There have been some well publicised cases recently where claims have been in dispute through non-disclosure. Paid claims on Life are about 99% and 92% on CI but those that are not paid erode public confidence when so many are in need of insurance. Sometimes people are dishonest in what they disclose - but often they are just careless or make mistakes. And when this happens it can be a financial catastrophe at a personal level.
In March the Consumer Insurance Act law is changing the burden of responsibility more in consumers favour - but people will still need to be careful to answer questions correctly. The industry has also improved its record on paying claims in recent years - but can/should it do more?
Regardless of what the law says – is there generally a case to be made for insurers to take a different approach to non-disclosure on application forms – and what specifically should that approach be?
It would be interesting to get your thoughts and suggestions on this.
For example:
If someone omits a material fact or tells an untruth – should the insurer always ignore that and pay up anyway?
If so - would you be prepared to pay higher insurance premiums to cover that approach?
If not - what process or criteria would you use to separate the honest mistakes from the deliberate liars?
How could you ensure that this would apply consistently and fairly to all customers?
What should the appeal process be? Does the Ombudsman provide the right solution?
What more can be done to explain insurance and risk to the public?
Over to you ...
In March the Consumer Insurance Act law is changing the burden of responsibility more in consumers favour - but people will still need to be careful to answer questions correctly. The industry has also improved its record on paying claims in recent years - but can/should it do more?
Regardless of what the law says – is there generally a case to be made for insurers to take a different approach to non-disclosure on application forms – and what specifically should that approach be?
It would be interesting to get your thoughts and suggestions on this.
For example:
If someone omits a material fact or tells an untruth – should the insurer always ignore that and pay up anyway?
If so - would you be prepared to pay higher insurance premiums to cover that approach?
If not - what process or criteria would you use to separate the honest mistakes from the deliberate liars?
How could you ensure that this would apply consistently and fairly to all customers?
What should the appeal process be? Does the Ombudsman provide the right solution?
What more can be done to explain insurance and risk to the public?
Over to you ...
Comment