Business Standard

Expert panel on health insurance says pilot products for 5-year tenure needed

- BS REPORTER

An expert committee constitute­d to examine the health insurance framework has said there should be experiment­al products, with a five-year period.

In its report, given to the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai), it recommende­d insurers have a category of closed-end products(termedpilo­tproducts) for this much time. These would cover risks that are otherwise generally declined or excluded, where they have the option to renew or not after five years. This is to encourage new and innovative products. After five years, the companies have to confirm a pilot product as a regular one, subject to the various provisions of renewabili­ty.

For product pricing, it has recommende­d inclusion of an inflation benchmark (Consumer Price Index rise+three per cent) to allow an automatic increase in premium to take care ofmedical inflation, year on year. This is a cap and an insurer may increase up to this limit. Any higher increase would require Irdai’s approval.

The regulator had constitute­d a 11-member panel in December 2014, with members from the private sector and public sector, of life and general insurers, apart from members from Irdai and the General Insurance Council. It was to look into products, distributi­on, financial matters, mergers and acquisitio­n, and policyhold­ers' interest in the segment.

The panel said there should be entry age-based pricing, where it has to be ensured that the premium reflects risk at the age of entry into the pool. This would create an automatic, structural­incentivet­oattractth­e younger population and keep them in the insured pool. This also means a first-time entrant who is older would be charged more than a similar-aged life which has entered the pool in the past and stayed insured.

The committee said insurers and third-party administra­tors have systems to identify, monitor, control and deal with fraud (including hospital abuse) by various agencies, including health care providers. The regulator should direct insurers and TPAs to put systems and internal processes in place. It proposed greater transparen­cy and clarity to enable policyhold­ers to understand the boundaries of coverage in their policy.

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