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Industry

Fact Sheet: Making a BI Claim

April 30, 2024 by insuranceca

ICA Statement – 19 August 2023

August 19, 2023 by insuranceca

Home Industry Page 3

ICA Statement - 19 August 2023

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Saturday 19 August 2023

Insurers paid out $36.5 billion in claims last year, helping millions of Australians recover from the unexpected. Insurers are committed to ensuring products and services provided to customers are of a high standard and are consistent with regulatory obligations and community expectations.

Because of a series of very significant extreme weather events since the Black Summer bushfires the sector and its customers have experienced several very challenging years. In 2022 alone, there were more than 300,000 disaster-related claims lodged from four declared insurance events across the country, costing more than $7 billion in insured losses.

At the same time, in response to the Financial Services Royal Commission insurers have upgraded systems and processes and improved the way they engage with customers. This has resulted in better capacity to address customer issues and work more closely with regulators in ensuring improved customer outcomes.

We acknowledge there is more work to be done, which is why in April we commissioned Deloitte to undertake an independent review of how insurers responded to last year’s floods. This review predated the recently announced Parliamentary inquiry and will feed into that process, which we look forward to participating in.

Given the critical nature of insurance, it is vitally important that Australia has a robust and profitable insurance sector to help families, businesses, and communities get back on their feet.

Insurer profits are cyclical and often impacted by factors outside of the control of the businesses, including extreme weather events. Insurers faced historically low profits in 2020, 2021, and 2022, and recent improvements in profitability, largely due to a significant turnaround in investment returns and improvements in some commercial lines, should be seen in that context.

Persistently high inflation and significant increases in reinsurance costs are continuing to increase costs for insurers into 2023. Home insurance is under particularly significant pressure – for every dollar collected in home premiums in 2022 insurers' costs were $1.04.

The sector has appreciated the opportunity to work more closely with ASIC to develop a clearer understanding of their view of specific obligations for general insurers. We note that the recent interim stop orders on some lines of pet insurance were in place for less than 24 hours, following immediate engagement from affected businesses with ASIC to make amendments to certain documents. The sector was pleased to see these interim stop orders lifted so quickly.

Insurers must carefully calibrate costs through volatile weather periods to ensure the product remains in reach of as many Australians as possible. We note ASIC’s recommendation on resourcing and will engage further with the regulator to understand what level of permanent claims staffing they consider appropriate, given that any ongoing increase will be a cost that is ultimately borne by customers.

Suggested Links

Our Role
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Fact Sheet: The benefits of contents insurance – protection for renters

March 14, 2023 by Shannon White

Stronger NSW

February 13, 2023 by insuranceca

Insurance Council welcomes resilience and cyber investment

March 29, 2022 by insuranceca

Home Industry Page 3

Insurance Council welcomes resilience and cyber investment

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News release

Tuesday, 29 March 2022

Key budget takeaways impacting insurance:

  • $268.1 million in resilience preparedness related measures
  • $9.9 billion in cyber security over 10 years to improve cyber preparedness
  • $2 billion expansion of the Home Guarantee Scheme

The Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) today welcomed the Federal Government’s 2022-23 Budget announcement of $268 million in related measures to better protect Australians from the impacts of extreme weather and improve protections against cyber attacks. 

Under the Emergency Management Fund, the Government has committed $150 million per annum for recovery and post-disaster efforts over the next two years. An additional $116.4 million has been provided to the Black Summer Bushfire Recovery Program, funding 524 community projects with total program investment of $390 million.

Emergency Management Australia has received an additional $1.7 million to better share data and information across states and territories during large scale disasters.

The ICA has long been calling for the Federal Government to lift its investment in this area, and just last month released its Building a More Resilient Australia report which called for a doubling of Federal Government investment to $200 million in this area over the next five years, matched by the states and territories.  

The ICA’s proposed $2 billion resilience investment pipeline included:

  • $522 million for local projects such as flood levees to defend regional towns 
  • $413 million to better protect homes against flood, Australia’s most expensive natural peril, by raising utilities and services above the expected floodline
  • $221 million to cyclone-proof more than 44,000 homes in northern Australia 
  • $712 million to support the selective reduction of fuel in our forests 
  • $37 million for an improved national flood early warning system, estimated to increase the lead time for flood warnings from 3-5 to 10-15 days
  • $10 million to establish a national coastal hazard information database  

While the two-year commitment to resilience funding is welcome, sustained and greater funding in this area is required if the risk profile of communities exposed to extreme weather is to change.

The Insurance Council welcomes the Government’s $9.9 billion investment over 10 years to boost the nation’s capacity to prevent and respond to cyber threats.

This follows the release of an Insurance Council report on Monday, Cyber Insurance: Protecting our way of life in a digital world, which highlights the challenges to maintaining and developing a cyber insurance market to support Australian individuals, businesses and organisations operating in a digital economy.

As announced yesterday, the Insurance Council and those members who offer Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI) remain concerned about the continued expansion of the Home Guarantee Scheme, which removes the need for eligible borrowers to have LMI.

By displacing a proportion of the LMI market, the cost of providing LMI to borrowers who do not access the Scheme is potentially impacted. 

Comment attributable to Andrew Hall, CEO Insurance Council of Australia: 

The Insurance Council has long been calling for the level of investment in resilience measures to be increased, so funds confirmed in the Federal Budget are an important step in the right direction. 

