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When pigs can fly...If you wanted to bring a class action against an insurance company for raising their rates due to bad assumptions, you'd have to bring a class action suit against every LTCi carrier on the planet.
You can't target the company for it's raising of rates as they disclaim that......I think where you can hit them is in their faulty underwriting practices and pricing.
Every company claims their rate increases are justified.
Their 4 main excuses are:
1) Policyholders are not dropping their policies as expected. So, this is an error in the company's methodology, right?
When this business started back in the early 1980s, it was a brand new product with no actuarial history. Actuaries looked at Medicare Supplementals for their statistics and saw that 8% of all policyholders dropped thier coverage. So, they used an 8% lapse rate. Would this still apply to policies issued 20 years later after all that prior claims experience?
The problem is that the actual lapse rate was much less @3%-4%. Carriers like nothing more than having a policyholder pay premiums for 10 years and lapse their coverage without the company paying claims. The difference of that 4%-5% cost the carriers a fortune of unexpected claims.
Again, the company made major mistakes....if a life company makes mistakes with their products of this magnitude, they pay for it in litigation.
2) Second on the list is that policyholders are going on claim sooner, younger & longer than anticipated. People are living longer and therefore spending more time in a LTC situation. (Which, actually shows you the value of a LTC policy)
Here's what I don't get....what age did they assume insureds would go on claim.....infinity???
3) Third up is the unanticipated lower interest rates. The company's reserves are sitting in accounts earning substantially lower interest than anticipated.
4) And finally, certain benefits of a policy were also based on false assumptions. It turns out that the costs for inflation riders, particullarly the 5% compound was way underpriced as was the lifetime/unlimited benefit option.
How does an insurance company screw up a 5% compounding?? Makes no sense to me, as they take the benefit x 5% add to the original benefit, repeat.
These 4 reasons are carbon copy for every company's bulletins to both agents and policyholders as to why these increases are justified.
Eventually they will get it right. Let's just hope when they do, it will be priced where it's affordable.
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