M II A II R II K
Senior Member
At all income levels, most drivers would save money if they paid for insurance by the mile
http://www.streetsblog.org/2011/01/...-you-drive-insurance-which-could-cut-traffic/
http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/papers/2008/07_payd_bordoffnoel/07_payd_bordoffnoel.pdf
http://www.streetsblog.org/2011/01/...-you-drive-insurance-which-could-cut-traffic/
http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/papers/2008/07_payd_bordoffnoel/07_payd_bordoffnoel.pdf
It could reduce driving statewide by more than eleven percent, put money in the pocket of two-thirds of the state’s motorists and put little to no strain on the government budget. That sounds-too-good-to-be-true idea is called pay-as-you-drive insurance, and the city DOT is looking into how it might work in New York.
The idea is simple. Right now, most car insurance policies cost the same whether you drive 500 miles in a year or 50,000. While some of the costs of car-ownership change based on how you drive, like fuel or maintenance, insurance doesn’t. If insurance premiums rose with every mile you drove, it would be one more incentive for drivers to keep the mileage down.
In fact, it would be a pretty hefty incentive, according to a 2008 Brookings Institution report on the subject. They found that if all drivers paid for insurance by the mile, total driving would drop by eight percent. That’s the equivalent of gas prices jumping by $1 per gallon, but in the form of a carrot, not a stick. In New York State, where insurance premiums are high, they estimated it could provide an 11.5 percent reduction in driving.
There’s also a big market for pay-as-you-drive insurance. As you’d expect, those who drive more also tend to crash more and cost the insurance companies more. In essence, low-mileage drivers subsidize high-mileage drivers on average. With pay-as-you-drive, insurers could lure away the low-cost drivers with lower rates, a win-win for both those groups.
And because of the uneven distribution of miles driven, two-thirds of drivers nationwide would save money under a pay-as-you-drive system, according to the Brookings report. Since lower-income drivers tend to drive shorter distances already, the distributive effect of the policy is also progressive, according to Brookings.
So why isn’t pay-as-you-drive already more popular? One reason is technology: in the past, it was difficult to accurately track how far people drove. With both electronic odometers that are harder to tamper with and GPS devices, however, measurement isn’t a big obstacle anymore.
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