The Prince George Citizen

Poor decisions at ICBC to blame for crisis, Fraser Institute says

- Citizen news service

VANCOUVER — A study from a Vancouver-based public policy think tank blames what it terms “misguided decisions” and runaway costs for the current financial crisis at the Insurance Corporatio­n of British Columbia.

The Fraser Institute study, authored by John Chant, a professor emeritus of economics at Simon Fraser University, finds the corporatio­n’s problems began years ago and grew steadily worse with government inaction.

The newly elected New Democrat government confirms the corporatio­n faces a $1.3 billion loss this fiscal year and Chant says the public insurer had a $889 million loss last year.

He says the corporatio­n’s basic insurance operation, which has a monopoly over mandatory coverage, suffered persistent losses for years but received infusions of $1.4 billion between 2010 and 2017 from the then-profitable optional insurance side of the business.

The former Liberal government also transferre­d $1.2 billion to provincial coffers from optional insurance but Chant says when that side of the corporatio­n also began losing money, no action was taken to boost rates or stop the slide.

The corporatio­n’s current financial position is unsustaina­ble, he says, noting rate hikes totalling 44 per cent would have been required between 2015 and 2017 just to offset rising costs.

“Faced with exploding costs, the previous B.C. government had a choice: contain the costs, take the unpopular decision to increase rates substantia­lly, or enact large-scale reform of the basic auto insurance system in the province. In the end, the government chose to do nothing,” Chant says in a news release.

No one from the Liberal Opposition was available to comment on the report.

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