News
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Former Fed Chairman Volcker: Bring Back a Version of Glass-Steagall
October 27, 2009
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker wants the nation's banks to be prohibited from owning and trading risky securities. He is proposing that commercial banking be separated from investment operations. To achieve that goal, Congress would have to enact a modern-day version of the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act, which mandated separation.
Volcker was chairman of the Fed from 1979 to 1987, and he currently serves as head of President Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, which makes him the administration's most prominent outside economic adviser. The problem for Volcker is he doesn't seem to have great influence within the administration. At age 82, he is dealing with Treasury officials who are young enough to be his grandchildren. More importantly, they are veterans of investment banks. The administration has said it will not separate commercial banking from investment operations.
Volcker's proposal would roll back the nation's commercial banks to an earlier era, when they were restricted to commercial banking and prohibited from engaging in risky Wall Street activities. The Obama team, in contrast, would let the giants survive, but would regulate them extensively, so they could not get themselves and the nation into trouble again.
"The banks are there to serve the public," Volcker said in an interview with the New York Times. "And that is what they should concentrate on. These other activities create conflicts of interest. They create risks, and if you try to control the risks with supervision, that just creates friction and difficulties" and ultimately fails. Volcker wants to break up the financial giants, which have been getting even bigger since the federal government bailed them out.
The remarks by Volcker were echoed in a recent speech by Bank of England Governor Mervyn King. "The massive support extended to the banking sector around the world, while necessary to avert economic disaster, has created possibly the biggest moral hazard in history," King said in a speech in Scotland. "The 'too important to fail' problem is too important to ignore. Never in the field of financial endeavor has so much money been owed by so few to so many. And, one might add, so far with little real reform."
"People say I'm old-fashioned and banks can no longer be separated from nonbank activity," Volcker said in the interview, acknowledging criticism that he is nostalgic for an earlier era. "That argument," he added ruefully, "brought us to where we are today."
Volcker Fails to Sell a Bank Strategy (New York Times 10/20/09)
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An Example of Hypocrisy: Bankers Argue Against Federal Regulator - For Them
October 21, 2009
Here's a quick quiz. Which industry groups said this?:
"…the current regulatory structure is complex, but variety in regulatory perspective provides a 'healthy check against any one regulator neglecting its duties.'"
Was it PIA, arguing against a federal insurance regulator and in favor of state regulation? It could have been, but in this case it was not.
The groups making this robust argument against consolidating regulatory authority in one federal regulator are … The American Bankers Association (ABA) and the Independent Community Bankers of America (ICBA). Both groups sent a letter to Senate Banking Chairman Chris Dodd (D-Conn.), who is a leading proponent of the single regulator concept for banks, urging him to maintain the system of multiple regulators at the federal and state level.
What It Means to Agents: It is interesting to note that the same groups who argue vehemently that state regulation of insurance is duplicitave and inefficient and want a federal insurance regulator suddenly start singing a different tune - the one independent agents sing - when they find it to their advantage.
Webster's dictionary defines hypocricy as "a feigning to believe what one does not." Something to keep in mind the next time these bankers get back up on their high horses and start preaching sermons about the benefits of federal regulation - for us, but not for them.
Bankers Oppose Plans to Consolidate Regulators (FinReg21 10/21/09)
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PIA Member on Turning 100 - "I Don't Feel or Think Old"
September 29, 2009
Astrid Thoenig works full time in bookkeeping, A/P and general administrative support for the Thorton Agency Inc., a PIA member agency in Parsippany, New Jersey. Thoenig works five days a week and brings work home in the evenings. But last week, she spent a little extra time at her desk at the agency opening birthday cards that said, "Happy 100th."
Thoenig was interrupted by a steady stream of deliverymen bringing bouquets, chocolate-dipped strawberries and stacks of cards to the Thornton Insurance agency in Parsippany, New Jersey where she's been answering phones, keeping financial records, handling payroll and typing up documents for 32 years.
"It's another day - it's hard to explain," Thoenig said of turning 100. "I don't feel old, and I don't think old." Born Sept. 24, 1909, in Bloomfield, New Jersey, Thoenig's earliest memories start in 1918, when she witnessed something so traumatic, "it erased all memories of my childhood before that."
