Micro-insurance: an accessible, affordable safeguard for low-income Filipinos
MANILA, Philippines - When it comes to tackling financial responsibilities,
many Filipinos used to set aside insurance as an optional cost; the benefits
deemed a nice-to-have rather than a necessity.
However,
following the rapid development of the micro-insurance industry in recent
years, more Filipinos are gradually recognizing the comfort and security that
insurance brings, even to those with limited means.
Specifically geared towards low-income households, micro-insurance
offers bite-sized insurance products that effectively mitigate risks while
reducing the vulnerability of those in the lower end of the market. According
to a study by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies, the term
“micro” pertains to the capacity of a program to handle the small, sometimes
irregular cash flow of underprivileged families who have been excluded in the
commercial insurance system.
The
advent of micro-insurance may be traced to as early as 2006 with the issuance
of the First Circular on Micro-insurance by the Insurance Commission that led
to the creation of Mutual Benefit Associations. Until 2009, the bulk of what constituted
micro-insurance products was primarily credit life insurance — a life insurance
policy designed to pay off a borrower’s debt in case of death. Pioneer was one
of the pioneers from commercial insurers that began product development in
2007.
Pioneer
Life Inc. President and CEO Lorenzo Chan says they often refer to
micro-insurance as sachet insurance or insurance that comes in affordable,
bite-sized chunks. He added that tailor-fitting micro-insurance products first
requires a deeper understanding of their partners and market, which in turn
allows them to respond to various needs more effectively. “Traditional
insurance primarily targets corporate and higher socio-economic classes, which
comprise only about one percent of the country’s population,” he said. “On the
other hand, micro-insurance is intended to cater to approximately 80 percent of
Filipinos.”
Having already established its expertise in a myriad of non-life
and life insurance coverages, Pioneer began its foray into micro-insurance in
2007 by launching and evolving varied single and bundled offerings accessible
to Filipinos form all walks of life. In a recent article, Insurance
Commissioner Atty. Dennis Funa regarded CARD Pioneer Micro-insurance Inc.
(CPMI) as “not only a leader in nonlife micro-insurance, it is, in fact, the
very first micro-insurance company in the Philippines.” CARD Pioneer is a joint
venture between Pioneer and CARD MRI, the country’s largest microfinance
institution. Bundled offerings in micro-insurance can include a wide range of
coverages including burial, personal accident, damage to property arising from
fire, flood, typhoon or earthquake. Pioneer launched the first micro-crop
insurance for farmers in 2016 and dengue insurance the year before that.
Chan
said they were determined to target new markets and push the boundaries by
introducing accessible insurance to millions of Filipinos, most of whom until
recently could neither afford nor comprehend it.
He
further adds, “To this day, insurance remains a product that is sold and not
bought. It still requires pushing. No one wakes up in the morning saying they
have to go and buy insurance. By introducing and evolving insurance for 80
percent of the population, by getting them to try it and benefit from it, they
will hopefully gain familiarity and talk about it and continue to patronize
it.”
Micro-insurance
products must be accessible to the target market. For Pioneer, this means
partnering with various channels of distribution. Such channels are those
frequented by the mass market that may include pawnshops, rural banks, motor
dealers or malls.
Required
information has been simplified. Taglish is often used. Enrollments and claims
can be initiated via SMS, calls or social media.
“Given that insurance premiums are meant to be affordable, this
means small premiums which then require large volumes to ensure scale and
spread to be commercially viable. Building scale implies a start-up period
followed by a build-up phase which doesn’t happen overnight so patience is
clearly in order,” Chan said. To date, Pioneer has over 18 million enrollments
from a mere 28,760 in 2008.
This
number has been helped in part by it’s commitment to pay micro-insurance claims
within five to ten days from the time a claim is reported and requirements are
complied with. Chan noted that paying all proper claims is one of the most
effective measures for client retention as well as word of mouth generation.
However, customer centricity also requires that they practice some flexibility
with requirements if circumstances call for it.
“The
market lives on a very tight budget and often do not have the means to wait for
lengthy periods. During the aftermath of Yolanda, we had to be quick with
alternative documentation requirements,” he said. “Back then, we promptly paid
the claims of 20,199 families in Leyte and Samar. That’s 20,199 families less
dependent on dole-outs and evacuation centers. That’s 20,199 families who
started rebuilding soon as their claims were settled.”
While
micro-insurance may not provide the market with all the needed coverage, it
offers timely cash assistance, enabling those who suffered losses to start
rebuilding their lives and properties, settle their bills, bury their dead and
move on quickly.
Chan
was recently elected to the Board of Directors of the Micro-insurance Network —
a non-profit organization based in Luxembourg and the only international
multi-stakeholder platform in the micro-insurance industry with experts
committed to promoting the development and delivery of insurance services to
low income people. The network serves as a platform for members to share and
trade insurance expertise among 80 institutional members from over 40
countries, including those coming from the insurance industry as well as
governmental and development organizations.
Pioneer is also an incorporator and member of the board of
trustees of the newly-constituted Mutual Exchange Forum on Inclusive Insurance
(MEFIN Network), a collegial body of insurance policy makers and regulators in
Asia.
“If
enough of us in the industry continue to improve and evolve and encourage the
population to use insurance, I believe it will one day join the ranks of
products being bought. For me, that day will come when I see several insurance
products being bought in the neighborhood sari-sari store. I may or may not
witness this in my lifetime but no doubt, the millennials in our midst will in
theirs,” concluded Chan.
Ref: http://www.philstar.com/business/2017/07/28/1722400/micro-insurance-accessible-affordable-safeguard-low-income-filipinos
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