of the median household
income of a metropolitan statistical area
or state.44
The term ‘‘minorit[y]’’ is defined, by
law, as ‘‘Black American, Native
American, Hispanic American, or Asian
American.’’ 45 FIO proposes to use ZIP
codes in which the minority population
exceeds 50 percent as the standard for
majority minority geographic areas.
Using these parameters, a definition
of affordability can be constructed. One
respondent suggested personal auto
insurance is affordable if personal auto
insurance does not claim more than two
percent of a low-income family’s takehome pay. A recent study of the
affordability of personal auto insurance
found the national average insurance
expenditures divided by national
median income has been under two
percent since 1995.46 CES reports the
average expenditure for all households
for auto insurance and the average
income after taxes for all households
and the data for 2013 indicate all
consumers spent about 1.6 percent of
average income after taxes on auto
insurance. FIO proposes to presume
personal auto liability insurance is
affordable if, for Affected Persons, the
affordability index is less than or equal
to two percent of household income.
Combining these elements, FIO
proposes the following working
definition of affordable personal auto
liability insurance for Affected Persons:
A personal auto liability insurance
policy is affordable if the annual
premiums are within the financial
means of most people as measured by
an affordability index for Affected
Persons in the standard market.
Personal auto liability insurance is
presumed to be affordable if, with
respect to household income, the
affordability index does not exceed two
percent for Affected Persons in urban
areas, for LMI persons within a specific
geographic area (including rural areas),
or for all individuals in majority
minority geographic areas.
Availability and Affordability Task Force, June 4,
1996.
40 See Census Bureau, ‘‘2010 Census Urban Area
FAQs,’’ available at https://www.census.gov/geo/
reference/ua/uafaq.html.
41 FDIC, ‘‘Community Reinvestment Act (CRA)
Performance Ratings,’’ available at https://
www2.fdic.gov/crapes/peterms.asp.
42 Id.
43 Household income includes income received
on a regular basis by the householder and all other
individuals 15 years of age and older in the
household, whether related to the householder or
not. It does not include capital gains or noncash
benefits. According to the Census Bureau,
‘‘respondents report income earned from wages or
salaries much better than other sources of income
and that the reported wage and salary income is
nearly equal to independent estimates of aggregate
income.’’ See ‘‘About Income’’ available at
https://www.census.gov/hhes/www/income/about/.
44 As with other aspects of the working definition
for monitoring the affordability of auto insurance,
FIO may adjust the threshold for defining LMI
persons to a lower figure, such as 65 percent of the
median household income of the relevant area.
45 31 U.S.C. 313(c)(1)(B) (incorporating by
reference the definition established in 12 U.S.C.
1811, note).
III. Data
For purposes of further analysis of the
cost of personal auto insurance data is
needed to calculate the affordability
index for Affected Persons.
FIO has considered the currently
available data relating to premiums for
personal auto insurance and, at this
time, concludes that these data are
inadequate for FIO to monitor the extent
to which Affected Persons have access
to affordable personal auto insurance.
For example, CES data allows FIO to
monitor changes in the ratio of the
average expenditure for personal auto
insurance (including liability coverage,
uninsured motorist coverage, personal
injury protection, comprehensive
coverage, and collision coverage in all
three market segments for personal auto
insurance) to average annual income
PO 00000
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46 IRC, ‘‘Auto Insurance Affordability,’’
(November 2013), at 7.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 127 / Thursday, July 2, 2015 / Notices
before or after taxes for urban consumer
units, race of reference person, and
consumer units by income quintiles for
the nation as a whole.47 However, the
average expenditure for personal auto
insurance is not limited to personal auto
liability insurance. The NAIC (not state
regulators) collects insurers’ premium
and exposure data by type of coverage,
and the NAIC reports the average
premium by state, but does not report
the average premium by urban area or
areas where the majority of residents are
minorities or LMI persons.