"I remember coming down the stairs from my bedroom and saw these two coffins in the living room: one white, for my sister, and the other for the grown person," she said, recalling how the flu pandemic of 1918 killed her father and her 10-year-old sister within hours of one another. "To see my father and sister -- of all the things I can't remember - that's very vivid in my mind."
Thoenig, her remaining sister, and her mother also were infected but survived. Her mother lived until 101 and her sister, who suffered permanent hearing loss from the illness, was 95 when she died.Thoenig says "thinking young" has helped her take a century's worth of technological changes in stride. The daughter of Swedish immigrants, she credits her strong constitution, a wonderful family and getting up every day to get dressed and go to work with keeping her mind sharp. She still drove until age 98 when a botched hip operation made it difficult to get around.
She works alongside her son, John Thornton, who drives her to work, and grandson Peter at the PIA member, family-owned insurance agency.New Jersey Insurance Worker on Turning 100 (Associated Press 9/28/09)
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PIA's Page, Borowski Participate in Treasury Panel on Insurance Literacy
October 29, 2008
PIA National Immediate Past President Robert Page and Senior Vice President Patricia A. Borowski participated in a panel during the National Roundtable on Insurance Literacy on October 15. The panel was conducted by the Financial Literacy and Education Commission of the U.S. Treasury Department. Page and Borowski were panelists on Face to Face with the Consumer: A Report from the Frontlines, which covered the perspective of insurance agents in educating consumers about their options, including bad decisions witnessed by agents and lessons learned.
Page recounted his experiences with his clients in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Ivan, which caused damage in his southern Louisiana community of Houma.
"On behalf of the member agencies of PIA National, I thank you for the opportunity to participate in this conference," Page said. "As you clearly see, we are already well engaged in all parts of the insurance sector, providing accurate educational information about insurance. These are messages and efforts about many insurance issues that consumers need to be aware of and understand when they engage in various transactions conducted in the business of insurance."
The Financial Literacy and Education Commission was established under the Financial Literacy and Education Improvement Act, which was part of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions (FACT) Act of 2003, to improve financial literacy and education of persons in the United States. The Commission is headed by the U.S. Treasury Secretary. It coordinates the financial education efforts throughout the federal government, supports the promotion of financial literacy by the private sector while also encouraging the synchronization of efforts between the public and private sectors.
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PIA's Roadmap to State Regulatory Modernization
June 3, 2008
A special edition of PIA Connection has been published that details "PIA's Roadmap to State Regulatory Modernization."
"While it is critical that we speak out against proposals that would be bad for PIA members, it is also important that PIA work to bring about positive change as we see it," said PIA National President Robert Page, writing in his monthly letter in the magazine. "The first step is defining the positive changes we want and presenting a path to achieve them. This special issue of PIA Connection is devoted exclusively to PIA's Roadmap to State Regulatory Modernization."
"For the better part of the past year, PIA National's member policy committees have engaged in an ongoing review of the various reform proposals and approaches," Page said. "They have also reviewed current established PIA policy, to assess how much of our PIA plan has already been accomplished by the hard work of PIA states and members, and then determine our association's ongoing strategy. As part of this process, our committees have developed and approved PIA's own blueprint for reform, which is what you see detailed in this issue of our magazine."The PIA Roadmap to State Regulatory Modernization:
- Preserves the state-based structure of insurance oversight.
- Achieves insurance regulatory modernization.
- Protects the integrity and standing of state insurance law.
- Ensures competitive equity for all marketplace participants in an efficient and cost-effective manner.
The hard copy of this special edition of the PIA Connection is in the mail, but you can read it now online here. If you would like to begin by reading President Robert Page's special letter regarding the PIA Roadmap, you can access it here.
Robert Page's President's Letter
Special Edition of PIA Connection (PDF file)
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PIA Promotes Mike Becker to Director of Federal Affairs
June 3, 2008
PIA National has announced the promotion of Mike Becker to Director of Federal Affairs. Since joining PIA, Becker has managed the day-to-day responsibilities associated with running the Professional Insurance Agents Political Action Committee (PIAPAC), including PAC governance and oversight, grassroots initiatives and fundraising. He also serves as staff liaison to the PIAPAC Board of Directors.
