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-   -   driving / accidents (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/driving-accidents-702267/)

dbd33 Jan 25th 2011 5:30 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by spaceace (Post 9128011)
blimey, is that even possible ? [ that's not a moan btw :) ]

My car insurance is $5400 in rural Ontario. I think that's really quite expensive.

rubberduckofdeath Jan 25th 2011 5:33 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 9128021)
My car insurance is $5400 in rural Ontario. I think that's really quite expensive.

Flippin' 'eck... I'm going to get a shock in Canada. I'm paying £600 for FC cover on a group 20 car in the UK. It's going to be a wee bit (read: a lot) more expensive for less cover over there I'm thinking! :ohmy:

dbd33 Jan 25th 2011 5:37 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by rubberduckofdeath (Post 9128031)
Flippin' 'eck... I'm going to get a shock in Canada. I'm paying £600 for FC cover on a group 20 car in the UK. It's going to be a wee bit (read: a lot) more expensive for less cover over there I'm thinking! :ohmy:

Yes. But the good news is that the type of car doesn't matter anything like as much as it does in the UK. Once you get used to a dull car being five or six grand $500 more for an interesting one looks a bargain.

rubberduckofdeath Jan 25th 2011 5:43 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 9128039)
Yes. But the good news is that the type of car doesn't matter anything like as much as it does in the UK. Once you get used to a dull car being five or six grand $500 more for an interesting one looks a bargain.

Ha! Fair enough :)

spaceace Jan 25th 2011 5:45 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 9128039)
Yes. But the good news is that the type of car doesn't matter anything like as much as it does in the UK. Once you get used to a dull car being five or six grand $500 more for an interesting one looks a bargain.

that is true.....I've gone from a 2.0L Subaru Forester, to a 4.3L truck to a 220BHP Saab and no change in policy price.

Pretty Flowers Jan 25th 2011 6:33 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by spaceace (Post 9128066)
that is true.....I've gone from a 2.0L Subaru Forester, to a 4.3L truck to a 220BHP Saab and no change in policy price.

My insurance (fully comp, downtown Toronto address) for a Nissan Altima is just over $5k per year

Should be cheaper next year (I hope)

If it helps in 2007 I had a suspended licence and conviction for careless driving.

Car insurance for the first year after that was a heart rending $12,000 :eek:

YoshiPal2010 Jan 25th 2011 6:45 am

Re: driving / accidents
 
Blimey! If my insurance went up to $12,000 per year, I would just have to pack-up and go back to the UK. It is about time that the Canadian government had a look at how much the insurance companies are charging motorists, especially as those same companies are operating in other markets with much lower premiums!

Pretty Flowers Jan 25th 2011 6:48 am

Re: driving / accidents
 
I think its more of a testament to the standard of driving if anything, and the impact of the winter on accidents.

However, given the regular hosing that consumers get in Canada, I wouldn't be at all surprised that insurance companies make excessive profits.

iaink Jan 25th 2011 6:57 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by Pretty Flowers (Post 9128251)
I think its more of a testament to the standard of driving if anything, and the impact of the winter on accidents.

Unfortunately that doesn't stand up to comparison with the premiums in the snow bound parts of the USA. where Insurance is cheaper than in Canada. They have the same climate issues, and litigation and medical expenses could easily eclipse those in Canada...

Pretty Flowers Jan 25th 2011 6:59 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by iaink (Post 9128280)
Unfortunately that doesn't stand up to comparison with the premiums in the snow bound parts of the USA. where Insurance is cheaper in Canada. They have the same climate issues, and litigation and medical expenses could easily eclipse those in Canada...

So standard Canadian uncompetitive practices then. Hurrah!

iaink Jan 25th 2011 7:02 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by Pretty Flowers (Post 9128287)
So standard Canadian uncompetitive practices then. Hurrah!

I seem to recall the government is involved at some level. So yes, probably.

That and some terrible gouging of people with no other choice but to give up and take the bus:(

dbd33 Jan 25th 2011 7:24 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by iaink (Post 9128280)
Unfortunately that doesn't stand up to comparison with the premiums in the snow bound parts of the USA. where Insurance is cheaper than in Canada. They have the same climate issues, and litigation and medical expenses could easily eclipse those in Canada...

I suppose I should point out that the insurance companies in Canada generally make a loss on cars. That's why they're keen to bundle your car policy something profitable; house, boat, life, even farm.

I think the main reasons for the losses here vs the US are:

- more litigious climate

- more collisions, people here just can't drive and the traffic laws encourage a style that results in collisions. Surely no one can defend the Canadian practise of encouraging anyone to drive in any lane they like at any speed they like.

- government intervention. Obviously this is the major reason for high insurance costs in BC. After BC Alberta is the most regulated province then some down east. Governments intoduce rules whimisically, the cost of dealing with them is high, the market is small so each time a law comes along and the insurance companies have to find a means to circumvent it some more companies withdraw from the market. iirc it was the rule banning discrimination by sex of driver that caused Aviva and State Farm to withdraw from the market in Newfoundland.

- high cost of cars/lack of safety regulations. You can drive most anything on Canadian roads and, given the relative cost of a new truck, are more likely to do so in Canada.

- high cost of repairs, Canada is a long way from anywhere, everything is imported, it's expensive to fix cars.

iaink Jan 25th 2011 7:28 am

Re: driving / accidents
 
Canada isnt more litigous than the US, surely?

California is a lot farther from Detroit than Toronto?

US driving and car safety rules and practices are more or less just as poor as Canada.


So that leaves government?

dbd33 Jan 25th 2011 7:33 am

Re: driving / accidents
 

Originally Posted by iaink (Post 9128352)
Canada isnt more litigous than the US, surely?

I would say so, though it's not easily proven.



Originally Posted by iaink (Post 9128352)

US driving and car safety rules and practices are more or less just as poor as Canada.

I don't think that's remotely true. The US has a culture of interest in cars and driving, the concept of lane discipline exists, the proportion of new immigrants from ox cart economies is smaller. Canada's a dreadful place to drive.


Originally Posted by iaink (Post 9128352)
So that leaves government?

Government action is never good for anyone, the existence of the border with the US is both the result of government action and the way in which Toronto is made farther from Detroit than California.

iaink Jan 25th 2011 7:39 am

Re: driving / accidents
 
There are far more restrictive automotive laws specific to the state of California than there are to the Canadian market. Its cheaper and easier for Auto makers to meet Canadian legislation requirements than Californian.

It may not be entirely representative of the US as a whole, but Ive driven in LA, its just as bad as Toronto, probably worse. And TO is hardly representative of all of Canada either.


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