In 2014, the Consumer Federation of
America released a study in which it
analyzed price quotes for several
insurers for mandatory liability coverage
for a driver profile in urban areas by
comparing the price quote after
modifying the driver profile by specific
socio-economic factors (i.e., education,
occupation, credit score) to ascertain the
impact of specific socio-economic
factors on price. Some state insurance
regulators issue rate guides based on a
specific driver profile as a tool that a
consumer may use to compare the price
of personal auto insurance of one
insurer to another, but do not vary the
profile by specific socio-economic
factors to ascertain the impact of
specific socio-economic factors on price.
Certain states—California, Illinois,
Missouri, North Carolina, and Texas—
require insurers to submit premium data
and number of policies for personal auto
insurance, organized by the ZIP codes of
the insureds. Publicly available sources
Consumer Expenditure Survey Annual
Calendar Year Tables, available at the United States
Department of Labor Bureau of Statistics Web site,
https://www.bls.gov/cex/tables.htm.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
47 See
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:16 Jul 01, 2015
Jkt 235001
indicate that California, Illinois, and
Missouri use these data, in part, to
assess the availability of personal auto
insurance in certain areas or to compare
the costs of personal auto insurance in
areas with different demographic
characteristics. California reports the
market share of insurers writing
personal auto insurance in underserved
areas in comparison to the market share
held by those insurers throughout the
state.48 Illinois reports the market share
of the top 10 insurers for the state in
comparison to Chicago and the
remainder of the state.49 In 2004,
Missouri issued a report entitled
Affordability and Availability of
Personal Lines Insurance in
Underserved Communities; no
subsequent report has been issued.50 In
North Carolina 51 and Texas,52 insurers
must report premium and loss data by
ZIP code to a statistical agent for rating
purposes. Such data could be used to
calculate the average annual premium
48 California Department of Insurance,
Commissioner’s Report on Underserved
Communities, various years, available at https://
www.insurance.ca.gov/0400-news/0200-studiesreports/0800-underserved-comm/.
49 Illinois Department of Insurance, Cost
Containment Annual Report to the General
Assembly, various years, available at https://
insurance.illinois.gov/Reports/Report_Links.asp.
50 Missouri Department of Insurance,
Affordability and Availability of Personal Lines
Insurance in Underserved Communities, (December
2004), available at https://s3.amazonaws.com/
zanran_storage/insurance.mo.gov/ContentPages/
49561197.pdf.
51 11 NCAC 16.0103.
52 Texas Department of Insurance, Texas Private
Passenger Auto Statistical Plan: General Reporting
Instructions, (1994) available at https://
www.tdi.texas.gov/company/documents/
ta_ppasp.pdf.
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Sfmt 9990
38281
for personal auto liability insurance in
the standard market for urban areas and
areas where the majority of residents are
LMI persons or minorities.
Insurers have the most complete and
accurate information that would allow
FIO to perform its function of
monitoring the extent to which Affected
Persons have access to affordable auto
insurance. Insurers can provide accurate
price quotes for a given profile of a
driver, including for a specific
geographic area. In addition, insurers
have the information to calculate the
average annual premium for liability
coverage for personal auto liability
insurance in the standard market for
urban areas and areas where the
majority of residents are minorities or
LMI persons.
IV. General Solicitation for Comments
FIO hereby solicits comments,
including supporting and illustrative
information in support of such
comments where appropriate and
available, regarding:
1. FIO’s proposed working definition
of ‘‘affordability’’ in relation to personal
auto insurance;
2. The key factors FIO proposes to use
to calculate an affordability index for
Affected Persons (e.g., premium,
income, and other metrics); and
3. How FIO could best obtain
appropriate data to monitor effectively
the affordability of personal auto
insurance for Affected Persons.
Michael T. McRaith,
Director, Federal Insurance Office.
[FR Doc. 2015–16333 Filed 7–1–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–25–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 127 (Thursday, July 2, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 38277-38281]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-16333]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Monitoring Availability and Affordability of Auto Insurance
AGENCY: Federal Insurance Office, Departmental Offices, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice; Request for Information.
