Fraud is pushing car insurance premiums up faster than ever, according to AA Insurance.
This is echoed in a report published 4 September, 2010 by Moneysupermarket.com, which suggests a fifth of young drivers has ‘staged’ an accident.
The AA has been tracking the quarterly movement of average car insurance premiums across the industry for 16 years and premiums are now rising at their fastest ever rate. The price of a typical comprehensive car insurance premium, currently about £704, rose by an unprecedented 30.9% over the past year.
In just three months, premiums rose on average by 11.5 per cent and, for drivers under the age of 30, by 13.4 per cent to £1,128.
While the organised ‘cash for crash’ scams that ripped millions of pounds off insurers have made headlines, the problem of car insurance fraud is much deeper and has become one of the principle drivers of insurance premium inflation.
According to some industry commentators, over the past year, for every £100 taken in premiums, insurers have been paying out up to £122 – which, is simply not sustainable and it’s honest drivers who are paying for it.
Defrauding insurance companies is not a victimless crime because it affects all honest drivers.
Also dishonest claims are being encouraged by a fast-growing ‘black market' of personal injury claim lawyers who are only too ready to promote ‘free’ cash by claiming for relatively minor, or even non-existent, injury that people would otherwise not have thought to claim for before.
Other common forms of fraud include ‘fronting’, where a named driver (often a young person on a parent’s policy) is in fact the main driver; withholding information such as past claims or convictions; telling lies about age, where the car is kept or occupation; and even cancelling direct debit payments to insurers once their documents have been deliver