"We congratulate Mike Becker on his promotion and look forward to benefiting from his expertise," said PIA National Executive Vice President & CEO Leonard Brevik, in making the announcement. "Mike brings a wealth of talent and political acumen to PIA's Capitol Hill advocacy on behalf of professional insurance agents."
It is with sadness that PIA National also announced the resignation of Assistant Vice President for Government Affairs Kellie Bray, to accept a position as Government Affairs Leader for CropLife America. Bray joined PIA in 2001.
"PIA National has benefited greatly from Kellie Bray's work for us over the past seven years," said PIA National Senior Vice President Patricia A. Borowski. "PIA members greatly appreciate all of her excellent efforts on their behalf. We wish Kellie continued success throughout her career." -
PIA Branding Program Wins Two MarCom Awards
November 7, 2007
WASHINGTON, November 7, 2007 - The Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals (AMCP) has selected the National Association of Professional Insurance Agents' "PIA Branding Program" as a recipient of two awards in its annual MarCom Awards competition.The PIA Branding Program was presented with a Platinum Award in the Corporate Branding category, one of a limited number of categories representing entire campaigns. The AMCP also presented the PIA Branding Program with a Gold Award in the Advertising Campaign category.
"PIA is honored to be recognized by the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals with these MarCom Awards," said PIA National President Robert Page. "These awards are a testament to the quality of the branding materials PIA makes available to its members through the PIA Branding Program, Local Agents Serving Main Street America SM."
"Almost daily we hear from agents who see the benefit of branding their agencies using the advertisements PIA makes available through the PIA Branding Program," Page said. "It is especially gratifying to have our program recognized for excellence in competitions conducted by some of the most prestigious organizations involved in marketing and advertising."
The MarCom Awards is an international, creative competition that recognizes outstanding creative achievement by marketing and communication professionals. There were over 5,000 entries from throughout the United States and several foreign countries in the 2007 competition, perhaps the largest and most respected of its type in the world.
During 2007, the PIA Branding Program also received two other prestigious awards. The program was named a Gold Award recipient of the Hermes Creative Awards 2007 competition by the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals. And the PIA Branding Program received an APEX Award for Publication Excellence.Additional information about the PIA Branding Program is available on PIA National's website.
Founded in 1931, PIA is a national trade association that represents member insurance agents and their employees who sell and service all kinds of insurance, but specialize in coverage of automobiles, homes and businesses. PIA members are Local Agents Serving Main Street America (SM). PIA's web address is www.pianet.com. -
Court Decisions on Contingent Commissions a Major Win for PIA Agents
October 10, 2007
Last week PIA reported on a series of decisions that, when taken together, reaffirm the legal arguments made by PIA in our court filings over the past two years. The September 28 ruling by a federal judge dismissing the remaining racketeering claims pending against several dozen insurers and brokers in a class action lawsuit is significant is several respects.
The decisions reaffirm that receiving contingent compensation is neither illegal nor unethical, and that the kind of flawed disclosure regimes contained in questionable settlement agreements which were selectively imposed on Main Street agents who were never accused of any wrongdoing, are not required by the law.
Background: In the wake of scandals stemming from industry wide investigations by then-New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer into bid-rigging and client-steering allegations against a handful of insurers and mega-brokers, settlement agreements were negotiated. Some called for outright bans on the payment of contingent commissions, while others proscribed a disclosure regime.
But instead of being applied just to those suspected of wrongdoing, these agreements were applied to all Main Street agents in all jurisdictions nationwide. While those suspected of wrongdoing were included in the negotiations leading to these agreements, Main Street agents were shut out, but then included in the sanctions that were imposed. Then, to add insult to our injury, some of those suspected of wrongdoing subsequently had the sanctions against them reduced by authorities, while the restrictions on Main Street agents were kept in place!
In short, Main Street agents were getting used. That's why PIA decided to fight back. PIA made clear from the outset that we would write, speak, act and litigate - in short, we would fight hard to defend the integrity of PIA members.
