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RBAP SESSION: Learnings from the 7th Microinsurance International Conference
November 8-10, 2011 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Discussion Framework
RBAP-RBRDFI Microinsurance
Initiative
Partnerships
Distribution Innovation and
Technology
o Insurance regulations are not tailored to the unique characteristics of MI o Common products: funeral, credit-life, disability (life and health less available) o Financing mostly comes from the private sector. Premiums and insured value is rarely subsidized by the government MI Industry is INNOVATIVE • POS – shoppers can buy life insurance • Remittance – based – emigrants can buy policies that when death happens while they are abroad, it covers the cost to transport their bodies home • Catastrophic – policies against natural disasters in Haiti (parametric model) • Brokers/Intermediaries – improvement of variety and quality of insurance products and to expand the channels
MI in Latin America and the Caribbean
Other Innovations: LA and the Caribbean - cancer-indemnity for low-income women - accident insurance for agri, cattle and fishery workers - life insurance drawn when eligible for micropensions - hospitalization coverage - indexed agricultural insurance that may be linked to yield or to climate-related losses
Low Takeup Why are people uninsured? • Insufficient fund to buy insurance • Lacks understanding of insurance
Problems in the MI Market • low takeup is common • high distribution costs that raise issue on equity To boost penetration… • subsidies • mandatory requirements • reliance on private sector provision • right balance between public and private
MI in Brazil • MI Resolution: focused on product regulation, prudential regulation, market conduct regulation • Lessons:
• utility, telecommunications and retailer distribution • product development: use of client data to design appropriate product
offering • sales: layered commission structures and the use of non-monetary
incentives • premium collection: existing bill-collection infrastructure, flexible
premium collection • servicing: use of electronic in-store help terminals, one-stop service
desks • claims process: simplified, outsourced, in-store claims submission
Technology in MI Challenges in MI: - Accessibility - Channel - Enrollment - Billing - Relationship Technologies in MI to help address: SCALE and EFFICIENCY - Cell phones - accessibility, channel, enrollment, billing, relationship - PoS - accessibility, channel, enrollment, billing - Barcodes, billing - Social Network - relationship - Internet - accessibility, channel, enrollment, billing, relationship
Technology plays a fundamental role to: - increase operations scale - increase operations efficiency - create a communication channel to increase the relationship and education - reduce costs Technology for MI: - The need of rural customers is low-value, low-margin, high volume business, and calls for solutions that are highly decentralized, flexible and cost-effective - Challenge for insurers is to bring down cost of servicing customers and distributors - Ghana: enrolment and premium payment thru mobile phone - Philippines: simplified claims system - Tanzania: enrolment thru handhelds (ipods) to capture data and biometrics
Why mobile insurance?: the case of Ghana
•Customer access: poor have mobile phones •Financial transactions: faster, cheaper, easier, safer •Information transfer: efficient marketing, enrolment, administration •Consumer Trust: reputation, familiarity of telecoms vs. insurers •***Tigo - coverage based on monthly airtime usage
Requirements: - must enhance the channel's core business - reliance on the channel's brand - product, process, technology must be simple - premium collection requires creativity - incentives must be aligned - tech should serve the product - capital must be patient
Managing Microinsurance Partnerships The Partnership Lifecycle: Search
Assessment and Selection
Incentives
Pre-agreement
process Implementati
on
Maintenance
Evaluation
What have we been doing right? • Consistent communication with regulatory bodies governing MI in the Philippines • Formulation of the MI National Regulatory Framework that sets the parameters in product development and distribution • Active involvement of private insurance providers as risk-carriers under the Principal-Agent Model •Building the capacity of community-based institutions like the rural banks as distribution channels for MI • Insurance education integrated to the Basic MI Training to raise awareness and appreciation of insurance products
What have we been missing?
• Adoption of innovative technology in enhancing distribution and expanding MI outreach • Still to tap the popular usage of mobile technology in addressing challenges in accessibility, premium collection, claims payment, reporting and feedback • Response of RBs in the licensing procedure
• About 52 rural banks are in the different stages of the licensing process
• Lack of deposit-linked MI product
What needs to be done? • Promotion of mobile phone technology usage to rural banks and their insurance partners. If possible, pilot bank for the mobile technology be given financial aid by RBAP through the ILO innovation grant • Usage of SMS, social networking, internet in the promotion of RBAP MI Initiative on insurance education and soon, financial literacy to target clients • Use of the innovations mentioned above on close follow-up and monitoring of RBs in their licensing process •Encourage both insurers and RBs to tap the large number of microdeposit clients in the bank
Opportunities: • development of agricultural-based MI product • retail-like MI product that may be marketed to accredited RB bayad centers
SALAMAT!