Insurers make easy villains. The denied claim, the fine-print exclusion, the impossibly slow correspondence after a hurricane โ these are real experiences and the source of justified frustration. But the broader narrative that insurance is a scam misses something important: pooling risk across a large group is genuinely valuable, and individuals can’t do it alone. The right critique of the industry isn’t that it exists. It’s that specific practices, in specific lines, have drifted away from the original function.
What insurance is actually doing
Insurance solves a problem that’s almost impossible to solve any other way: catastrophic, low-probability losses that would bankrupt an individual but are predictable in aggregate. House burns down once in 600 years on average across all houses, but for the one homeowner whose house actually burns down, that’s a lifetime loss. Pool 600 homes’ premiums together and the math works. Most insurance functions like this, more or less, most of the time. The premiums are calibrated to expected losses plus operating costs plus some profit margin. The math is genuinely useful even when it produces individual outcomes that feel unfair.
Where the legitimate critique lives
The honest case against parts of the industry is narrower than “they’re crooks.” Health insurance in the U.S. is structured around employer benefits and price-opaque networks in ways that produce genuinely bad outcomes. Property insurance in disaster-prone regions has been slow to honor claims and quick to non-renew, with companies pulling out of California and Florida markets entirely as wildfire and hurricane risk has grown. Some title insurance and credit life insurance products have loss ratios so low โ meaning so little of premiums flow back to claimants โ that the products are arguably ornamental. These are specific, documentable failures, not a blanket indictment.
The denied-claim story is more complicated
Claim denial rates vary enormously by line and by company. Auto and homeowners claims are denied at relatively low rates and the disputes are often genuine โ fraud, coverage disagreements, valuation disputes. Health insurance denial rates run higher and are the source of most of the industry’s reputational damage. But many denials, even controversial ones, do involve real coverage questions about what was promised in the policy. The right response to a denial isn’t always outrage; it’s often appeal, which works far more often than people expect. Independent state insurance commissioner complaint processes resolve a meaningful share of disputes in the consumer’s favor.
Where to push and where to choose
Useful pressure on the industry tends to come from regulators โ state commissioners, the NAIC, and CFPB-equivalent bodies. As a consumer, the most effective moves are picking insurers with strong claim-payment reputations (J.D. Power and AM Best ratings track this), reading the policy when nothing is wrong, and documenting losses meticulously when something is. The villains in the industry are real but specific. Painting all insurance as a scam ends up obscuring the bad actors and dismissing the good ones.
The bottom line
Insurance is a genuinely useful financial technology that some companies and product lines have abused. The cure is targeted reform and informed shopping, not blanket cynicism.
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