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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Leavell
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/7/07
HB
SHORT TITLE Property and Casualty Insurance Rate Forms
SB 483
ANALYST Earnest
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Public Regulation Commission (PRC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 438 makes significant changes to the regulation of property of casualty insurance.
This bill intends to eliminate rate regulation of property and casualty insurance and rely on
market forces for rate setting. The Superintendent of Insurance would no longer be required to
approve rate changes. The bill would require the Superintendent to promulgate automobile and
homeowners insurance premium comparison guides for consumers. It would require insurance
companies to alert consumers of their right to obtain a detailed description of the reasons why
their automobile or homeowners insurance premiums have changed upon policy renewal. It
would give the superintendent the authority to require automobile and homeowners insurers to
file their underwriting guidelines and to cease underwriting practices that are vague or unfairly
discriminatory. The bill increases the fines levied against insurance companies that violate the
Insurance Rate Regulation Law.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The PRC did not identify any fiscal impact from this legislation. However, the bill increases
maximum penalties for not complying with the act from $50 to $10,000 and for willful violation
from $500 to $25,000.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 483 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The bill alters the Insurance Division role in regulation of the property and casualty insurance.
Instead of rate setting, Insurance Division would be required to provide information on insurance
rates to consumers. Property and casualty insurers would be required file rates with the division
but the rates would not be subject to regulation. However, the bill maintains prior approval
requirements for rates in insurance markets that the Superintendent determines are not
adequately competitive as well as for key ingredients of workers compensation insurance rates.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
PRC finds that this bill would free up the Insurance Division’s limited actuarial resources to
focus on regulating rates for those types of insurance where adequate competition does not exist,
on creating and maintaining premium comparison guides for consumers, and on monitoring
levels of competition in the New Mexico insurance marketplace.
BE/nt