PIA had the fortitude of character to stand up when others were retreating, making clear to the media, insurers, insurance regulators, state AGs and other insurance trade associations that adverse comments and actions blindly taken against retail Main Street agencies were factually and legally wrong, unfair and would not be tolerated. PIA was the first to challenge such actions in court. PIA provided the most comprehensive legal briefs in the federal district court action.
PIA was the only insurance trade association that provided the NAIC with the correct way to draft a producer compensation disclosure model and, when they did not act on our advice, we opposed their disclosure in the states. As a result, no state ever adopted the flawed NAIC disclosure model.
It has been a long, hard struggle. Although some legal skirmishes may remain, PIA members have won a major victory in the battle to defend the integrity of all PIA members and protect their business interests.
Courts Underscore Receiving Producer Compensation is Legal (PIA 10/2/07)
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PIA Branding Program Wins APEX Award of Excellence
July 23, 2007
Second Award in Two Weeks for "Local Agents Serving Main Street America" (SM)
WASHINGTON, July 26, 2007 - The National Association of Professional Insurance Agents' (PIA National) "PIA Branding Program" has been named an APEX Awards for Publication Excellence award winner.
The PIA Branding Program, Local Agents Serving Main Street America (SM), is an advertising and promotional campaign available at no additional cost to all PIA member agencies throughout the nation. The program currently consists of twenty-one print advertisements with 251 variations that PIA members can run in their local publications.
The APEX Awards for Publication Excellence is an annual competition for writers, editors, publications staff and business and nonprofit communicators. APEX Awards are based on excellence in graphic design, editorial content and the ability to achieve overall communications excellence. The PIA Branding Program was presented with the prestigious APEX Award of Excellence in the Marketing and Public Relations Campaigns category.
"PIA is honored to receive the APEX 2007 Award of Excellence," said PIA National President Donna Pile. "Almost daily we hear from agents who see the benefit of branding their agencies using the advertisements PIA makes available through the PIA Branding Program. It's nice to have an independent group of professionals recognize the quality of this program."
The APEX award was the second in two weeks for the PIA Branding Program. The program was previously named a Gold Award recipient of the Hermes Creative Awards 2007 competition. The Hermes Creative Awards program is administered and judged by the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals. The awards program is an international competition for creative professionals involved in the concept, writing and design of traditional materials and programs, and emerging technologies.
Additional information about the PIA Branding Program is available on PIA National's website here.
Founded in 1931, PIA is a national trade association that represents member insurance agents and their employees who sell and service all kinds of insurance, but specialize in coverage of automobiles, homes and businesses. PIA members are Local Agents Serving Main Street America (SM). PIA's web address is www.pianet.com.
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PIA's 75th Anniversary
January 3, 2006
By Ray L. Peretti
President
PIA NationalThe year 2006 marks an auspicious milestone for PIA. It is our association's 75th anniversary. In 1931, a group of independent insurance agents gathered together in Washington, D.C. and held the first meeting of the National Association of Mutual Insurance Agents.
NAMIA's name was changed to the National Association of Professional Insurance Agents in the bicentennial year of 1976. PIA's name was changed, but the mission remains the same.
The mission statement of PIA National is: "To promote, protect and defend the integrity of our members, the value of their profession and the success of their businesses."
And while it is great to make note the past, PIA's focus is always on the future success of PIA member agencies. That's why the PIA National Board of Directors decided that the best way to celebrate our association's 75th anniversary is to invest in PIA's future - not throw a party.
PIA's 75th anniversary provides our association with a unique opportunity to let all the players in our industry, as well as policymakers and industry colleagues, know that PIA is strong, active, influential and committed to growth and success for many years to come.
PIA National staff has developed a coordinated strategy of enhanced promotion and engagement that will occur throughout 2006. Beginning in January and continuing throughout the year, you will be seeing an aggressive national ad campaign by PIA in many industry publications, including the National Underwriter and Rough Notes. PIA affiliates will have the opportunity to participate in coordination with this campaign.
The other elements of this strategy will be announced as the year progresses.
All activities under the umbrella of the 75th Anniversary will be leveraged to build the PIA brand and increase membership, making PIA a stronger organization that is better equipped to directly benefit its members. We will do this by substantially raising PIA's profile among independent insurance agents, the insurance industry generally and those policymakers we need to influence.
