In a country
where less than 15 per cent of population has some form of health insurance
coverage, the potential for the health insurance segment remains high. It seems
that there is an urgent need to ramp up the health insurance coverage in the
country as out-of-pocket payments are still among the highest in the world.
Furthermore, according to the statistics of the World
Health Organization (WHO), in 2011, India has spent only 3.9 per cent of gross
domestic product (GDP) on the health sector which is the lowest amongst the
BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) member countries pack.
Moreover, amongst the BRICS nations, in 2011, Russia’s
out-of-pocket expenses stood highest at 87.9 per cent closely followed by India
(86 per cent), China (78.8 per cent), Brazil (57.8 per cent), and South Africa
(13.8 per cent). On the other hand, these expenses in developed economies of US
and UK were comfortably poised at 20.9 per cent and 53.1 per cent respectively.
High out-of-pocket expense is exactly the reflection of
low health insurance coverage in India. Sudip Bandyopadhyay, President,
Destimoney Securities, opined, “We don’t have the insurance to cover and thus
we end up paying from our own pockets. Once the penetration of health insurance
increases, out of pocket payments will come down. In US and all, health
insurance coverage is around 80 per cent.”
Reasoning out the low health insurance coverage in India,
Antony Jacob, CEO, Apollo Munich Health Insurance, said, “Only about 12-13 per
cent of population has some form of health insurance coverage, including those
who are covered through some form of government schemes. People are yet to
accept health insurance as a financial tool for medical emergencies. They
usually procrastinate when it comes to buying health insurance unless they are
faced by a challenging situation.”
Although the Indian health insurance market still lags
behind other countries in terms of penetration yet the health insurance segment
is rising. It continues to be one of the most rapidly growing sectors in the
Indian insurance industry with gross written premiums for health insurance
increased by 16 per cent from Rs 13,212 crore in 2011-12 to Rs 15,341 crore in
2012-13. The health insurance premium has registered a compounded annual growth
rate (CAGR) of 32 per cent for the past eight financial years.
Health insurance segment still remains an unexplored
territory in India. Jacob at Apollo Munich Health Insurance asserted, “Health
insurance has become one of the most prominent segments in the insurance space
today and is expected to grow significantly in the next few years. As spending
on healthcare in India is expected to double in a couple of years, we believe
that health insurance will eventually become the biggest contributor in the non-life
segment.”
Furthermore, in the present scenario, the health
insurance industry is dominated by four public sector entities (National, New
India, Oriental, and United India) that together have 60 per cent market share.
The rest of the share is with 17 private sector players, of which four are
standalone health insurance players (Star Health, Apollo Munich, Max Bupa, and
Religare Health). ICICI Lombard continued to be the largest private sector
non-life insurance company, with market share of 9.74 per cent.
Standalone health insurers have got a boost by the move
taken by Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) in early 2013.
Bandyopadhyay averred, “Few months back, IRDA has classified health
insurance as a separate category and has permitted the insurers to tie-up
with banks. All the four exclusive health insurance companies will be tying
with the banks across the country and that will help them to move to the next
level. The penetration of health insurance is now expected to increase with banks
pushing for it through bancassurance tie-up.”
[Source: http://zeenews.india.com/bbv/exclusive/health-insurance-in-india-still-remains-an-untapped-market_877989.html]
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