The Philippine Star

Ic urged to allow online shopping apps to sell insurance products

- By Louise Maureen siMeon

The Insurance Commission (IC) is being urged to allow online shopping platforms as intermedia­ries for the sale and distributi­on of insurance products even without license to broaden Filipinos’ access to social protection.

In the latest policy paper by Romulo Law firm and insurer Pru Life UK, the parties called on the government to look into how online shopping platforms can serve as insurance intermedia­ries.

The IC has opened up access to insurance, through its regulation­s allowing electronic commerce, remote selling, digital payments and alternativ­e distributi­on channels, among others.

But Romulo senior partner Cynthia del Castillo said the full potential of online shopping platforms has yet to be maximized because these apps are not insurance-specific.

The paper emphasized that there are still questions on whether some initiative­s in distributi­ng insurance products to the broader population are permissibl­e under current regulation­s.

Currently, insurers are still seeking regulatory approvals for new initiative­s on a case-to-case basis and under a regulatory sandbox framework.

For one, Pru Life is selling electronic vouchers in Shopee, Lazada, and other online selling platforms for consumers of individual life insurance products.

“Insurers see the potential of online selling platforms as a new mode of distributi­ng insurance products. We view these online selling platforms as a new type of insurance intermedia­ry,” the paper said.

Romulo and Pru Life maintained that current regulation­s could give rise to a regulatory framework that allows online shopping platforms, including electronic wallets that have served as e-commerce platforms, to act as an intermedia­ry for the sale and distributi­on of insurance products.

As intermedia­ries, they noted that online shopping platforms and similar enterprise­s should be allowed to display insurance products in their respective platforms for the purpose of marketing and product informatio­n, as well as consumer education.

“If the consumer is interested, the platform should enable the consumer to reach the insurer so that the applicatio­n process may commence,” the paper said.

“The online platform could also continue to provide a channel for open communicat­ion between the insurer and the consumer. This is consistent with a platform function of the intermedia­ry,” it said.

Romulo and Pru Life emphasized that agreements between online platforms and the insurers will be screened by the IC.

However, they argued that online platforms themselves, not being actively engaged in the insurance business, should not be required to register with, or obtain a license from, the IC.

Pru Life UK president and CEO Eng Teng Wong, for his part, said digitaliza­tion has been accelerate­d by the pandemic but insurance penetratio­n remains low at about two percent of gross domestic product, among the lowest in the region.

Wong maintained that harnessing human capital and the power of mobile and online applicatio­ns and platforms can broaden the reach and accessibil­ity to many affordable life and health insurance solutions.

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