Advocating for Agents
Advocacy by an association is comprised of the positions it takes on key legislative and regulatory issues and its effectiveness at pursuing its agenda. It encompasses grassroots advocacy as well as lobbying on Capitol Hill, in the state legislatures, at the NAIC, NCOIL and NCSL - and, when necessary, in the court of public opinion.
PIA members must continue this long heritage of personal, direct engagement in the state and federal political process. This involves knowing your state representatives, commissioners and other officials. It involves knowing your Members of Congress, and sharing those contacts with your state and national PIA, so that we can work with you and get those leaders to "get things done!"
It is sharing with policymakers on a regular basis what is important to your agency and how that affects you and your clients in your community. It is being a visible part of their campaign efforts. This is especially important to PIA members' individual interests on federal issues, because it take the votes of a majority in both the House and Senate - all coming from various states - to achieve the federal legislative victories that you need!
PIA's ability to engage in detailed policy analysis at the NAIC, as well as in the various states, assures that PIA members' interests are being protected.
Carrier advocacy is anot
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PIA Response to Hurricane Katrina Detailed in November Rough Notes Article
November 8, 2005
PIA's efforts to help Gulf Coast agents and their clients in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina were detailed in an article in the November 2005 Rough Notes magazine.
"The PIA issued a call to members of the association from across the country to offer temporary housing assistance as needed to independent agents in the areas damaged by Hurricane Katrina," the article noted. "From its headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia, PIA National immediately began to coordinate the relief effort with PIA state affiliate offices in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama."
"The PIA provided $100,000 in assistance to the three state affiliates hit by Katrina. Moreover, PIA National contacted state insurance regulators and federal authorities recommending they ease certain insurance regulations that apply to insurance claims processing to assist consumers beginning to cope with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. On behalf of PIA affiliates in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, PIA National transmitted a request that the appropriate state departments of insurance issue [certain directives and orders]."
In September, the National Underwriter published an article in which PIA members and affiliate executives from Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama shared their experiences.
Agents Respond to Hurricane Katrina (Rough Notes, November 2005)
Besieged Agents Need a Helping Hand (National Underwriter 9/19/05)
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PIA's Besesparis Discusses How the Media Covers Insurance in PR Week Magazine
November 8, 2005
There are regular disasters and extraordinary catastrophes, and the media cover both differently. That point was made by PIA National Vice President of Communications Ted Besesparis in an article that appeared in PR Week, a national publication for PR professionals. Besesparis was interviewed for the article along with Robert Hartwig, chief economist for the Insurance Information Institute; Tom McCoy, editor-in-chief of Rough Notes; and Mechell Clark, media relations manager with Aflac Insurance.
"Most disasters tend to play out over a shorter period of time, so you usually quickly see focused stories dealing with how to prepare for the next crisis," says Besesparis. "In a situation like Katrina, your second- and third-day stories have become second- and third-week stories because most reporters were dealing with the immediate situation for a lot longer."
Crises Spotlight Insurance Issues (PR Week 9/23/05)
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PIA's Pat Borowski Discusses PIA Natural Catastrophe Plan in CNN Interview
November 7, 2005
PIA National Senior Vice President Patricia A. Borowski discussed PIA's call on Congress to adopt and fund a coordinated natural disaster catastrophe program, during a nationally televised interview on CNN, on Saturday November 5.
Borowski appeared on the CNN real estate program Open House, hosted by CNN anchor Gerri Willis.
"In taking the model of the federal flood program, those that have the exposure and purchase the properties will be the ones to certainly pay the largest amount of that cost," said Borowski, elaborating on the proposal for a catastrophe fund that was adopted uninimously by the PIA National Board of Directors on September 11, 2005. "That will lessen the amount of money that the federal government and local governments and state governments already pay out."
"The federal efforts thus far have to be improved," Borowski said. "And part of that also is understanding that, as these insurance premium funds are created, they cannot be raided by subsequent decisions of Congress or any administration to be used for other purposes."
Joining Borowski on the CNN program was J. Robert Hunter, insurance director of the Consumer Federation of America (CFA). Despite the fact that PIA has strenuously objected to some of Mr. Hunter's statements in the past regarding the insurance industry in general and independent agents in particular, he did not attack PIA's proposal. Pressed by the host for his response, Hunter said, "Well, we have to wait for the details."
