The National Auto Agents Alliance recently issued a statement that credit scoring is “unreliable, inaccurate, and so against public interest as to endanger the insurance industry to the wrath of the public.” NAAA President James W. Holthaus commended Georgia Commissioner of Insurance John W. Oxendine’s plan to investigate the use of credit scores for underwriting and/or rate determination in Georgia. “Credit scoring, while new to insurance rate making, should at the very least have to be substantiated by no less rigorous actuarial standards than other rate making criteria. The recent effort by insurers to hide behind the third-party provider of the data is unacceptable,” Holthaus stated. “Credit scoring is a ‘black box’ procedure that may deny otherwise acceptable insureds insurance coverage at rates that are appropriate to their risk rating factors.”
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
US Efforts to End Iran War Stumble as Ship Seized Near UAE
Florida, Louisiana Insurer Safepoint Reveals 97% Revenue Surge in IPO filing
Ex-NFL Player Sentenced to 16 Years in Prison for $200M Medicare Fraud Scheme
Lawyers, Traders Among 30 Charged in Global Insider Trading Case 


