Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

Número de respuestas: 8

Insurance is required to provide a safety net to people. It is a mechanism to manage life’s inherent risks and cushion the financial blow of unforeseen events. A vast portion of the global population remains uninsured. Billions of people, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, live without formal protection against crises like failed harvests, sudden illnesses, natural disasters, or the loss of a breadwinner. 

The Global Findex 2025 confirms that people in low- and middle-income countries mostly rely on informal mechanisms, such as borrowing from family or selling assets, rather than formal insurance products, when faced with negative events. 

This chasm between the need for, and the access to, risk mitigation is known as the global protection gap. CGAP estimates that there are 3.8 billion people who need insurance and do not have it. The women’s insurance market opportunity alone is about USD 1.7 trillion. 

The gap spans health, mortality, crop loss, and natural catastrophes. It is a staggering reality that leaves the most vulnerable households exposed. When facing a crisis, these households are forced to deplete savings, sell assets, or fall into debt, which only perpetuates the cycle of poverty, hindering economic development. 

Without deliberate and targeted action, this gap will continue to widen. It will leave the most vulnerable even less capable of withstanding the impacts of climate change and other risks. It will also make it even more challenging for them to build resilience.

Traditional insurance models have struggled to bridge the coverage gap. 

Conventional insurance products typically:

  • are designed for formal, high-income markets
  • involve high premiums
  • are written in complex policy language
  • use cumbersome paperwork for enrolment
  • involve various coverage exclusions
  • have lengthy, bureaucratic claims processes. 

For low-income individuals with irregular cash flows, limited financial literacy, and a distrust of formal institutions, these barriers are often insurmountable. This is precisely where the concept of inclusive insurance emerges as a targeted, market-based solution.

The following video unpacks what inclusive insurance is and how it can help address this coverage gap and build resilience. 

 

 

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Click to view the transcript.

Additional Reading:

The following sources were consulted in preparing this video. We suggest that you include these as additional reading as you proceed through this course. 

Reflection Questions for Discussion

Please post your response using the forum functionality to share your insights and thoughts with your fellow students. 

  1. How are inclusive insurance providers making innovative use of digital data in your market? 
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Sarim Ali - Group 5
In Pakistan, inclusive insurance is increasingly distributed through mobile wallets and partnerships with banks and telecom operators. Digital channels are also used for premium collection and faster claims payments.

Providers are starting to use customer and transaction data to design simpler products and improve pricing for underserved segments.
En respuesta a Sarim Ali

Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Mariam Nansubuga - Group 4
In Uganda, inclusive insurers are using mobile money transaction data and airtime usage patterns to underwrite micro-insurance products without requiring traditional paperwork, with companies like Turaco embedding life and hospital cover directly into mobile wallets with automated premium deductions and mobile claims processing.
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Faith Fxentirimam Envuladu - Group 1
The insurance providers in Nigeria who offer inclusive coverage use digital data methods to close protection gaps by analyzing mobile phone usage patterns and alternative credit scoring data. They use data analytics to create customized microinsurance products, which they deliver through their digital platforms. This enables them to access affordable insurance solutions that meet their specific needs.
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Lucy Kihembo - Group 4
1. In design of products, insurance providers are developing products that are not covered by the traditional insurance types. For instance, micro insurance for health care providers who were previously too small for the big insurance providers. A case in point in Clinic pesa in Uganda.
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Michael Sserwanga Sserwanga - Group 4
In the Ugandan market, inclusive insurance providers are increasingly making innovative use of digital data and alternative distribution channels to reach previously underserved populations. One example is the distribution of Motor Third Party (MTP) insurance through local retailers such as petrol stations. Because petrol stations interact with motorists on a daily basis, insurers can leverage these to sell or renew policies instantly. Data from these retail outlets helps insurers identify patterns in vehicle usage, locations with higher demand for coverage, and customer segments that were previously difficult to reach through traditional insurance brokers.

Another innovation is the use of telecommunications platforms such as MTN and Airtel to distribute Lower level insurance products. Through mobile money systems, insurers can embed simple insurance products that customers can purchase directly via USSD or mobile apps. For example, some mobile based products provide short term accident or hospitalisation coverage, including benefits such as covering accommodation or night stay costs in the event of an accident. Mobile network operators generate large volumes of customer transaction data, which insurers can analyse to design affordable products, set appropriate pricing, and identify potential customers who may benefit from such coverage.
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Doreen Ninsiima - Group 4
They are using digital data to access the earning and income potential of potential clients which then helps the insurance providers tailor products that can meet the market needs of the potential customers.
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Aboo Badhasa Aboma - Group 2
Inclusive insurance providers in Ethiopia are increasingly using AI-driven platforms and satellite geodata to automate index-based payouts for climate-related agricultural risks through the national Agricultural Insurance Consortium. Meanwhile, fintech innovators are digitizing traditional social networks like Iddirs and Equbs to leverage community-level data and mobile money history for the targeted delivery of micro-health and life insurance.
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Re: Prudential Supervision: Introduction to Inclusive Insurance

de Agaba Albert Busingye Agaba - Group 4

In the Ugandan market, the Insurance providers are utilizing customer data to develop user-friendly products or services to meet the different customers. Insurance providers have developed digital access or medical collections to specific hospitals or medical services for quick services and claims in the short-term. Insurance providers have developed digital access for premiums of life insurance packages, Motor vehicles and Motorcycles Third party insurance payments through mainly Petrol Station outlets and Retail shops that have partnered with Insurance providers, improving the financial inclusion objective.