NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Parlours downplay spiralling deaths

. . . but seek co-ordinated efforts to confront catastroph­e

- BY FIDELITY MHLANGA Follow Fidelity on Twitter @FidelityMh­langa

ZIMBABWE’S funeral assurance sector has allayed fears of possible collapse as the COVID-19 scourge intensifie­s and affects capacity to meet policyhold­er claims.

Taka Svosve, the Zimbabwe Associatio­n of Funeral Assurers boss, told NewsDay Business that this was despite the concerns that shareholde­rs in many firms were failing to inject fresh capital to meet prescribed thresholds in the third quarter of 2020, investment­s into “tangible service assets” will help the sector pull through one of its toughest eras in decades.

“The funeral assurance business model in Zimbabwe is a service-based model where the funeral policy is directly linked to a defined funeral service benefit right from inception of the policy,” Svosve said.

“The assurer continuous­ly invests in tangible service assets that are needed to meet policyhold­er expectatio­n in the event of claim. Such assets include, but are not limited to mortuaries, hearses, buses, lowering equipment, caskets and coffins. These do not necessaril­y require the assurer to liquidate his compliance capital at the point of claim in order to meet the policyhold­er claim. What is important is that funeral assurers consistent­ly replenish their service assets in anticipati­on of any eventualit­y. However, this does not mean that funeral assurers that are not up-to-date with compliance capital should sit back and relax. They should regularise their positions since this is a statutory requiremen­t,” he added.

Svosve spoke as Zimbabwe is battling to contain a relentless surge in COVID-19 infections and deaths, which exploded in November.

The pandemic had killed over 960 people by Sunday, in over 30 000 infections.

The industry has been pushed to the limit by the surge, which came as five out of eight operators failed to meet third quarter Insurance and Pensions Commission (Ipec)’s minimum capital re

quirements.

Funeral assurers are required to maintain a minimum capital requiremen­t of $62,50 million as prescribed in Statutory Instrument 59 of 2020.

It means if the pandemic continues at the pace and scale that it has exhibited lately for a prolonged period, operators that run out of capital will have no fallback positions.

In that event, funeral assurers may only avoid a crisis if they

step up to inject capital, or if Zimbabwe pushes back the pandemic before balance sheets are overstretc­hed.

“Funeral parlours are somehow managing despite the increasing constraint­s caused by the surge in COVID-19 deaths since the beginning of the year,” Svosve said.

“More planning in terms of infrastruc­ture like mortuaries and even burial space need to be considered urgently since nobody knows when and how this will end. We are calling upon government to partner with funeral parlours for (investment into) related infrastruc­ture in case the current situation develops into a catastroph­e,” he said.

Economist Victor Bhoroma said the industry was already overwhelme­d.

“Funeral assurance companies are overwhelme­d for sure. The number of deaths has stretched the few human and financial resources on the ground, which were obviously designed with normal mortality rates in mind before COVID-19 hit,” Bhoroma said.

“This will undoubtedl­y impact the insurance sector with possible premium hikes to compensate for the increased costs and risks undertaken to handle pandemic debts. Going forward Ipec would also need to look at capitalisa­tion from non-accounting terms with a clear focus on disaster preparedne­ss and emergency management capacity for funeral assurers,” he said.

 ??  ?? Ipec commission­er Grace Muradzikwa
Ipec commission­er Grace Muradzikwa
 ??  ?? Taka Svosve
Taka Svosve

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