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SUMMARY: The Federal Insurance Office (FIO) of the Department of the
Treasury (Treasury) issues this notice pursuant to its authority to
monitor the extent to which traditionally underserved communities
(including rural areas) and consumers, minorities, and low- and
moderate-income (LMI) persons (collectively ``Affected Persons'') have
access to affordable personal auto insurance. In particular, FIO seeks
comments from state insurance regulators, consumer organizations,
representatives of the insurance industry, policyholders, academia, and
others regarding: FIO's proposed working definition of
``affordability'' in relation to personal auto insurance (which, at
this stage, is solely for the purpose of inviting further comment); the
key factors FIO proposes to use to calculate an affordability index for
Affected Persons (e.g., premium, income, and other metrics); and how
best to obtain appropriate data to monitor effectively the
affordability of personal auto insurance for Affected Persons.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before August 31, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Please submit comments electronically through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov or by mail (if hard
copy, preferably an original and two copies) to the Federal Insurance
Office, Attention: Lindy Gustafson, Room 1319 MT, Department of the
Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20220. As postal
mail may be subject to processing delay, it is recommended that
comments be submitted electronically. All comments should be captioned
with ``Monitoring Availability and Affordability of Auto Insurance.''
Please include your name, group affiliation, if any, address, email
address and telephone number(s) in your comment. In general, comments
received will be posted on https://www.regulations.gov without change,
including any business or personal information provided. Comments
received, including attachments and other supporting materials, will be
part of the public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not
enclose any information in your comment or supporting materials that
you consider
[[Page 38278]]
confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lindy Gustafson, Federal Insurance
Office, 202-622-6245 (not a toll free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Subtitle A of Title V of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act established FIO and provides it with the
authority to monitor the extent to which Affected Persons have access
to affordable insurance products, other than health insurance.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 31 U.S.C. 313 (c)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this purpose, FIO is monitoring the availability and
affordability of personal auto insurance for Affected Persons due to
several factors, namely:
1. Nearly all jurisdictions of the United States generally require
a driver or owner of a motor vehicle to maintain auto liability
insurance or financial security that may be satisfied by auto liability
insurance and is applicable at the time of an accident, while operating
a motor vehicle, or at the time of registering a motor vehicle.
2. On a nationwide basis, the percentage of uninsured motorists was
approximately 14 percent between 2002 and 2009 dropping to 12.3 percent
in 2010, 12.2 percent in 2011, and 12.6 percent in 2012; however, in
2012, a significantly higher percentage of uninsured motorists resided
in 10 states.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ More specifically, in these 10 states the percentage of
uninsured motorists ranged from about 16 percent to 26 percent. See
Insurance Research Council (IRC), Uninsured Motorists: 2014 Edition,
at 8, 10 (August 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Owning an automobile gives low-income commuters greater access
to jobs since public ``transit only enables [low-income commuters] to
reach less than one-third of metro-wide jobs within 90 minutes while
the automobile enables them to reach all jobs in the 51 largest
metropolitan areas within 60 minutes.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Clifford Winston, ``On the Performance of the U.S.
Transportation System: Caution Ahead,'' Journal of Economic
Literature, Vol. 51, No. 3 at 805 (2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Insurance industry representatives assert that auto insurance
has become more affordable over time, but representatives for consumers
assert that auto insurance has become less affordable for LMI consumers
and for minorities.
In April 2014, FIO issued a notice inviting comments regarding: (1)
A reasonable and meaningful definition of affordability of personal
auto insurance; and (2) the metrics and data FIO should use to monitor
the extent to which Affected Persons have access to affordable personal
auto insurance (2014 Affordability Notice).\4\ Eighteen individuals and
organizations submitted comments in response to the 2014 Affordability
Notice. Three respondents offered the following specific definitions of
affordability: (1) Auto liability insurance is affordable if its price
does not preclude a person or family from the purchase of other
necessities; \5\ (2) auto liability insurance is affordable if its
price does not impose any financial difficulties greater than the costs
of other necessities; \6\ and (3) affordable means being within the
financial means of most people.\7\
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\4\ Monitoring Availability and Affordability of Auto Insurance,
79 FR 19,969 (Apr. 10, 2014).
\5\ Center for Economic Justice (CEJ), at 5, (June 9, 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-
2014-0001-0014.