We are in the process of securing from CNN permission to post a video file of this program here on PIANET. Check back for the link.
For additional information, read PIA National's September 11, 2005 press release: PIA National Board Endorses Creation of Public-Private Natural Catastrophe Fund
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PIA Texas Agents Offer Office Space, Web Site Set Up for Agents Coping With Rita
September 27, 2005
As the evacuation preceding Hurricane Rita began, PIA agents were quick to lend a helping hand to their fellow agents who had to evacuate their offices. Agents located inland volunteered temporary office space to PIA agents who were displaced from their offices.
PIA has created a special Hurricane Rita Web Resource Center with information for Texas agents, including a PIA Preparedness Alert, ACORD forms and updates from the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI). This page will be updating this page continually as the situation warrants.PIA Hurricane Rita Resource Center
PIA Agents Lend Helping Hand in Texas (9/22/05)
PIA Agents Offer Office Space to Agents Fleeing Rita (Insurance Journal 9/23/05)
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Raising Up the Next Generation of PIA Members
September 1, 2005
It Is Our Responsibility to Ensure the Future of Our Industry and PIA
By Lewis L. Wilson
PIA National Director, New YorkThroughout my involvement in business, politics and PIA, one thing I have noticed is that there are few issues upon which almost everybody can agree.
In the agency business, there is one thing almost everyone believes: we need to do more to attract young people into our industry.
Those of us who have spent many years as independent insurance agents might like to think that we will be around forever - but we know better. As business owners, we know that no enterprise can achieve long-term success without attracting a steady stream of new talent that will one day be in charge.
Many of us who chose to work in the insurance industry made that decision because a family member was also in insurance. Involvement in the insurance industry is often something that gets handed down from one generation to the next. But in today's world, perpetuation by tradition isn't enough.
If we want the American Agency System to continue to flourish, we need to do more to reach out to young people with the message that one of the most exciting, challenging and lucrative career choices they can make is to become a Professional Insurance Agent.
Now, I realize that, for many Americans, "exciting" and "insurance agent" are terms that seldom get used in the same sentence. It can be a daunting task for a person more mature in years (which some people have suggested describes me) to convince a young person just starting out that insurance is a great career choice.
In 2002, this issue was discussed during a CEO Conference hosted by PIA of New York, the New York Insurance Association and the New York Young Insurance Professionals (NY-YIP). What came out of those discussions was that we, as an industry, have to attract college-aged men and women who want to learn about all that the industry has to offer. We must develop more insurance-based programs for these students to test the waters in order to ensure that their entrance into the industry will be long term - and not serve as a r©sum© builder. We need to reach out to young people before they make their career choices. We must go to them; they will not come to us.
In several states, PIA associations have sponsored organizations to encourage the young professionals who already work in our industry and attract others to join us. The New York, New Jersey and Connecticut Young Insurance Professionals associations are thriving groups comprised of dedicated young insurance people who gather to network, enable education, engage in charitable works and have fun. There are also similar YIP organizations, councils or committees in Virginia, Louisiana, Wisconsin, Arkansas and other PIA affiliates.
For years, I have been working hard to help our Young Insurance Professionals gain the recognition they deserve by our national association. That's why I am pleased that beginning in 2006 our national association will inaugurate the PIA National Young Agent of the Year Award. It is especially fitting that the first of these awards will be presented during PIA's 75th Anniversary year. After all, what better way to celebrate the fact that PIA has been in existence for many generations than to give recognition to PIA's upcoming leaders.
As all of us move through our lives and our careers, we try to give back. For many of us, service to PIA is not only in the best interest of our businesses, it is also a chance to contribute something back to the industry that we cherish, that has helped us achieve the best for ourselves and our families.
For many years, the members of PIA have been steadfast in their shared belief in the future of professional insurance agents. In every decade, so-called "industry experts" have tried to sound the death knell for independent agents. And every time they try to c
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Fighting the Good Fight for PIA Members
July 1, 2005
PIA of Tennessee Presents PIA Boxing Gloves to PIA National
"You may have noticed that lately, some people have been taking a lot of shots at professional insurance agents," said PIA of Tennessee outgoing President Britt Linder, during the PIATN annual convention. "The folks at PIA National have been quick to speak up on our behalf - to state attorneys general, at the NAIC, in Congress, with carriers and in the press."
