BIZ-HOME-INSURANCE-INFLATION-OS

Gutted homes north of Toronita Avenue Beach Park in Wilbur-By-The-Sea, Florida, on Dec. 2, 2022. The southern Volusia coastline was devastated by significant beach erosion from Hurricane Ian and Tropical Storm Nicole, causing millions in damage to oceanfront properties.听

If the rising price of homeowners insurance were factored into the U.S. Consumer Price Index 鈥 a key metric of inflation 鈥 it could have added 80 basis points, or about 0.8%, to last year鈥檚 CPI increase of 3.4%, according to an analysis from Bloomberg Intelligence.

By not including home insurance, the CPI 鈥渋gnores climate costs,鈥 writes BI senior analyst Andrew Stevenson in his April 9 note.

Homeowners insurance costs in the U.S. hit roughly $175 billion in 2023, up 21% over the previous year, according to insurance brokerage Policygenius. The increase is in large part due to climate change, which is driving more extreme fires, floods and storms. The U.S. endured a record 28 weather and climate disasters that caused at least $1 billion in damage last year. As insurers incur higher costs, homeowners are facing higher premiums. Inflation itself is also making it more expensive to pay out claims.

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The average cost of insuring a U.S. home last year was $1,905 鈥 50% higher than the average of $1,272 in 2019, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and Policygenius.

Calculated by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, CPI measures the average change in prices paid by urban consumers for various goods and services, including both food and fuel. (鈥淐ore CPI鈥 excludes food and energy.) CPI includes the category 鈥渢enants and household insurance,鈥 but this is more colloquially known as renters insurance. Last year, the average renters insurance cost in the U.S. was $180, up 3% from a year earlier.

Stevenson looked at what would happen if the $1,905 average for home insurance were given the same CPI weight as 鈥渢enants and household insurance,鈥 which accounted for just 0.01% of the overall increase in CPI last year. He found that the 21% increase in home insurance could have contributed as much as 鈥84 bps to the index vs a 1-bp gain realized by the 3% rise in tenant and homeowner insurance costs.鈥 (A basis point is equal to 0.01 percentage point.)

Just five years ago, homeowners insurance and renters insurance were increasing at similar rates year over year. But while home insurance costs have since surged, renters insurance has largely held steady. The difference 鈥渕ight be meaningful enough鈥 for federal officials to 鈥渞econsider鈥 the inclusion of homeowners insurance in the CPI basket, Stevenson writes.

鈥淲e are unable to provide any insight into custom calculations created outside BLS,鈥 Gerald Perrins, a BLS section chief working on the CPI, told Bloomberg Green.

The cost of U.S. homeowners insurance stands to keep growing, with average premiums in the U.S. predicted to hit a potential record of $2,552 by the end of 2024, according to Insurify. Researchers at the Massachusetts-based insurance-comparison platform attribute the expected increase to intensifying weather disasters, rising reinsurance rates and high home repair fees.

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