\6\ Property Casualty Insurers (PCI), (June 9, 2014), available
at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-
0020.
\7\ IRC, (June 6, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0007.
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Three respondents to the 2014 Affordability Notice cautioned that
any definition of affordable personal auto insurance is subjective.\8\
One respondent noted that a single, widely-accepted methodology for
defining or determining affordability does not exist and, of the
methods available to develop a definition, each has its drawbacks.\9\
For example, affordability could be defined: (1) Using a normative
standard, establishing a specific amount or percentage of income
individuals believe others should pay for personal auto insurance; (2)
using an external benchmark as is done with the housing affordability
index of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD); or
(3) based on the price at which at least 50 percent of individuals with
certain socio-economic characteristics purchase a personal auto
insurance policy.\10\
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\8\ See National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC),
(June 9, 2014) available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0018; Allstate, (May 29,
2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0006; and Insurance
Information Institute (III), (June 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0016.
\9\ Insurance Information Institute, (June 2014), available at
https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-
0016.
\10\ Id. at 3-4.
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Others encouraged FIO, when defining affordability, to: (1)
Recognize flexibility and consumer choice; \11\ (2) base the definition
on premiums charged to lower income drivers; \12\ (3) base the
definition on the cost of mandatory personal injury protection, bodily
injury, and property damage coverages; \13\ (4) recognize that insurers
may not charge a premium that is excessive, inadequate, or unfairly
discriminatory; \14\ (5) include premium and finance charges; \15\ or
(6) recognize auto insurance should not claim more than two percent of
a low-income family's take-home pay.\16\
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\11\ See Financial Services Roundtable (FSR), (June 6, 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-
2014-0001-0019 and American Insurance Association (AIA), (June 9,
2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0015.
\12\ Consumer Federation of America (CFA), (June 9, 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-
2014-0001-0011.
\13\ PCI, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0020, III,
(June 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0016.
\14\ AIA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0015.
\15\ CEJ, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0014.
\16\ Vehicles for Change, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0013, and
CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0011.
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Respondents identified a number of metrics FIO could use to monitor
the extent to which Affected Persons have access to affordable auto
insurance. These suggested metrics include: (1) Competitiveness of the
auto insurance market; \17\ (2) market share of the residual market,
which is the insurance market for individuals denied a policy by one or
more auto insurers; \18\ (3) unemployment rate; \19\ (4) injury
compensation system; \20\ (5) uninsured motorists; \21\ (6) various
service measures such as cancellations, retention, claims payment data,
and agent location; \22\ (7) the ratio of average auto insurance
expenditure (premium) to median household income; \23\ (8) the
[[Page 38279]]
ratio of premium paid by LMI drivers to household income of LMI
drivers; \24\ (9) consumer views of affordable insurance premiums as
measured by surveys; \25\ (10) quote prices; \26\ (11) payment options;
\27\ and (12) percent of income spent on other goods and services.\28\
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\17\ NAIC, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0018.
\18\ Allstate, (May 29, 2014) available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0006; and
IRC, available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0007.
\19\ III, (June 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0016.
\20\ Id.
\21\ CEJ, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0014, and
IRC, available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-000.
\22\ Id.
\23\ IRC, at 5 (June 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0007.
\24\ CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0011; Ways
to Work, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0010; IRC, (June 2014),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-
2014-0001-0007; and AIA, (June 9, 2014) available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0015.
\25\ CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0011.
\26\ CEJ, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0014.
\27\ Id.
\28\ AIA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0015; III,
available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-
2014-0001-0016; and National Association of Mutual Insurance
Companies (NAMIC), (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0009.
