Report on health cover for ‘missing : Irdai ..Since long BPS has been demanding health cover for those who are neither covered under the government’s social schemes providing health insurance nor do they have employers’ or private health insurance.
For a long time BPS has been demanding health cover for those who are neither covered under the government’s social schemes providing health insurance nor do they have employers’ or private health insurance.Like 69lac EPS 95 Pensioners & those pensioners who have for some reason did not/could not join any of the Govt, Scheme
Report on health cover for ‘missing : Irdai ..
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Mumbai: The Insurance
Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) has said it will soon
come out with its report on covering the ‘missing middle’ in the country under
health insurance. The regulator has asked the industry to be prepared to move quickly
with the insurance solutions required for this segment.
The ‘missing middle’ in the insurance industry
refers to the 40-50 crore people who are neither covered under the government’s
social schemes providing health insurance nor do they have employers’ or
private health insurance.
“A large section of the population — the missing
middle — still has no coverage under health insurance. What the insurance
solutions are is something that we need to work out. We have already appointed
a committee which is working quickly, you should work out your strategy,” said
Irdai chairman Debasish Panda. He was addressing insurance companies at Ficci’s
22nd annual insurance conference in Mumbai.
Speaking at the event, HDFC Ergo MD & CEO
Ritesh Kumar said there was an opportunity for insurers to extend health
insurance with OPD (outdoor patient department) cover. He said the challenges
were the 18% goods and services tax (GST) on the premium and the huge volumes
that would be generated. “OPD covers will have to work on networks and
cashlessly,” he said.
According to GIC Re
chairman & MD Devesh Srivastava, the need is to have simple, flexible
products that can be expanded as the requirement and the purchasing power of
the policyholder increases. “When you are young, you do not need health
insurance, and old age itself is a disease,” said Srivastava.
United India Insurance CMD Satyajit Tripathy
said it were the government schemes that drove insurance penetration in rural
areas.
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