FTA Ireland Motor Insurance Survey – more regulation needed

on Feb 28, 17 • by • with Comments Off on FTA Ireland Motor Insurance Survey – more regulation needed

Increased motor insurance costs for commercial vehicle operators could curb efforts to  remain competitive, according to FTA Ireland. A survey of motor insurance prices by the  association found that 87 per cent of its members experienced rises in 2016, with half saying their  premiums had gone up by more than 40...
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Increased motor insurance costs for commercial vehicle operators could curb efforts to  remain competitive, according to FTA Ireland. A survey of motor insurance prices by the  association found that 87 per cent of its members experienced rises in 2016, with half saying their  premiums had gone up by more than 40 per cent .

To compound the problem, the lack of regulation and transparency within the insurance  sector in Ireland is causing confusion on pricing and not enabling fleet operators to compare  prices effectively and efficiently, according to FTA Ireland.

“FTA Ireland welcomes the recently-published finance sub-committee’s report on insurance,”  said Aidan Flynn of FTA Ireland. “However, it is disappointing that the report made no specific  recommendations relevant to the commercial fleet sector. This would have given peace of  mind to fleet operators who are being burdened with huge hikes in their insurance premiums.

“It is vital now that insurance is on the agenda for government so that commercial fleet  insurance is dealt with as a stand-alone item for investigation and discussion. There is no point  inviting stakeholders like FTA Ireland into discussions on insurance and then ignoring the  issues for the fleet sector and focusing completelyon the more populist issues such as private  more insurance.”

FTA’s survey, gathered evidence from commercial truck fleet members about their experiences over the past 12 months. Tocompound the challenge of achieving a competitive rate for such vital insurance, around athird of those questioned admitted they were uncertain what commission or fees their insurance brokers were charging.

“This demonstrates a real and very worrying lack ofregulation,” continues Flynn, “since one  of the basic obligations of an insurance broker is to make it clear to the client the fees charged  and commission due from the insurance company. Brokers are making significant fees and  commission increases off the back of the significant insurance premium hikes and taking  advantage of freight operators.

“Commercial fleet insurance is a complicated process with a lot at stake. It is therefore  imperative that insurance brokers have competencies and an acute understanding of this  specific area rather than viewing the relationship with a fleet operator as just another  transaction.”

Mr Flynn said there were few specialised commercialfleet insurance brokers so operators  struggled to get the best deal for their businesses. He said government committees needed  to engage in the process by improving rules of engagement for brokers, auditing these rules  by the central bank and encouraging insurance companies to mandatorily push for risk  management practices to be audited.

FTA Ireland is calling on the insurance sector, as well as the government’s Cost of Insurance  Working Group, to implement the following recommendations:

• Separate out private and commercial motor insurance issues to enable a more
structured debate on how to better support insurance outcomes for the commercial
fleet sector
• Audit proposals submitted by brokers to ensure the detail matches reality
• Insist that insurers must audit risk management of the client and develop and enhance
a culture of risk management
• Demand more transparency in claims handling
• Make it imperative that insurers consider the Road Safety Authority’s commercial
vehicle operator risk index (CVORI)
• Ensure that companies that engage in risk management practices and accreditation
schemes such as FTA Ireland’s accreditation programme must benefit from
recognition from insurance companies
• Require that insurance companies must base price onthe actual level of assessed risk
in the operation not on the market norm

“Risk management is a discipline that offers many rewards – notably improved safety and reduced accidents and incidents. The insurance sector must be encouraged by the likes of  the insurance sub-committee to recognise and amend premiums accordingly for operators  that pass audits such as the FTA Ireland accreditation and demonstrate good risk  management and safety practices. FTA Ireland is leading the way in changing the culture of  compliance in Ireland with Brakes Ireland, McArdle Skeath, NVD and BOC Gases recently  achieving our Gold Accreditation Standard.”

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