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State insurance regulators and industry representatives generally
suggested that FIO rely on existing data sources to monitor the extent
to which Affected Persons have access to affordable auto insurance.
Existing data sources include: the Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer
Expenditure Survey (CES); the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC); statistical agents that collect and aggregate
data from insurers; and data collected by certain states, such as
California. In addition, these respondents noted that FIO should review
studies conducted by others such as the NAIC, individual states, the
Insurance Research Council (IRC), and the Insurance Information
Institute (III).
By contrast, consumer organizations urged FIO to collect
transactional data directly from insurers relating to auto insurance
policies or, indirectly, from price information on the insurers' Web
sites and/or from third-party vendors. Consumer organizations also
noted that state insurance regulators could collect from insurers the
premiums charged by those insurers, and organize that premium data
based on the ZIP codes of the insureds.
II. Proposed Working Definition of Affordable Personal Auto Insurance
This section sets out to derive a proposed working definition of
affordable personal auto insurance based on an affordability index. To
do so, it sets out in sequence: (1) A definition of affordability; (2)
a definition and calculation of an affordability index; (3) a
calculation of average premium; (4) a definition of the market scope
for an affordability index; and (5) a definition of Affected Persons.
At this time, FIO does not have access to information sufficient to
establish a final definition of affordable personal auto insurance for
Affected Persons based on a normative standard, external benchmark, or
percentages of individuals purchasing personal auto insurance. However,
a working definition of affordability is needed to guide further
analysis of the cost of personal auto insurance in order to monitor
access to that line of insurance for Affected Persons.
FIO considered the definitions of affordability submitted by three
respondents to the 2014 Affordability Notice and proposes adopting the
definition of affordable derived from a dictionary and submitted by one
respondent: Affordable means being within the financial means of most
people. As the respondent observed, this common sense definition may be
used to develop ``a practical and effective approach to monitoring
access to affordable personal auto insurance.'' \29\ Developing a
complete working definition of affordable personal auto insurance also
involves identification of ``the criteria used to measure the
affordability of auto insurance and the standard applied to determine
whether auto insurance is or is not affordable.'' \30\
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\29\ PCI (June 9, 2014), at 1.
\30\ Id., at 2.
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Two respondents recommended that FIO use an affordability index to
measure the affordability of personal auto insurance. These respondents
suggested different calculations for an affordability index: (1) The
ratio of the average insurance expenditure (premium) to national and
state median household income \31\; or (2) the ratio of average premium
paid by LMI drivers (presumably in geographic areas where LMI drivers
reside) to median household income of LMI drivers.\32\
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\31\ IRC, (June 6, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0007.
\32\ CFA, (June 9, 2014), available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0011.
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Some federal agencies use an index to measure other kinds of
affordability. For example, HUD has a publicly available location
affordability index that estimates the percentage of a family's income
dedicated to the combined cost of housing and transportation in a given
location.\33\ The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau recently defined
a qualified mortgage based, in part, on the ratio of the consumer's
total monthly debt to total monthly income.\34\ Given the use of
indices by other federal agencies and FIO's statutory authority to
monitor affordability for Affected Persons, FIO endorses the concept of
an affordability index for personal auto insurance and proposes to
calculate an affordability index for personal auto insurance for each
type of Affected Persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Location Affordability Portal available at https://www.locationaffordability.info/lai.aspx.
\34\ 12 CFR 1026.43(e)(2)(iv).
