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Irdai sees demand for new covers in wake of pandemic

The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irda... Read More
MUMBAI: The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (

Irdai

) is expecting demand for new covers like those for business interruption and

cyber risks

to rise in the wake of the pandemic and the corresponding shift to work-from-home arrangements.


The regulator is also considering the proposals of its panel which has recommended a

business interruption cover

. This will provide small businesses with up to 10 employees a minimum salary of Rs 6,500 for up to three months of a

lockdown

.

Speaking at a CII virtual seminar on learnings from the pandemic, Irdai executive director Suresh Mathur said that the regulator is considering the formation of an

Indian pandemic risk pool

with contributions from the country’s

insurers

and reinsurers. A pandemic pool is required to cover such risks because international reinsurers do not provide pandemic cover.

“As remote working becomes a norm, insurers can expect changes in the workmen and employee compensation products to include features like workspaces ergonomics and work-life balance for employees. The effect of Covid on general liability will vary industry-wise,” said Mathur. He added that this would also increase the demand for

cyber insurance

and further the evolution of cyber insurance products.

Mathur pointed out that the lockdown had resulted in business interruption covers taking centre stage. He added that while there will be pressure on insurers to settle claims arising out of business interruption, the impact on companies will depend on policy wordings.

Irdai had last year constituted a working group to explore the formation of an Indian pandemic risk pool. This was supposed to focus on risk to business continuity, reduction of stress on individuals and address the issue of migrant labourers. The working group had suggested that the pandemic pool should be through public-private partnership and the capacity (capital) would be through premium collections from insurers, Indian reinsurers and foreign reinsurance branches.

“The product initially will cater to the micro and small to medium enterprises. We want a product where salary protection would be covered up to three months or an actual lockdown period, whichever is less. It is envisaged that Rs 6,500 per month for a maximum of three months can be covered for a maximum of 10 employees per MSME,” said Mathur.

In the second phase, it could provide health insurance and enhancement of employees’ salary, and the third phase would include life insurance cover and higher salary cover.

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