Beijing Review

Breakout After Outbreak

COVID-19 brings insurance industry new opportunit­ies as public awareness of health and safety grows

- By Wang Jun

released on March 4 that in the first quarter of 2020, the expansion of agent teams in various insurance companies will slow down. This is because traditiona­lly, the recruitmen­t of agents is done mainly through meetings, interviews and training, which need to be supported by offline operations.

The property insurance business will be seriously affected in the short term. Specifical­ly, growth of premium income from car insurance will face some pressure due to limited new car sales. Sales of aviation accident insurance and traffic accident insurance will decrease due to the massive cancellati­on of travel plans, the report said.

According to it, during the epidemic, except for one company that saw growth in its premium income in early and mid-february, all the other top 10 property insurance firms in China suffered significan­t declines in business.

Health cover to rise

“After every disaster, people are inevitably more keen to buy insurance. Health-related insurance is expected to see a new round of breakout after this epidemic,” Wang Xujin, head of the Insurance Research Center of Beijing Technology and Business University, was quoted as saying by China Economic Times.

The Zhongan report also said the epidemic will make the public more aware of health management and safeguardi­ng against risks, which will greatly boost the breakout of health insurance in the short term and its developmen­t in the long run.

According to Wang Xujin, three reasons will lead to the rapid growth of health insurance after the epidemic.

It will increase people’s awareness of their health and risks and risk awareness is the most important reason for people to buy insurance.

Also, as people’s incomes grow, how to live with dignity becomes a common need. Insurance, especially health insurance, is an important guarantee of that.

The epidemic will also further educate the public in the importance of commercial insurance, especially health insurance, as a supplement to social security.

The China Securities report pointed out how health insurance grew explosivel­y after the severe acute respirator­y syndrome outbreak in 2003. During the May-august period that year, when the outbreak had come under control, health insurance premium soared by 309 percent, 265 percent, 158 percent and 131 percent in the four months respective­ly year on year, and then went back to the normal state after the epidemic situation further stabilized.

“As a risk management industry, the insurance industry is a stabilizer of social developmen­t and booster of economic growth,” Wang said.

The CBIRC figures showed that in 2019, the premium income earned by the Chinese insurance industry totaled 4.26 trillion yuan ($608.57 billion), a year-on-year increase of 12.17 percent.

Of this, property insurance generated a premium income of 1.16 trillion yuan ($165.71 billion) while life insurance earned 3.1 trillion yuan ($442.86 billion), up by 8.16 percent and 13.76 percent, year on year, respective­ly. In life insurance, health insurance generated a premium income of 706.6 billion yuan ($100.83 billion), surging 29.7 percent.

Transforma­tion needed

“The epidemic will accelerate the insurance industry’s transforma­tion and upgrading. Offline sales have been affected, bringing pressure for increasing new policies and recruiting insurance agents and insurance companies will have to accelerate informatio­n technology applicatio­n.

This will be conducive to the sound and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the industry,” Zhou Yanli, former Vice Chairman of the China Insurance Regulatory Commission, said in an article in China Banking and Insurance News.

According to the Zhongan report, the COVID-19 outbreak is a kind of new opportunit­y for the developmen­t of the insurance industry. Because of the epidemic, insurance companies have widely recognized the importance and urgency of digital transforma­tion. Highly efficient online sales channel will be one of the key points in the future market competitio­n.

“This epidemic will accelerate the establishm­ent of online insurance sales channels, and informatio­n technology-based insurance product innovation will also speed up. Under the mobile and digital trends, insurance companies will increase investment in insurance technologi­es, which will bring more vigor and impetus to the industry,” the report said.

According to Wang Shuo, his company is now holding meetings and trainings via the Internet, and his colleagues share informatio­n and conduct business exchanges via Wechat or e-mail.

“Through the online insurance system, our clients can process, anytime and anywhere, businesses such as automatic claim settlement and policy inquiry, and we can also make feedback visits through this system. The contactles­s operation model is really efficient, and it can be used even after the epidemic is over,” he said.

Wang Guojun, a professor with the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing, told Financial News that during the epidemic, the insurance industry has been relying more on technology and focusing more on online sales, which is in line with the trend of sales channel revolution.

Online consumers, especially young people, are very capable of accessing Internet-based insurance, and they tend to choose products with high cost-performanc­e ratio. Changing consumptio­n habits will drive insurance companies to further invest in online channels and establish more efficient and convenient online services.

“We have seen some examples of Internetba­sed short-term insurance products. As more financial services are provided through the Internet, financial technologi­es and insurance technologi­es will also usher in new developmen­t,” Zhou predicted.

 ??  ?? Huang Hong (right), Vice
Chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, and commission spokespers­on Xiao Yuanqi are interviewe­d after a press conference on better serving the real economy in Beijing on January 13
Huang Hong (right), Vice Chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, and commission spokespers­on Xiao Yuanqi are interviewe­d after a press conference on better serving the real economy in Beijing on January 13
 ??  ?? An insurance agent promotes products through Wechat Moments amidst the outbreak
An insurance agent promotes products through Wechat Moments amidst the outbreak

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