Plus: We're sinking into the ocean, what ending homelessness looks like, and more.
February 21, 2024 [View in browser]( Good morning! Inflation rates are down, but they're still higher than many of us might like. Senior correspondent Marin Cogan is here today to look at one of the stubbornly high factors. âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [Cars driving in traffic on a multilane highway at dusk with skyscrapers behind them.] Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images Car insurance is too dang high If you pay for car insurance, youâve probably noticed that rates are really high lately. Youâre not alone. Last weekâs Consumer Price Index report â the governmentâs method [for tracking what people are paying]( for goods and services and how thatâs changing over time â noted that the price of car insurance was up [more than 20 percent]( over the same time last year. Whatâs particularly painful is that rates were already rising: CPI reports have shown that, overall, car insurance rates are up more than 38 percent since January 2020. Whatâs going on? The big insurance companies have been relatively quiet about whatâs driving rates up. Inflation is definitely a big part of the equation. Everything now costs more, including cars and car repairs, and insurance companies are passing those costs on to consumers. But industry insiders and experts I spoke with say there are a few under-the-radar trends also driving rates up, and they relate to [the subjects I cover]( at Vox, so letâs dive in. Weâre driving more dangerously One reason rates are up is that driving became much more dangerous during the pandemic. People started engaging in risky behaviors like speeding and using their phones while driving more. âSince Covid, we saw this incredible increase in distracted driving,â says Ryan McMahon, senior vice president of strategy for Cambridge Mobile Telematics. âYou could almost track it by the day schools started to shut down.â Heâs not just speculating: CMT has access to driver data for millions of drivers, who download apps via their insurance companies that measure things like speeding, hard braking, and cellphone use while driving. McMahon told me that the huge jump they saw in distracted behaviors during the pandemic hasnât come down since. Maybe not surprisingly, the number of [fatal accidents spiked](; so did the [severity of auto insurance claims,]( meaning cars came in severely damaged and requiring expensive repairs. [An SUV crashed into a sidewalk tree in a city.] Luiz C. Ribeiro for NY Daily News via Getty Images Costs keep rising While drivers were getting more dangerous, law enforcement in many parts of the country began [pulling back on traffic safety enforcement](, likely due to Covid-related staff shortages and criticisms over racial biases following the murder of George Floyd. Traffic enforcement has always been a deeply imperfect mode of safety enforcement, [one that leaves Black drivers susceptible to racial biases]( from law enforcement. But itâs also one of the factors insurance companies use to determine individual rates. âUltimately, without traffic violation data, insurers arenât able to accurately assess and underwrite a driverâs risk. With the compounding cost from accidents, carriers are now increasing rates for everyone, meaning we are all paying for this problem,â Mark McElroy, executive vice president and head of TransUnionâs insurance business, said [in a recent report](. Cars have also become more technologically advanced, making car repair more expensive. Think of a car made in 2004 versus a car made in 2024. If the two crashed, the car in 2024 would probably be more expensive to fix because itâs more likely to have advanced technology like backup cameras and lane sensors. According to one report by [industry analysts CCC](, the average estimate for a front-end claim in 2022 was $3,706, up more than 15 percent over the year before. Vehicles more than seven years old, meanwhile, were over $1,000 less to repair. When does it end? This is, needless to say, not good news for consumers. The price of new cars has grown so much that theyâre practically [unaffordable for middle-class consumers]( now, and these rising costs hit low-income people even harder. Itâs particularly difficult because for many, a car is often an essential means of keeping a good job. So theyâre stuck with a kind of Catch-22: They canât live with the [rising costs of car ownership, but they canât live without them, either](. And their rates are already likely to be higher if they have poor credit or live in a high-crime neighborhood. âThe people least able to afford it are paying the highest amount,â said the industry insider. The good news â if you can call it that â is that experts donât think rates will keep growing so much over the next year. âYou had this problem where the insurance companies fell behind, so the prices didnât match the costs and they were losing a bunch of money,â another insider told me. Rates rose in an attempt by insurance companies to catch up with costs, but now inflation isnât growing at the same runaway clip and insurers arenât seeing the same levels of loss. âCosts shouldnât be as high as last year,â he said. [âMarin Cogan, senior correspondent]( [Listen]( Forgetful old men Joe Bidenâs age and mental acuity are center stage after a Justice Department prosecutor described him as an âelderly man with a poor memory.â Vox reporter Christian Paz explains why Democrats are stuck with him. [Listen now]( AMERICA - Speaking of dangerous driving and rising pedestrian deaths in the US: A new study found that making the front of a car just 10 centimeters higher makes it 22 percent more likely to kill a pedestrian in an accident. [[Science Direct](]
- SCOTUS ducks another race-conscious admissions policy question: Letâs unpack the courtâs decision not to hear a challenge to a Virginia high schoolâs admissions system. [[Vox](]
- Weâre sinking into the ocean: And itâs partly our own fault. We've been overpumping groundwater. [[NYT](] CULTURE - âThe loneliness of Jodie Foster:â See a new side to the actor the world has known since she was a child. [[Atlantic](] [Jodie Foster.] Joel Saget/AFP via Getty Image AROUND THE WORLD - What ending homelessness could look like: Finland is defying Europeâs rising homelessness rates. [[Spiegel](]
- The dueling ceasefire resolutions at the UN: What they both include, why the US proposed its own, and more, explained. [[Vox](]
- Close call for democracy: Senegalâs elections are likely back on sometime soon this year. [[World Politics Review](] Ad
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[Learn more about RevenueStripe...]( How Israelâs war went wrong Vox's Zack Beauchamp on how the conflict in Gaza became âan era-defining catastrophe.â [Read more »]( Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here]( . And as always, we want to know what you think. We recently changed the format of this newsletter. Any questions, comments, or ideas? We're all ears. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story youâre curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Your question might be the centerpiece of this newsletter one day or featured in a Friday reader mailbag. Today's edition was produced and edited by Caroline Houck. We'll see you tomorrow! Ad
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