Monday, April 28, 2008

How to Find Cheap Liability Auto Insurance Online

Most of the automobile liability insurance is the only state to require insurance. How are the following: automobile liability insurance online, the best cheap - two kinds of ratings company.
liability insurance
liability auto insurance and vehicle insurance. They are ...
1. Bodily injury liability insurance - this is the person to pay medical costs for auto accident.
2 injury. Property damage liability insurance - are paying someone else& 39;s vehicle repair or replace the damaged private property and auto accident.
liability after three numbers represent the range of compensation. For example, if you 25/50/100 This means that the maximum size of 25,000 U.S. dollars to conceal a person& 39;s medical bills, 50,000 U.S. dollars bill of health for all people, and the other person& 39;s liability for cars and a range of a hundred thousand dollars in addition to some Personal injury protection insurance should be property.
in state and / or health insurance driving the insurance. Personal injury protection coverage that reimburses you and your passenger& 39;s medical bills for your medical bills when you are involved in auto accidents. To complete a health insurance car insurance reimburses the driver damages for health insurance, underinsured, driver.
getting cheaper to run or liability on the keyboard - and - online
to liability insurance cheap car insurance online, the first in their current state They visit the website of the insurance department of insurance requirements for reference. Their websites to display the required minimum liability insurance on a car that gets road.
next visit comparison sites to each other online insurance quotes from other companies. Have to do is spend a few minutes filling out a simple form, wait a little quotation marks, one.
most comparison sites and select only the cheapest insurance operation - you algoman ratings of insurance companies paid claims. Insurance comparison sites offer articles on the section leading money - saving tips, and answers to your questions and get advice. Suit their online chat section, where to go to the insurance professional.
visit http://www.lowerratequotes You talk to the suit. com or by clicking on the following link to the cheapest online quotes from top auto insurance liability - and corporate ratings to see how much savings you suit. Many more articles on insurance suit to get hints. Section.
the author, Brian Stevens, former insurance agent and financial consultant who is widely and is cheaper for liability auto insurance quotes in writing.



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Sunday, April 20, 2008

Health Insurance Coverage For The Entire Family

Your health insurance requirements shoot up once you start a family and entwine your life with those of other individuals. Your family may be a traditional on, or you may be a single parent. You may also decide to adopt. In either case, accidents may happen any time, especially if you have young, active children. The encumbrance of escalating medical bills could rapidly become intractable. Locating an apposite family health insurance policy is simply the best preventive measure that you can take. Younger families often need to spend long hours at the offices of medical practitioners. Diseases like the influenza or the measles are very common among children. Even if your child is a healthy one, it is sure to need vaccinations. Babies younger than one year of age typically need to visit the pediatrician every three months for routine check-ups. For these reasons, you should give the utmost priority to the selection and purchase of appropriate family health insurance coverage.
The health needs of a family are different from those of a single individual. The basic coverage is provided by almost all family health insurance plans. But all the benefits of a particular plan must be ascertained from the insurer before making the actual purchase. It is advisable to find out whether physical examinations, ongoing treatments for existing diseases, periodic health checkups, prescription drugs, emergency care, and hospitalization of every member of your family would be covered under the plan you are planning to buy. Check with your insurance agent, or go through the website of the company to get information about these aspects of the coverage.
Some ailments like allergies and gout are better treated with alternative modes of treatment like homeopathy or acupuncture. If your family has any such problems, check if these are covered under your plan.
Families with young children might need vision care coverage. Plans that give coverage to eye check-ups, glaucoma screening, cost of glasses or contact lenses are worth considering.
Dental insurance can also be purchased to obtain coverage against dental check-ups, diagnosis of dental ailments, restoration and repair of teeth problems that are common in cases of younger children and older family members alike.
You will be better equipped to procure the fitting family health insurance policy by carrying out research and taking pains to understand the different types of insurance available in the market. Want to learn more about Family Health Insurance?, feel free to visit us at: http://www.health-insurance-land.info



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Insurance Credit Scoring: An Ethical Issue

The issue at hand is the use of a consumer s credit score as an underwriting tool for auto insurance rates. What is a credit score or FICO score? A FICO score is a credit score developed by Fair Isaac & Co. Credit scoring is a method of determining the likelihood that credit users will pay their bills. Fair, Isaac began its work with credit scoring in the late 1950s and, since then, scoring has become widely accepted by lenders as a reliable means of credit evaluation. A credit score attempts to condense a borrower s credit history into a single number. Fair, Isaac & Co. and the credit bureaus do not reveal how these scores are computed. The Federal Trade Commission has ruled this to be acceptable.

