/
Income Protection ... and beyond Income Protection ... and beyond

Income Protection ... and beyond - PowerPoint Presentation

faustina-dinatale
faustina-dinatale . @faustina-dinatale
Follow
417 views
Uploaded On 2017-11-07

Income Protection ... and beyond - PPT Presentation

Ron Wheatcroft 9 Feb 2017 2 Agenda Inforce income protection data and high level trends Selfinsurance Where are the gaps in data The DWPDH Green Paper Presenting a marketwide picture ID: 603323

000 protection income 2015 protection 000 2015 income insured people swiss group disability source payment health 2014 number year

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Income Protection ... and beyond" is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Income Protection ... and beyond

Ron Wheatcroft, 9 Feb 2017Slide2

2

Agenda

In-force income protection data and high level

trends

Self-insurance

Where are the gaps in data

The DWP:DH Green Paper

Presenting

a

market–wide picture

Opportunities

   Slide3

3

Number of group income protection policies and people covered, 2006-2015

(source: Group Watch reports, Swiss Re)

Year

No. of insured schemes

No. of people insured

2006

19,065

1,731,138

2007

18,859

1,723,960

2008

18,619

1,757,365.

2009

17,796

1,777,459

2010

17,576

1,792,038

2011

17,307

1,836,020

2012

17,224

1,963,814

2013

17,193

2,039,059

2014

17,119

2,078,536

2015

17,111

2,106,180Slide4

4

Disability insurance product trends

(source: Swiss Re Group Watch 2016)

Year

Policies to retirement age/SPA

People covered to retirement age/SPA

2011

88.3%

74.4%

2012

86.8%

70.8%

2013

85.8%

70.0%

2014

84.4%

67.4%

2015

83.1%

63.4%Slide5

Employer self-insured arrangements, such as the public sector, large employers Number of people covered is unknown

Swiss Re has estimated on a conservative basis that the number of people covered is around 3m, i.e. roughly the same as the number of people insured via a private policy or through an employer scheme

Other workplace benefits provided on disability

5Slide6

6

Number of individual income protection policies, 2006-2015

(source: ABI)

Year

No. of people insured

2006

1,418,000

2007

1,365,000

2008

1,345,000

2009

1,223,000

2010

1,381,000

2011

1,283,000

2012

1,263,000

2013

1,185,000

2014

1,100,000

2015

1,129,000Slide7

Product

 

2014

2015

% Change 2015/2014

IP

to “retirement age” (excluding

LPT)

63,339

66,167

4.5

Income protection 1 year limited payment term

2,200

2,383

8.3

Income protection 2 year limited payment term

17,329

33,271

92.0

Income protection 5 year limited payment term9,402 2,360 -74.9Income protection 'other' limited payment term4,619 3,121 -32.4

New individual IP sales split by duration of limited payment term, 2014 – 2015 by volume (Source: Term & Health Watch 2015 and 2016, Swiss Re)

7

M

ajority written

to "retirement age" but 38% of new IP business is written on a limited payment term basis (34% in 2014

).Slide8

Individual income protection benefits in force totalled £14,711m pa (note that these are tax-free in payment)

Group income protection benefits in force totalled £65,080m pa (note that these are taxed as earned income)

Self –insured – if we assume that the average self-insured benefit mirrors insured cover, this amounts to approximately £100,000m pa

STIP?

Insured IP benefits

in

force at end 2015

(sources: ABI and Swiss Re)

8Slide9

Improving Lives, The Work, Health and Disability Green

Paper, October 2016

A disability or health condition should not dictate the path a person is able to take in life – or in the workplace. What should count is a person’s talents and their determination and aspiration to succeed.

We know that the right type of work is good for our physical and mental health and good health and support helps us in the workplace.

…..we

are committed to halving the disability employment gap and share this commitment with many others in society.

Change will come, not by tinkering at the margins, but through real, innovative action.

Source: Ministerial foreword:

Improving Lives,

The Work, Health and Disability Green Paper,

October

2016

9Slide10

The financial case for supporting people back to the workplace where possible – links to the Green Paper

The total annual cost of long-term absence to the private sector could rise from

£4.17bn in 2014 to £4.81bn in 2030. When the public sector is added, the costs over the same period rise from £6.71bn to £7.60bn

.

Factors

that could influence this include changes to t

he make-up of the workforce, including increases to the number of older workers

.

Source: CEBR on behalf of Unum

An

 annual direct financial benefit of

£

74m

can

be attributed to rehabilitation through Group Income

Protection.

Additional quantified indirect benefits for employers were found to be worth around

£35 million

.

A pound

spent on rehabilitation on group scheme claimants can bring savings of £16.80 Source: EPC on behalf of Zurich10Slide11

11

Disability Gap using 60% income replacement ratio

The extent of the IP shortfall across EU marketsSlide12

12Slide13

Legal notice

13

©2017 Swiss Re. All rights reserved. You are not permitted to create any modifications or derivative works of this presentation or to use it for commercial or other public purposes

without the prior written permission of Swiss Re.

The information and opinions contained in the presentation are provided as at the date of

the presentation and are subject to change without notice. Although the information used

was taken from reliable sources, Swiss Re does not accept any responsibility for the accuracy

or comprehensiveness of the details given. All liability for the accuracy and completeness

thereof or for any damage or loss resulting from the use of the information contained in this

presentation is expressly excluded. Under no circumstances shall Swiss Re or its Group

companies be liable for any financial or consequential loss relating to this presentation.