The funds identified for the northern rivers rebuild is needed to ensure that community can rebuild stronger homes and infrastructure in a way that makes them more resilient to future extreme weather events.

While we are pleased the Federal Government is heeding this important call to step up its funding in resilience measures, there are dozens of other communities in Australia that remain exposed and require similar assistance, and we look forward to working with all levels of Government to assist in resilience and mitigation efforts.

Insurers welcome additional investment in cyber-security and resilience related measures to better protect Australian from the impacts of extreme weather and cyber threats in the digital age. We look forward to working with the Government in these important areas of public policy.

Useful links

ICA Election Platform
ICA Cyber Insurance White Paper
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Opening statement from Andrew Hall, appearing on behalf of the Insurance Council of Australia before the Christensen Inquiry

July 27, 2021 by insuranceca

Home Industry Page 3

Opening statement from Andrew Hall, appearing on behalf of the Insurance Council of Australia before the Christensen Inquiry

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Opening statement: Tuesday, 27 July 2021

Thank you Chair. I'm supported today by my Chief Operating Officer, Kylie Macfarlane who looks after our disaster recovery and resilience teams.

By way of introduction, general insurers provide Australians with 43 million business and household policies each year and pay more than $166 million in claims every working day.

Over the last year we provided support to Australia’s export industries to the amount of at least $500m dollars in gross incurred claims.

Insurance is a key component of the economy, especially in a country like Australia, where our natural peril risks are a constant reminder of the challenges we face in protecting our assets.

Insurers are proud of the way we have supported the growth of our nation, from our largest exporters to underwriting Australian’s homes, contents, small businesses and cars.

The nation's economic recovery following the COVID downturn has included lower unemployment and record levels of investment.

Unfortunately, not all sectors of the economy are performing as strongly, and the general insurance sector is currently enduring its most challenging circumstances in nearly two decades.

Insurer profitability over the last 24 months, ending March 2021, was down 64 per cent on the preceding two years.

According to APRA, the entire general insurance sector only made a profit of $19 million dollars in the most recent March quarter, largely because of the impact of recent natural disasters and in provisions undertaken for potential pandemic claims.

While over the last 18 months the Australian community has been focused on the pandemic, since the devastating bushfires of 2019, we've also endured three major flood events, a category 3 cyclone, three destructive hailstorms and a bushfire in the Perth Hills.

Over the past three years, insurers have paid out more than $7.4 billion dollars in natural disaster claims, with more than $5.6 billion dollars paid out since the 2019 bushfires.

Australian insurers are also impacted by global trends which influence underlying costs—in particular, the cost of reinsurance.

Insurance is a globalised financial service and is currently in what is described as a hardening market, meaning reinsurance pricing has increased, and, in turn, this is impacting the cost of premiums locally.

Insurers are well aware that the availability and the affordability issues of some lines of insurance for small and medium businesses have become challenging – and this includes SMEs in our export sector.

We are very aware of the impact this market environment is having on particular sectors.

In many of these categories, insurer profits are under pressure with gross loss ratios running at near or more than 100 per cent. So in this context solutions are often difficult to determine as more money is being paid out than what is being collected in premiums.

A range of inquiries and reviews over the past decade have put forward various recommendations on how to address these.

In November last year, the ICA engaged former insurance executive and regulator John Trowbridge to undertake an independent review and identify potential solutions to these affordability and availability issues.

His paper was released earlier this year for public comment, and we are engaging with key stakeholders, such as COSBOA and other specific industry associations, to continue to work through these important but complex issues.

With this consultation paper on commercial insurances, a dialogue with stakeholders representing different SME sectors has started.

There is no single silver bullet for resolving these issues, but we are serious about grappling with them for the benefit of small businesses and the broader economy.

We are engaging with government, regulators, policy holders, industry groups and consumer groups to understand where we can find sensible actions moving forward over the short, medium and longer term.

Turning to the topic of climate change, there is a growing recognition by companies, investors and regulators that climate presents a significant set of financial risks as well as opportunities.

Insurers have been looking at how to balance the requirements of regulators, investors and the overall global insurance environment.

Central banks and financial regulators globally now widely acknowledge that climate change is a source of financial stability risk.

Our industry is aligned with the regulatory guidelines on managing the financial risks of climate and we recognise that our regulators are keeping pace with the global standards.

We will continue to heed the guidance of our regulators and manage liability risks accordingly.

In Australia the emphasis in the immediate term has been on addressing the physical risks associated with a warming climate.

Climate change in Australia means more intense and frequent natural hazard events and more loss events, as re-insurers can clearly evidence.

To mitigate these physical risks, we have been collaborating with all levels of government to protect Australians through implementing projects to drive more resilient built environments, especially against cyclone and bushfire risks.

We are working with Federal Government to see these resilience projects replicated and scaled through the National Recovery and Resilience Agency.

We stand ready to provide data to Government on where investment in resilience and mitigation will provide the maximum benefit as well as bring down pressure on premium pricing.

We're happy to take any questions from the committee.

Useful links

Our Executive Team
icon Opening statement from Andrew Hall, appearing on behalf of the Insurance Council of Australia before the House Economics Committee
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