Isn t it interesting that the score most important in our financial lives, our consumer credit score does not even contain full disclosure? As stated above the Federal Trade Commission has ruled that it is ok for Fair Isaac & Co not to disclose the algorithms used in this process, but what about consumer rights.

While it is important to understand what a FICO score is, it is not the main issue of this paper, insurance rates are. So where is the connection? All the public knows is that Fair Isaac tells us there is a high correlation between people with bad credit and high risk drivers. This notion is insane and from what I can see from this black box approach, there is no real causation between the two.

This type of reasoning is similar to convicting a person of something before they have even committed a crime. For instance, let s say I do a study and that study shows there is a high correlation between criminals and people with bad credit. Is this to say that just because you have bad credit you are more likely to commit a crime and therefore you should be profiled or perhaps locked up because you are a risk to society?

This system is discriminating against minorities, disabled and in my case college students among others. Fair Isaac & Co claims that they cannot show the sophisticated algorithms they use to calculate these correlations and scores because they fear that they would be giving up valuable proprietary information that was very costly to develop and maintain. What about the cost to consumer s who may be paying higher rates or in worse cases even denied insurance based on these practices.

The Equal Credit Opportunity Act forbids creditors from considering race, sex, marital status, national origin, and religion, but if we don t even know how these companies are calculating these scores, how in the world could we possibly know whether or not they are discriminating. This smoke and mirror approach is what many government agencies do to subtly discriminate and extort money from the American.

What about extortion? As I reflect on this topic extortion comes to mind. Webster defines extortion as to obtain by force or compulsion. By using such unfounded tactics consumers are forced into paying the higher rates. First of all, 90% of all insurance companies use this procedure; secondly in the interest of society legislation requires all Americans with cars to have car insurance. Living in a country where it is virtually impossible to live without a car doesn t this present some force to pay the rates? Also, lets say you cannot afford to buy a car with cash, in which case you could obtain liability insurance alone and save quite a lot of money; but instead you take out a loan, the bank will require you to obtain full coverage auto insurance to cover them until you pay off the loan. While this case may not represent an extreme case of extortion it does give reason to ponder the connection.

Insurance companies tout themselves as representing peace of mind, protection and security, but at what cost. Over the past 10 years, I have spent roughly 20,000 dollars in car insurance, what have I claimed? Easily less than half and I totaled a car. Is insurance just a form of legalized gambling protected by government? The McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1944 exempts the insurance industry from antitrust laws, so here we are again without a choice; collusion is the rule not competition. Where are the ethics of lawmakers? Many states are screaming about this controversial issue and some states such as California have had some success, but with protection from top government what can consumers do?

I have personally written the Governor of Pennsylvania about the subject, one of my main questions was;

I am a concerned citizen. Recently I noticed my car insurance rates increasing at a substantial rate. I investigated the situation only to find out that my credit rating was making the difference, not my driving record.

The response I received from the Department of Insurance follows:

This letter is in reponse to your complaint filed with the Pennsylvania Insurance Dpartment through Governor Edward G. Rendell s correspondence office regarding the use of credit as an underwriting tool for automobile insurance in Pennsylvania.

I have read through your concerns and it appears that you are questioning the underwriting of automobile insurance. Specifically, the use of credit in determining eligibility. Many different factors go into the underwriting of an insurance policy, such as type of vehicle, drivers, location, etc. and most recently credit history. Pennsylvania law does not prohibit an insurance company fromusing credit as an underwriting tool so long as it is done within the first 60 days of writing a policy. Under the law, an insurance company is granted a 60 day window from the inception of a policy to determine whether or not the policy fits into the company s guidelines.

In your letter, you stated credit scoring in part of the rating structure and presumable must be approved by the Insurance Department. Actually, credit scoring is part of a company s underwriting guidelines and the Dapartment only regulates underwriting guideline to the extent they are not discriminatory.

Also, Federal law under the Fair Credit Reporting Act allows credit information to be used for underwriting financial and insurance transactions.

