Oh yeah, because the "collect hurricane insurance, spend all the money, go bankrupt" pipeline has worked wonders in Florida.
The government already foots the bill when insurance doesn't cover the costs (which is every single time here in Florida) and when there is no insurer anymore Citizens Insurance (the government plan) also covers it.
Homeowners insurance wasn't made for natural disasters and the fact we continue to make it so only fills the purses of the fraudsters running the scams. The moment there is no more free money for these insurers in Florida the market will change overnight.
Your tone suggests strong disagreement but I’m not seeing much other than what is the difference between a one-time backstop by public money prior to an insurer exiting the market, and an ongoing public insurer with unlimited obligations.
The question, as you put it, is how and where Floridians should be encouraged to build since home insurance doesn’t work in major disasters.
The issue is that if it becomes a government fund the insurers can't spend the money in the year when we didn't have destructive hurricanes, which is what they usually do.
The government would keep the money in the fund indefinitely until it was needed and would't be spending it.
That is not something that's happening; surplus is tightly regulated now in Florida. Plus, reinsurers will not let insurers steal money that's meant to cover losses. It's cheaper for Florida to tweak the dials of surplus regulation than to become an insurance company because it would encourage loss-making behavior.
The government already foots the bill when insurance doesn't cover the costs (which is every single time here in Florida) and when there is no insurer anymore Citizens Insurance (the government plan) also covers it.
Homeowners insurance wasn't made for natural disasters and the fact we continue to make it so only fills the purses of the fraudsters running the scams. The moment there is no more free money for these insurers in Florida the market will change overnight.