MA may have the very highest share of its market in the assigned risk pool of any state. It is the highest of 25 or so states listed by NCCI. Rate suppression is the most likely explanation.
1) I find it interesting, although it is Massachusetts so brushing your teeth in the morning (in your own home) is probably regulated by the Attorney General’s office, that the Attorney General’s office has anything to do with dictating what the Insurance Department should approve.
2) They won’t be happy until private insurers completely walk from the state and every risk is in the state pool (thereby under the control of the Democratically controlled legislature, thereby giving them more to raid when they overspend and cannot find revenue).
MA may have the very highest share of its market in the assigned risk pool of any state. It is the highest of 25 or so states listed by NCCI. Rate suppression is the most likely explanation.
1) I find it interesting, although it is Massachusetts so brushing your teeth in the morning (in your own home) is probably regulated by the Attorney General’s office, that the Attorney General’s office has anything to do with dictating what the Insurance Department should approve.
2) They won’t be happy until private insurers completely walk from the state and every risk is in the state pool (thereby under the control of the Democratically controlled legislature, thereby giving them more to raid when they overspend and cannot find revenue).