Sincerely yours,

Debra L. Roadcap

Consumer Service Investigator

The response I received is hardly what I would call an answer, of course Federal Law preempts state law and the Fair Credit Reporting Act allows for use of such information, but the real question is why? An answer to this question has still not been received. I believe this is a highly unethical practice in which insurance companies are being given free rule to take advantage of low-income families, single mothers, disabled, minorities and others. If the government wants to do the right thing they should judge consumers on what they have done individually, not what scientist s hypothesis they might do based on the history of others.

About The Author

My name is Richard D. Schrader, I advocate consumer education on many topics and help consult American consumers with excessive credit card debt. You can visit my website at www.debtjustice.net

webmaster@debtjustice.net



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Friday, April 18, 2008

Critical Illness Insurance. Do you really need it, or is it a waste of time?

GREAT NEWS! There s now a one in five chance of you winning the lottery before you retire. Getting excited? Think it s just a matter of time before you win? Think again, it s not going to happen - but it got you thinking! Now think of the same odds but this time about bad news. There is a 1 in 5 chance for men and a 1 in 6 chance for women that a long-term critical illness will prevent them from working. Sorry - this time it s true. Insurance cannot change those odds but it can alleviate the potential financial wreckage caused by being unable to work through long-term illness and still having a family and home to support. Convention declares that every good family man should have life insurance. It s easily understood, it s accepted and your next door neighbour has it too. But what about it s close cousin critical illness insurance? You ll have to walk several streets to find someone who has it. Given the odds, why? After all it pays out a tax-free lump sum immediately an insured critical illness is diagnosed. The usual reason given is its expense. Yes it is more expensive than life insurance but after all it s providing cover for a greater risk. You re much more likely to experience a critical illness than die before your normal retirement age. Indeed, the average age for a claim is 47. So clearly there is much more to the public s resistance. Not understanding the risks or head in the sand syndrome are certainly major factors. After all a lzheimer s disease, bacterial meningitis, brain tumours and leukaemia plus the long list of other illnesses typically covered by critical illness insurance, are not matters we care to think of nor know much about. Could there be another reason? Well there have been repeated newspaper articles about people who claim on their critical illness policy only to have it turned down on an apparent technicality the inference being that the insurance company cannot be trusted. Indeed, Standard Life freely admits that it turns down around 20 % of critical illness claims. The truth is that behind every story of rejection there s a harrowing story of illness, distress and sorrow - and potential copy for the journalist. But that in itself, is not evidence that the insurance company is guilty of devious behaviour. Yes insurance companies do make mistakes, but more often than not the claim was invalid from the outset. There are two main causes. Firstly, the policyholder is claiming for an illness that is not one of the critical illnesses scheduled in the policy documentation. Regrettable, but it s a fact that if the illness is not listed it isn t insured and the policy won t pay out. The moral is to closely compare the illnesses covered by competing insurance companies and buy the one with the most extensive coverage of illnesses. If you don t, sods law will prevail . The second major reason for refusal is a failure to disclose all relevant matters on the original application form. For example, if the applicant fails to disclose in response to the insurance company s questions that his father a died of a heart attack aged 50 or that he is having medical tests for headaches, then the insurance company will wrongly assess the risks it is being invited to insure. Had the insurance company known this extra information they might have increased the premium, or asked the applicant to go for a medical examination, or waited for the outcome of tests, or even refused to provide cover. By failing to disclose, the applicant has effectively obtained cover on false pretences or at least on inaccurate information. Thereby lies the second moral. Always provide the truth and the full truth on your application form. Anything remotely relevant to your medical condition must be disclosed. All this points to the need for professional insurance advice. Critical Illness policies do vary and it can take an experienced eye to evaluate the best policy for your circumstances and pocket. This doesn t mean that you have to miss out on the discounted premiums available online - but do thoroughly talk it through with one of their telephone based advisers and do make sure you read the schedule of claimable illnesses when it arrives in the post. Then sit back knowing you ve taken another important step to protect your family s finances. Lets all hope that you re one of the majority who are happy never to claim. It s now time to concentrate on enjoying life. Michael Challiner has 15 years experience in financial services marketing at senior level. Michael now works as the editor of Express Life Insurance Futher reading What is Critical Illness Insurance.Futher reading Critical Illness Information Resource



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