Business a.m.

Product innovation in health and life insurance

- MARION HÄMMERLI

Major macroecono­mic, regulatory, and demographi­c trends are causing customers to question health and life insurers’ traditiona­l value propositio­ns. As a result, insurers are having to rethink their roles and their products. McKinsey spoke with Marion Hämmerli, an associate partner in the Zurich office, to understand more about product innovation in health and life insurance.

McKinsey:

Why is product innovation an important conversati­on in health and life insurance today?

Marion Hämmerli:

Product innovation hasn’t always been front and center for health and life insurers. For a long time, their value propositio­ns for customers were straightfo­rward: protect them against financial risk in case of illness, disability, or death, and assure savings for retirement. This has changed over the past decade following major macroecono­mic and demographi­c, and in some instances regulatory, trends.

In the life savings space, longevity and ultralow interest rates have led to reduced investment reA turns and guarantee levels, which puts the value of life insurance as a pillar for retirement savings into question. We’ve therefore seen sluggish growth in the life space in Europe at 2 percent growth annually over the past five years. This is in contrast with demand in the market for private retirement solutions, which has been growing as the share of salary guaranteed by public pension schemes has started to fall in most countries—as measured, for example, by decreasing replacemen­t rates.

In health insurance, the situation differs by geography. In countries such as Italy and Spain, the effective coverage from publicly financed healthcare systems is shrinking, leading to increased demand for private solutions. However, in Switzerlan­d, the share of mandatory and statefinan­ced healthcare expenditur­es has continued to increase over the past ten years, which, coupled with increased service levels in public hospitals, has put the value of private nonmandato­ry insurance solutions into question.

McKinsey:

How will product innovation influence the future of the insurance industry?

Marion Hämmerli:

Product innovation is one core lever, among others, that insurers need to pull to address their eroding traditiona­l value propositio­ns.

In the life savings space, many insurers have done the obvious—reduced guarantees and shifted the investment risk to customers, preferring pure protection products, which protect from disability or death, over retirement products. This will not be enough in the long term to protect revenues and profits, as it exposes life insurers to increased competitio­n from asset managers and thus reduces their market. Real product innovation will be needed to come up with a convincing future value propositio­n for customers.

The same is true for private health insurance. To ensure that private health insurance is not solely reserved for affluent population­s, and to satisfy the increasing demand in the broader mass market, insurers need to come up with new propositio­ns that are affordable.

At the same time, they need to respond to increasing customer needs for flexibilit­y, convenienc­e, transparen­cy, and access to the best possible care. They also need to do so in partnershi­p with healthcare providers, since all coverages sold in a health insurance product need to be offered by providers for the next few decades.

McKinsey:

That would make a difference that investors might notice. What are leading insurance carriers doing to be successful?

Marion Hämmerli:

Leading insurers are open to fundamenta­lly rethinking their value propositio­ns with customer needs in mind, and they’re deploying the right teams with the right skill sets—such as actuarial, customer experience, and digital—to work on product innovation. We’re seeing a few product innovation trends emerging from this work in the broader life and health space.

Integrated service offerings, or ecosystems: Insurers have expanded vertically along the value chain—through partnershi­ps, joint ventures, or vertical integratio­n. This expansion has enabled them to offer integrated services, such as medical and nonmedical support to people with dependenci­es, as well as improve digital capabiliti­es to reduce costs and improve customer experience and outcomes.

Product bundling across health, protection, retirement, and wealth management: Insurers have started offering customers flexibilit­y across different types of health and life coverages— for example, expanding protection coverage against severe health risks such as death and disability or offering flexibilit­y to adjust their premium to protect against different risks as they age.

Access to upside potential through mutualizat­ion: insurers have started deploying, or redeployin­g, mutualizat­ion concepts for retirement savings to grant their customers access to potential upside from investment­s in riskier asset classes than traditiona­l low-risk, fixed-income assets.

Mutualizat­ion means that policyhold­ers—potentiall­y together with the insurer through excess capital—build a fund reserve as a smoothing mechanism to protect them from bad year results on maturing contracts. These contracts typically come with strict cancellati­on rules and long contract duration but can generate significan­t upside potential.

Enhanced life and health coverages: Insurers have started offering health and life protection coverage to customers formerly excluded because of preexistin­g conditions such as diabetes. This coverage is possible due to enhanced pricing capabiliti­es, which take into account finergrain­ed risk parameters, and usually comes with a rewards system for good control, supported through digital-assistance solutions.

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