I recently asked my insurers what effect changing the second driver would have. It upped the price from a retired ex PSV Ambulance driver with unblemished record, to a mid 50's woman with one record of a hit years ago. It upped the price by maybe £20 in £200 ish. So I said well what if I didn't have a second driver? that upped the price by maybe £10. neither ladies live at the same address and have their own car. The car is low mileage anyway.
After questioning the logic of this they just (verbally) shrugged, that is the way the statistics tell them! Statistics, schmistics. Bias in data for AI is a well known problem, but not to insurance companies!
The older driver was about to be loaded with flood insurance on her house which is 10 ft above a sloping road, which is 60 ft above the main road which is another 20 ft above a stream which would incapacitate a sizeable industrial estate never known to be so! PostCode is all they could squawk. As if there aren't apps and website that will tell them of flood risk. A look at an OS map would tell them, if they knew how to use one. SatNavs wouldn't cut that one!
I was once told to pay for a radiator after a bump, because they wear out! Since when did modern cars' radiators need repair in 200,000 miles?
|