Insuring Against Crime
by
Gil
Guillory
by Gil Guillory
DIGG THIS
What if there
were a company that would patrol your neighborhood and be financially
liable for losses due to crime on your property…would you be interested
in subscribing? Could something like that actually work and be profitable,
and would it be preferable to tax-funded patrol?
This idea has
been suggested by a number of libertarians, from Molinari
to Rothbard
to Benson
to Hoppe
to Barnett.
Some people think the insurance component of such a venture would
completely swamp its viability.
So how much
would it take to just cover the payouts for losses? My friends and
I decided to find out. We took data from the FBI
Uniform Crime Reports and the Department
of Justice (sic) National Crime Victimization Surveys, picked
a specific location in the US, did a little bit of math, and found
out:
To insure against
the peril of murder, assuming each victim’s estate would be given
1 million USD, it would cost about $8 a year per household.
To insure against
the peril of rape, assuming each victim would be given 50,000 USD,
it would cost about $21 a year per household.
To insure against
the peril of battery/assault, assuming each victim would be made
whole for monetary losses only, it would cost about $3 a year per
household.
To insure against
all property crimes (robbery, burglary, motor vehicle theft), assuming
each victim would be made whole for monetary losses only, it would
cost about $126 a year per household.
But
wait – you already have car insurance and homeowner’s insurance!
What if the payouts were capped at your homeowner’s insurance deductible,
where your insurance company already starts picking up the tab?
Well, then,
to insure against all property crimes, it would cost only about
$25 a year per household.
Maybe the idea
isn’t so crazy, after all.
November
29, 2007
Gil
Guillory [send him mail]
recently
presented An Actuarial Analysis of Crime Data with Applications
to Subscription Patrol and Restitution at the Southern
Economic Association Annual Meeting in a session sponsored by
the Society for the Development
of Austrian Economics. He is an engineer living in The Woodlands,
Texas, near Houston. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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