Linder noted that recently, the National Underwriter reported on PIA National Executive Vice President & CEO Len Brevik's criticisms of a mega-broker's suggestion that contingency commissions for Main Street independent agents should be eliminated. The magazine put Brevik's picture and quote on its front cover, under a big boxing glove.
"It's nice to know that when we have to stand up for our interests, the staff at PIA National is always there to 'fight the good fight' for us," Linder said. "So, as a token of out appreciation, the members of PIA of Tennessee would like to present you with this custom pair of boxing gloves with the PIA logo. We know you'll be able to use them."
PIA of Tennessee outgoing President Britt Linder presents PIA National Executive Vice President & CEO Len Brevik with a custom pair of boxing gloves with the PIA logo at the PIATN annual convention.In his remarks to PIA of Tennessee, Len Brevik noted the mission statement in PIA National's new Strategic Long Range Plan: "To promote, protect and defend the integrity of our members, the value of their profession and the success of their businesses."
"This says it all," he said. "It is what PIA is all about. At times, it is a difficult task, but our job is to speak truth to power."
He noted that PIA has been in the forefront of the public policy debate resulting from the investigations by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer.
"From the moment the first Spitzer story broke, PIA National shifted its focus," said Brevik. "First, we responded to the initial news with a public statement, and assured that all of PIA was on the same page. Then, we got about the task of exercising our influence with policymakers, to assure that any new regulatory or legislative initiatives did not create a competitive disadvantage for PIA members."
Brevik noted that PIA National has been engaged with the NAIC, NCOIL and with state legislatures across the country, in an effort to ensure that any new legislation is not burdensome for agents. He also noted that at times during the post-Spitzer period, it has been necessary for PIA to go on the offensive.
He pointed out that when a consumer activist, J. Robert Hunter, told Congress that the performance bonuses agents receive are "kickbacks" and implied agents may delay claims filings, PIA took Hunter to task in public. When Consumer Reports magazine advised consumers that by buying coverage from direct writers like State Farm, they can avoid "the bid rigging problem," PIA challenged them in public by releasing the story to the National Underwriter, which reported that Consumer Reports offered no evidence that independent agents were involved in bid rigging.
On the issue of insurance regulation, Brevik says PIA's position is crystal clear. "PIA is a steadfast supporter of state regulation of insurance - always has been, always will be," he said. "PIA has worked closely for decades with the NAIC. But when the NAIC adopted a broker disclosure model that was not in the interest of our members, PIA opposed it publicly."
Another recent area of focus has been company-specific disclosure
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Wharton Study Finds Contingent Commissions Necessary, Agents Essential to Industry
June 15, 2005
Scholars Conclude Profit Sharing Helps Ensure Fair Insurance Pricing
A new study by two Wharton School of Business scholars concludes that profit based contingent commissions are a necessity in the marketplace. The study, "The Economics of Insurance Intermediaries," by Professors J. David Cummins and Neal A. Doherty concludes that "although contingent commissions, like most business practices, can be misused by the unscrupulous, in general this type of incentive compensation plays an important role in aligning incentives between buyers and insurers and thus facilitates the efficient operation of insurance markets." The study was financed by the American Insurance Association (AIA).
According to the study, intermediaries are usually better informed about the risks of their clients than insurers and when such risk information is accurately transmitted to the insurer, carriers compete more vigorously for business and price more competitively and fairly. In this way, the study reports, agents and brokers "assist the flow of information in the insurance market and enhance the efficiency of the market to the benefit of all players."
The authors noted that intermediaries match buyers with insurers "who have the skill, capacity, risk appetite, and financial strength to underwrite the risk, and then help their clients select from competing offers." The authors said that the role of the intermediary is "to increase competitiveness, by providing the buyer access to a wider range of possible insurers and by helping the buyer to compare these bids on the basis of price, coverage, service and the financial strength of the insurer."