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An affordability index for Affected Persons may be derived from a
broad set of criteria, such as the average premium for personal
liability insurance, personal injury protection, comprehensive
insurance, collision insurance, uninsured motorist insurance, and
underinsured motorist insurance; or more narrow criteria, such as the
average premium for personal auto liability insurance for a given
year.\35\ Two respondents suggested FIO only consider personal auto
liability insurance when monitoring the affordability of personal auto
insurance as states generally require only the purchase of personal
auto liability insurance as a condition of driving or owning a motor
vehicle. FIO proposes to accept this suggestion and limit the
calculation of an affordability index to the average annual personal
auto liability insurance premium for Affected Persons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ For a detailed discussion of the calculation of an
affordability index, see IRC, ``Auto Insurance Affordability,''
(November 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Studies of the affordability of personal auto insurance may
calculate the average premium in one of the following ways: (1) The
total annual written premium for all insurers writing personal auto
insurance divided by the total number of policies; \36\ or (2) the
total annual premium quoted by a sample of insurers writing personal
auto insurance divided by the number of insurers in the sample.\37\ FIO
proposes to use one or both of these metrics for annual premium,
depending on the data sources FIO may use in future analysis (as
discussed in more detail in section
[[Page 38280]]
III). Given FIO's proposed working definition of affordable personal
auto insurance (provided below), the metric of annual premium should be
solely based on an annual price quote for personal auto liability
insurance or the annual written premium for personal auto liability
insurance.
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\36\ See IRC, ``Auto Insurance Affordability,'' (November 2013)
and Missouri Department of Insurance, ``Affordability and
Availability of Personal Lines Insurance in Underserved
Communities,'' (December 2004).
\37\ See Paul M. Ong and Michael A. Stoll, ``Redlining or Risk?
A Spatial Analysis of Auto Insurance Rates in Los Angeles,'' Journal
of Policy Analysis and Management, Vol. 26, No. 4, 811-829 (2007)
and CFA Supplemental Comments (June 9, 2014) available at https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=TREAS-DO-2014-0001-0012.
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An affordability index may be calculated for the entire market for
personal auto liability insurance or a specific market within personal
auto insurance. Historically, the auto insurance market has been
divided into three segments: (i) The standard market; (ii) the non-
standard market; and (iii) the residual market. The residual market is
generally comprised of the highest risk drivers, i.e., drivers who do
not qualify for personal auto insurance offered in the standard market
or non-standard market. The non-standard market is comprised of high
risk drivers, such as new drivers, drivers with moving violations,
drivers with a rare or unusual motor vehicle, or drivers with a high
auto insurance policy cancellation or non-renewal rate. The standard
market is comprised of all other drivers. Generally, annual premiums
for personal auto insurance are highest in the residual market,
followed by the non-standard market, and the standard market.\38\ FIO
proposes to limit the calculation of an affordability index for
personal auto liability insurance to the standard market in order to
diminish the impact of the annual premiums charged to the highest risk
drivers.
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\38\ In 2011, of the 330 insurers that wrote personal auto
insurance in either the standard and non-standard market, 95 wrote
personal auto insurance in the non-standard market. Of the 95
insurers in the non-standard market, 15 also wrote in the standard
market. See StoneRidge Advisors, LLC, ``Non-Standard Auto Insurance
Market Overview & M&A Trends,'' View from the Ridge, August 2012, at
1, available at https://www.stoneridgeadvisors.com/Content/View_From_The_Ridge_August_2012.pdf.
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In addition, any definition of affordability must include
parameters that adequately account for Affected Persons (i.e.,
traditionally underserved communities and consumers, minorities, and
LMI persons). In the 1990s, the NAIC studied the availability and
affordability of personal auto insurance and noted ``[t]here is
considerable evidence that residents of some urban communities,
particularly low-income and minority neighborhoods, face greater
difficulty in obtaining high quality auto and homeowners insurance
coverage through the voluntary market than residents of other areas.''
\39\ FIO proposes to use ``urban area'' as the proxy for traditionally
underserved communities and consumers, following the U.S. Census Bureau
(Census Bureau) definition of urban area, as densely developed
territory that encompasses at least 2,500 people of which at least
1,500 reside outside institutional group quarters.\40\
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\39\ NAIC, ``Improving Urban Insurance Markets: A Handbook on
Available Options,'' NAIC Insurance Availability and Affordability
Task Force, June 4, 1996.
