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Insurers' profits soar while taxpayers count
the cost
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - April 12, 2004
CONTACT: Natasha Maehara 07 3221 1204 or 0414 783 502
As predicted, restrictions on injury
compensation payouts have delivered a huge boost in insurance company
profits and a crisis in public hospitals that governments are finding
impossible to fund.
Accident victims used to be able to get private medical
help paid for by the reckless person's insurance company. Now, private
medical treatment is now denied to most accident victims. This is the
result of Civil Liability laws that excuse law-breakers from responsibility.
The new laws shift the cost of the damage away from the
at-fault person and their insurer, to the victim and the taxpayer. This
has meant a rush on public hospitals as accident victims seek medical
help from the only places they can afford.
But as taxpayers count the increasing cost of caring for accident victims
in the public system, all four Australian insurers have boasted record
profits.
In March, QBE posted an annual profit of $572 million on
a wave of premium increases and "no large claims". Suncorp stunned
with a jump in annualised profit to a record $562 million. IAG is also
swimming in cash with a 500% profit increase to over $600 million and
Promina Insurance announced a $298 million profit.
It was the insurance industry that waged a fear and misinformation
campaign to convince law-makers to rush through Civil Liability laws without
proper debate. They argued that 'increased litigation' was the cause of
industry problems that have since been blamed on entirely different factors.
Their stunning victory secured an 80% reduction in the number of injury
claims they previously had to pay.
Consumers and taxpayers are in reality subsidising the big
end of town who are revelling in massive salaries for insurance executive,
surging share prices and huge dividend cheques.
Although insurers refuse to reduce inflated premiums and
are clearly embarrassed by their sudden surge in profits, the politicians
who were so eager to sell consumers' rights down the drain have yet to
face the music for the debacle they allowed.
As the public hospital scandal escalates, the foolishness
of exempting wrongdoers and their insurers of accountability for the cost
of injuries they inflict, will become clearer even to those previously
blinded by anti-consumer prejudice.
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