"Our research provides empirical evidence that most of the contingent commissions are passed on to policyholders in the premium," notes the study. "However, whether this harms or benefits policyholders is a matter of debate. Despite recent allegations that contingent commissions are a 'kickback' from the insurer that compromises the intermediary's obligations to its clients, such commissions can actually be beneficial to clients."
Among other core aspects/findings of the Cummins-Doherty study:
- The conventional economic-legal role of agents in other industries is contrasted with the role of intermediaries in the insurance buying process, where information must be shared with both sides in order to come up with a product for the buyer. Their analysis argues that if risk information about the buyer is not shared with sellers/insurers, low-risk buyers will be penalized by having to pay higher prices than their risk level warrants; i.e., they would end up unfairly subsidizing higher-risk buyers.
- The authors explain how intermediaries can reduce market inefficiencies and alleviate the cross-subsidization problem for low-risk buyers by assessing the risk level of the buyer and providing that information to the insurer.
- Because the intermediary is, in effect, performing a critical underwriting function for the insurer (conducting comprehensive risk assessments of individual/organizational buyers to establish precisely the risk level represented by those buyers), some form of financial incentive (e.g., a contingent commission) from insurer to intermediary is appropriate.
The study concludes that "although contingent commissions, like most business practices, can be misused by the unscrupulous, in general this type of incentive compensation plays an important role in aligning incentives between buyers and insurers and thus facilitates the efficient operation of insurance markets."
The authors also found that premium-based commissions constitute the vast majority of intermediary revenues, contingent commissions account for about 4 to 5 percent of brokers' overall revenues, and that contingent fees help new insurers break into the property-casualty market.
"Absent contingent commissions," the professors said, "new i
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PIA National Takes Issue with Willis CEO's Comments
April 19, 2005
PIA's Brevik Defends Agent Compensation and Conduct
WASHINGTON, April 18, 2005 - The National Association of Professional Insurance Agents today reiterated its support of contingent commissions being a part of the compensation received by Main Street professional insurance agents.
The PIA statement was issued in response to an assertion made by Joseph Plumeri, CEO of Willis Group, who said at the annual conference of the Risk and Insurance Management Society (RIMS) that contingent commissions should be abolished throughout the insurance industry to include mega-brokerages as well as retail independent agents.
"This is a hypocritical suggestion, in that it comes from the CEO of the nation's third-largest insurance broker - a firm that earlier this month agreed to pay $51 million in restitution to policyholders to resolve concerns about anticompetitive practices involving incentive fees in property and casualty insurance sales," said Leonard C. Brevik, executive vice president and CEO of PIA National. "The timing of Mr. Plumeri's comments makes them particularly dubious." The settlement resulted from an investigation conducted by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch.
"This is another indication of people talking about the insurance industry in broad terms without having a complete understanding of all the issues involved," Brevik said. "One mega-broker's experience should not be extended to pontifications regarding the entire industry."
Brevik noted that even New York's Attorney General has clarified his position to distinguish between mega-brokers and Main Street agents.
"As he continued his investigations, the attorney general developed a more complete understanding and appreciation of the entire industry, of the differences between its sectors and the honesty of its participants," Brevik said. "So much so that in January, Mr. Spitzer said he did not think contingent commissions should be banned industry wide. And, in February, he said the vast majority of agents and brokers are honest, and he cautioned against anyone generalizing or jumping to conclusions."
In a speech to the National Press Club on January 31, 2005, Spitzer said contingent commissions "may be appropriate...I don't want to say they should be banned industry wide." And in an interview broadcast on FOX News on February 15, 2005, Spitzer said, "...the vast majority of insurance brokers and agents are honest, hardworking, good individuals...the last thing anyone should do is generalize or jump to conclusions about an entire group of people who are in a sector that is vitally important. The importance of the insurance sector to our economy can't be overstated."
Brevik added he hopes Willis CEO Plumeri, like Eliot Spitzer, develops a better understanding of the various participants in the insurance industry.
Founded in 1931, PIA is a national trade association that represents member insurance agents and their employees who sell and service all kinds of insurance, but specialize in coverage of automobiles, homes and businesses. PIA will celebrate its 75th anniversary in 2006.
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