\40\ See Census Bureau, ``2010 Census Urban Area FAQs,''
available at https://www.census.gov/geo/reference/ua/uafaq.html.
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) defines low-income
as ``individuals and geographies having a median family income less
than 50 percent of the area median income'' and moderate income as
``individuals and geographies having a median family income of at least
50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income.'' \41\
The area median income is: (1) The median family income for the
[metropolitan statistical area]; or (2) the statewide non-metropolitan
median family income, if a person or geography is located outside a
[metropolitan statistical area].'' \42\ FIO proposes to adapt this
definition based on the general use of median household income, as
defined and identified by the Census Bureau,\43\ in studies of
affordability of personal auto insurance. For the purposes of FIO's
working definition, LMI persons are individuals living in areas where
the annual income of the geographic area is less than 80 percent of the
median household income of a metropolitan statistical area or
state.\44\
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\41\ FDIC, ``Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) Performance
Ratings,'' available at https://www2.fdic.gov/crapes/peterms.asp.
\42\ Id.
\43\ Household income includes income received on a regular
basis by the householder and all other individuals 15 years of age
and older in the household, whether related to the householder or
not. It does not include capital gains or noncash benefits.
According to the Census Bureau, ``respondents report income earned
from wages or salaries much better than other sources of income and
that the reported wage and salary income is nearly equal to
independent estimates of aggregate income.'' See ``About Income''
available at https://www.census.gov/hhes/www/income/about/.
\44\ As with other aspects of the working definition for
monitoring the affordability of auto insurance, FIO may adjust the
threshold for defining LMI persons to a lower figure, such as 65
percent of the median household income of the relevant area.
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The term ``minorit[y]'' is defined, by law, as ``Black American,
Native American, Hispanic American, or Asian American.'' \45\ FIO
proposes to use ZIP codes in which the minority population exceeds 50
percent as the standard for majority minority geographic areas.
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\45\ 31 U.S.C. 313(c)(1)(B) (incorporating by reference the
definition established in 12 U.S.C. 1811, note).
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Using these parameters, a definition of affordability can be
constructed. One respondent suggested personal auto insurance is
affordable if personal auto insurance does not claim more than two
percent of a low-income family's take-home pay. A recent study of the
affordability of personal auto insurance found the national average
insurance expenditures divided by national median income has been under
two percent since 1995.\46\ CES reports the average expenditure for all
households for auto insurance and the average income after taxes for
all households and the data for 2013 indicate all consumers spent about
1.6 percent of average income after taxes on auto insurance. FIO
proposes to presume personal auto liability insurance is affordable if,
for Affected Persons, the affordability index is less than or equal to
two percent of household income.
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\46\ IRC, ``Auto Insurance Affordability,'' (November 2013), at
7.
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Combining these elements, FIO proposes the following working
definition of affordable personal auto liability insurance for Affected
Persons:
A personal auto liability insurance policy is affordable if the
annual premiums are within the financial means of most people as
measured by an affordability index for Affected Persons in the standard
market. Personal auto liability insurance is presumed to be affordable
if, with respect to household income, the affordability index does not
exceed two percent for Affected Persons in urban areas, for LMI persons
within a specific geographic area (including rural areas), or for all
individuals in majority minority geographic areas.
III. Data
For purposes of further analysis of the cost of personal auto
insurance data is needed to calculate the affordability index for
Affected Persons.
FIO has considered the currently available data relating to
premiums for personal auto insurance and, at this time, concludes that
these data are inadequate for FIO to monitor the extent to which
Affected Persons have access to affordable personal auto insurance. For
example, CES data allows FIO to monitor changes in the ratio of the
average expenditure for personal auto insurance (including liability
coverage, uninsured motorist coverage, personal injury protection,
comprehensive coverage, and collision coverage in all three market
segments for personal auto insurance) to average annual income
[[Page 38281]]
before or after taxes for urban consumer units, race of reference
person, and consumer units by income quintiles for the nation as a
whole.\47\ However, the average expenditure for personal auto insurance
is not limited to personal auto liability insurance. The NAIC (not
state regulators) collects insurers' premium and exposure data by type
of coverage, and the NAIC reports the average premium by state, but
does not report the average premium by urban area or areas where the
majority of residents are minorities or LMI persons.
