Are you ready for pay as you go car insurance?
Filed under: Insurance, Transportation
Pay as you go isn't just for cell phones anymore, it turns out some auto insurance companies are switching to pay as you go plans in order to offer better rates to customers. Traditionally insurance rates are based on, among many things, the estimated miles that each driver will travel during a year. Many people argue that these estimates are inaccurate and that a pay as you go plan would provide consumers with an incentive to drive less. Legislation is currently underway in California to let insurance companies base rates on actual miles traveled it is estimated that it would be the equivalent of removing 10 million cars from the road!While California is only on the cusp of letting insurance providers make use of this information to determine what your premium will be at least one other company is already offering pay as you go insurance rates in several states. Progressive offers a My Rate program in four states and requires that users hook up a device to their car which tracks the miles traveled as well as how you drive to recalculate your rate every 6 months.
Both of these plans have some similarities, neither will track where you go with GPS and both of them are under fire by privacy groups. The programs differ in that the My Rate plan from Progressive tracks WHEN and HOW you drive in order to determine your insurance rate. In California, much to the chagrin of insurers, neither of these pieces of information can be tracked.
You might think that by now, every angle of the gas price hike has been explored, but there are a couple of new nuggets out today. One, from
It's possible that I'm becoming a cold-hearted miser but many of the stories about the havoc wreaked by rising gas prices and a recessionary environment strike me as, well, kind of funny in that they expose the culture of entitlement that has taken hold of our country.
With gas prices rising steadily over the past decade -- even before the recent levitation -- there's been a question nagging at economists: at one point would consumers break? When would the elasticity of demand start to show? Obviously Americans would drive a lot less if gas were $35 per gallon, but at would point would consumption start to slow.
This may seem obvious, but apparently it isn't: waiting to get more gas for your car until the very last minute is not a good way to save money. It's a stupid way to not save money and maybe waste a ton of money and get stranded somewhere.
If soaring gas prices are hitting your wallet, the most obvious way to cut back on the expense is to reduce the amount of driving you do and the size of the car that you drive.
The combination of cell phones and driving is a hot button issue these days, and well it should be. My research indicates that cell phone- related crash statistics are sketchy at best but it seems that almost everyone agrees
A CNN/Opinion Research Corp. poll
I didn't get my driver's license until I was 18, for 2 reasons: first, I was afraid of driving and secondly, as geeky as this sounds, I preferred to save my money and invest it, not blow it on a car, sky-high insurance premiums, and increasingly expensive gas. And then there are the other expenses that come with having a car: increased meals out, $1.29 a bottle water at convenience stores and, of course, repairs.
So I'm furious about the continually creep upward of gas prices, and it hits me. There are web sites out there that will tell you how to find cheap gas.