Observer wrote:
JT wrote:
I can't see how my inherent "claim aversion" would decrease simply because I haven't held an insurance policy for 5 years. As I said earlier, I'd say that it would probably increase if anything, due to increasing maturity.
I think you're being a bit myopic about this.
Actually I think the opposite is true. I'm trying not to be constrained by thinking "that's just the way it's done" and to think strictly in terms of logic...
Quote:
Suppose you build up 5 years NCD then stop driving for 20 years. Are you seriously claiming that you should be able to just pick up where you left off with 5 years NCD?
Well I can't actually see a reason why not. It depends on what we think NCD is measuring (or rewarding). Do we go with my "best guess" that it is mainly an attitude measurement - ie a measure of what lengths I will go to in order to prevent a claim, all other things being equal?
If this is the case, then my observation and experience of human nature would lead me to believe that there is nothing about the process of ageing 20 years that should worsen someone's NCD record.
Or to look at it another way, someone who drives claim free for 5 years then has 20 years off is surely a better insurance prospect than someone who has never driven at all?
But in any case, it's not 20 years we're talking about is it? It's 2. In my wife's case she had built up about 10 years of claim free record, yet this is struck out after just two years of non-driving.
Quote:
If not, the only argument is how quickly the NCD should decay, not whether.
Perhaps it might be a bit more respectable if it decayed at the same rate it accrued. Eg my wife's ten years drops back to 8.
I also think this should apply to claims too. If a claim reduces entitlement by 2 years then someone with 20 years NCD should drop back to 18 not to 3, but that's another story...