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\47\ See Consumer Expenditure Survey Annual Calendar Year
Tables, available at the United States Department of Labor Bureau of
Statistics Web site, https://www.bls.gov/cex/tables.htm.
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In 2014, the Consumer Federation of America released a study in
which it analyzed price quotes for several insurers for mandatory
liability coverage for a driver profile in urban areas by comparing the
price quote after modifying the driver profile by specific socio-
economic factors (i.e., education, occupation, credit score) to
ascertain the impact of specific socio-economic factors on price. Some
state insurance regulators issue rate guides based on a specific driver
profile as a tool that a consumer may use to compare the price of
personal auto insurance of one insurer to another, but do not vary the
profile by specific socio-economic factors to ascertain the impact of
specific socio-economic factors on price.
Certain states--California, Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina, and
Texas--require insurers to submit premium data and number of policies
for personal auto insurance, organized by the ZIP codes of the
insureds. Publicly available sources indicate that California,
Illinois, and Missouri use these data, in part, to assess the
availability of personal auto insurance in certain areas or to compare
the costs of personal auto insurance in areas with different
demographic characteristics. California reports the market share of
insurers writing personal auto insurance in underserved areas in
comparison to the market share held by those insurers throughout the
state.\48\ Illinois reports the market share of the top 10 insurers for
the state in comparison to Chicago and the remainder of the state.\49\
In 2004, Missouri issued a report entitled Affordability and
Availability of Personal Lines Insurance in Underserved Communities; no
subsequent report has been issued.\50\ In North Carolina \51\ and
Texas,\52\ insurers must report premium and loss data by ZIP code to a
statistical agent for rating purposes. Such data could be used to
calculate the average annual premium for personal auto liability
insurance in the standard market for urban areas and areas where the
majority of residents are LMI persons or minorities.
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\48\ California Department of Insurance, Commissioner's Report
on Underserved Communities, various years, available at https://www.insurance.ca.gov/0400-news/0200-studies-reports/0800-underserved-comm/.
\49\ Illinois Department of Insurance, Cost Containment Annual
Report to the General Assembly, various years, available at https://insurance.illinois.gov/Reports/Report_Links.asp.
\50\ Missouri Department of Insurance, Affordability and
Availability of Personal Lines Insurance in Underserved Communities,
(December 2004), available at https://s3.amazonaws.com/zanran_storage/insurance.mo.gov/ContentPages/49561197.pdf.
\51\ 11 NCAC 16.0103.
\52\ Texas Department of Insurance, Texas Private Passenger Auto
Statistical Plan: General Reporting Instructions, (1994) available
at https://www.tdi.texas.gov/company/documents/ta_ppasp.pdf.
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Insurers have the most complete and accurate information that would
allow FIO to perform its function of monitoring the extent to which
Affected Persons have access to affordable auto insurance. Insurers can
provide accurate price quotes for a given profile of a driver,
including for a specific geographic area. In addition, insurers have
the information to calculate the average annual premium for liability
coverage for personal auto liability insurance in the standard market
for urban areas and areas where the majority of residents are
minorities or LMI persons.
IV. General Solicitation for Comments
FIO hereby solicits comments, including supporting and illustrative
information in support of such comments where appropriate and
available, regarding:
1. FIO's proposed working definition of ``affordability'' in
relation to personal auto insurance;
2. The key factors FIO proposes to use to calculate an
affordability index for Affected Persons (e.g., premium, income, and
other metrics); and
3. How FIO could best obtain appropriate data to monitor
effectively the affordability of personal auto insurance for Affected
Persons.
Michael T. McRaith,
Director, Federal Insurance Office.
[FR Doc. 2015-16333 Filed 7-1-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-25-P