Wednesday, 17 June 2015

HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE BUYING INSURANCE IN NIGERIA :FACTS

The insurance industry is currently experiencing low patronage. Most insurance companies declaring significant income are dependent on government patronage.  Premiums collected from government and government agencies account for about 70% of their gross premium income. Without these government accounts, most insurance companies would be declaring heavy losses. Unfortunately, government income has started to dwindle as revealed in current events. Some state governments can no longer pay salaries regularly. Some governments are diverting pension funds for other uses. Oil income is reducing daily.
Insurance practitioners must, therefore, start thinking of how to break this jinx of low insurance penetration in Nigeria once and for all. The industry must begin to think of how to strategically and aggressively put insurance on the fore front of human needs for all Nigerians.  
Dependence on government accounts has made many insurers to become laid-back on the issue of market development and market penetration. Even the practitioners do not have any form of insurance except those made compulsory by government. With very few corporate bodies and individuals taking up insurance, insurers scramble for the little available and are ready to do anything in order to win the few available accounts.
NAICOM has done so much as regulator in providing enabling environment for market growth. Training and retraining has been made available. Premium payment issues has been finally resolved. Some insurance products have become compulsory but without adequate willpower and innovative strategies from underwriters nobody is buying those products. These products remain on the shelves of insurance companies unsold.
Poor and bad publicity has been the origin of the industry’s problem. Unfortunately most insurers go through the years without reaching out to the outside world. They are satisfied with two or three adverts in insurance magazines read only by insurers. No effort is made to reach out to Nigerians out there.  
An international survey team, EFinA, recently published information on insurance penetration among adult population in Nigeria. The following are their findings in a survey carried out in all parts of Nigeria in 2014
Ø  Estimated Population of Nigeria 150m
Ø  No of people in rural area 63.5m
Ø  Total no of adult population 93.5m
Ø  49.4m adults (52.8m of Adult population) are below 33years old
Ø  20m adults (21.3% of adult population) get their main source of income from subsistence/commercial farming
Ø  17.6m adults (18.8% of adult population)  get their main source of income from their private business
Ø  8.6m adults (9.2% of adult population) get their main source of income from the formal sector
Ø  21.5m (23% of adult education)  adults have no education
Ø  33.9m people have bank accounts (33.3% of adult population.)
Ø  57.1m  adults has never used the bank (that is 61.0% of adult population)
Ø  2.6m adults have a micro finance account (2.8% of adult population)
Ø  Only Im adults have insurance (1.1% of adult population)
o   Of the 1m people with insurance
§ 47.8 % have Motor Vehicle insurance
§ 26.2% have Life Insurance
§ 8% have Insurance on their Building
§ 6.9% have Medical Insurance
§ 6.2% have Household content insurance
§ 4.2% have Group Life
§ 3.9% have Education Plan for Children
§ 3% have Livestock insurance
§ Others 7.3%
There is nothing to cheer about. Even micro finance that started more recently has overtaken insurance in penetrating the market. As revealed by their findings, there are huge potentials in the Nigerian market for the insurance sector.

To improve insurance penetration among adult population, practitioners must be strategic about consumer education. Determined effort must be made to clean up bad publicity and wipe out fake insurances. Training and retraining of personnel on customer service and prompt claims payment are keys to changing Nigerian’s perception of insurance services.
Practitioners need to create partnerships and alliances with governments and government agencies to enforce compulsory insurance. NIA/NCRIB need to enforce compulsory consumer education among member companies by insisting that each companies spend a certain amount of their income on consumer education each year.  All sectors of the industry must work towards achieving these common goals. This is the only way to go.
Rotimi Olukorede  


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