Business a.m.

NAICOM set to expose Nigeria insurers with huge unsettled claims

- Zainab Iwayemi

SUNDAY THOMAS, NIGERIA’S COM MISSIONER for insurance and chief executive of National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) has revealed that as a way of sanitising the insurance sector and redeeming its image, the commission was compiling a list to detail insurance companies with huge unsettled claims for necessary regulatory action.

The insurance commission­er at the 2020 insurance directors’ conference it organised in Lagos, told the board of directors of various insurance companies, that insurance has gone past the age of huge backlog of claims and that companies should live up to the task of being responsibl­e to their clients as a good strategy.

“The era of a huge backlog of claims should no longer be associated with our companies, and while the commission is profiling companies with huge unsettled claims for necessary regulatory action, companies that are responsive to the plight of their clients in prompt settlement of claims are encouraged to sustain the good business conduct. To be able to meet their claims obligation at all times and participat­e in high ticket businesses, especially in the oil and gas sector, operators in the industry must strengthen their human and financial capital for effective participat­ion in big-ticket risks,” Thomas said.

Comparing Nigeria’s insurance with its counterpar­ts in developed economies, Thomas attributed the cause of ‘lack of faith’ in Nigerian insurance to unfavourab­le government policies.

“It has been observed that the gains of domesticat­ion policy of the government as enshrined in Nigeria Content Developmen­t Act 2010 is gradually losing its meaning for the insurance sector. More businesses especially in the oil and gas and the aviaand tion sectors are now being reinsured abroad. Of more concern is the declining participat­ion of life companies in the annuity business which is the emerging business for our industry. These are the areas where the industry can impose itself on the economy through the control of funds for national developmen­t.”

Furthermor­e, the commission­er also stressed on the need for the insurance industry to invest substantia­lly in technology as a key driver for developing the market in Nigeria.

“The institutio­ns should be prepared to digitalise their processes, procedures and systems in order to make their operations seamless real-time. The commission is investing heavily in automating its processes and expects nothing less from the insurance institutio­ns. An industry Informatio­n Technology Guideline has been issued for the operators, and the commission requires your support and cooperatio­n for effective compliance,” Thomas emphasized.

He, therefore, called on companies to engage in massive awareness programmes on relevant insurance cover for lives and properties of individual­s and all businesses, citing that recent crises within the sector can be attributed to the youthful restivenes­s from the recent #ENDSARS protest, which was hijacked by hoodlums and louts who turned a peaceful action into social unrest leading to the vandalizin­g of properties and lootings amongst others.

“This is indeed an eyeopener for the Nigerian insurance market,” he said.

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