What if those who are crying out for federal oversight of insurance get their wish, but a Democrat is elected president of the United States–perhaps even another person named Clinton? Chances are that such a president would choose as Insurance Czar someone less than sympathetic to the industry–perhaps even Eliot Spitzer!
Luckily for insurers and brokers, New York's crusading attorney general probably is going to be too busy running his home state as governor to take the job. But luckily for Democrats, there are plenty of candidates out there for the new regulatory post who are just as hostile to the industry, such as two-time nemesis John Garamendi, insurance commissioner of California, or longtime gadfly J. Robert Hunter of the Consumer Federation of America.
You get my point. Concentrating power with one federal regulator would free carriers and brokers from pesky state regulations, but it might also leave them at the mercy of one really tough pooh-bah.
However, not even the prospect of having to report to Spitzer would change the mind of Evan Greenberg, president and CEO of Bermuda-based ACE, Ltd., the most outspoken advocate for an optional federal charter at the International Insurance Society's recent annual conference.
Greenberg seemed amused as I posed my worst-case scenario to him during an IIS press conference, following his appearance on a panel during which he declared that "our 50-state regulatory structure is costly, highly inefficient and frankly is an anachronism as well as a trade barrier."
"Right now we have 50 chances that we'll get an unenlightened regulator who is not business friendly," he shrugged, noting that Spitzer, as governor, would have the honor of appointing New York's next insurance commissioner.
Greenberg acknowledged that convincing Congress to create a federal chartering facility "is no panacea–we're not na?ve about this. But looking at banking under federal oversight, the regulator has been far more consistent. On balance, the federal system has withstood any change in administrations. There is an institutional integrity to the process."