Mississippi Has Among Highest Uninsured Motorists
MALVERN, Pa.—Across the United States, the estimated percentage of uninsured motorists trended down in 2010, 2011 and 2012, according to new estimates from the Insurance Research Council (IRC). In 2003, a cyclical high of 14.9 percent of drivers were uninsured, while the IRC’s most recent findings show the ratio has fallen to 12.6 percent.
In the new study Uninsured Motorists, 2014 Edition, the IRC estimates the percentage of uninsured drivers nationally and in individual states, based on a ratio of insurance claims made by individuals who were injured by uninsured drivers to claims made by those who were injured by insured drivers.
Nationally, the number of uninsured peaked at 29.9 million in 2009 and moderately declined thereafter to 29.7 million in 2012. Statewide, the uninsured motorist problem varied, with the highest total numbers in:
- California (4.1 million)
- Florida (3.2 million)
- Texas (1.6 million)
In addition, the states with the highest estimated percentages of uninsured motorists are:
- Oklahoma (26%)
- Florida (24%)
- Mississippi (23%)
- New Mexico (22%)
- Michigan (21%)
This Uninsured Motorists study also estimated the total claim payments to the uninsured. Discounting fatalities and total permanent disability claims, the IRC estimates that $2.6 billion was paid in the U.S. on 2012 uninsured motorists claims. Despite the declining trend in uninsured rates over the last decade, the aforementioned total claim payment amount is up 75 percent over the last 10 years and translated to $14 per insured individual in 2012.
“Responsible drivers who pay for insurance end up also paying for injuries caused by uninsured drivers,” said Elizabeth A. Sprinkel, CPCU, senior vice president of the IRC. “The declining trend in the percentage of uninsured motorists is a positive development for consumers; however, the heightened levels of uninsured motorists and the rising claim payments involved still remain a concern for insured drivers, insurers and policymakers.”
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