Funerals are big business in South Africa, with an estimated R10bn a year spent on funerals and related services.
Insurance companies have found a lucrative product offering in funeral policies, with around 15 million such policies currently held in South Africa. A survey by FinScope found that 5.5 million people have two or more funeral cover products and that only 6.6 million people have insurance other than funeral cover.
In a recent conversation with a researcher from CGAP – an international think tank dedicated to financial inclusion – I was told that South Africa has significantly more funeral insurance per capita than any other developed or emerging economy. He also commented that the amount spent on funerals well exceeds our international peers.
We can debate the impact that funerals and the related insurance has, not only on households’ expenses but in diverting funds away from other financial product needs. The bottom line, however, is that people take out insurance in the expectation that it will provide cash for a funeral.
Lack of emergency funds
South Africans have virtually no money put aside for emergencies or unforeseen events. The 2019 Old Mutual Savings and Investment Monitor found that 73% of households earning less than R6 000 a month and nearly half of middle-income households (R14 000 to R20 000) would not be able to meet an unforeseen expense of R10 000. They could neither tap into savings nor even take out loans to meet that obligation.
So, when a family member dies, especially in the middle of the month when there is no salary left, few households have the funds to meet the funeral expenses. They can’t even take a short-term loan to cover them while waiting for the insurance to pay out. That is why the maximum 48-hours turnaround time for a claim to be paid is crucial. If household finances were more robust, people would not become so desperate as to dump a body outside the branch of a life insurer when the payout was delayed by a few days.
Desperate times
The anger towards this life insurer, Old Mutual, is symptomatic of a desperate community, one that is feeling angry and disempowered. It feels sometimes as if the odds are stacked against us. As consumers of financial services we are given little leeway if our premiums are late ‒ we have to pay regularly, or we lose our cover. Yet if an insurer’s administration delays a payment, there is seldom any consequence to the company. In contrast the consequence of that late payment is significant to the household, so the anger is understandable.
However, we also need to look at the facts within context. In most cases established insurers do well in terms of their claims. This week FNB issued a press release that they had paid out R50 million of unclaimed life benefits over the last year. Through a partnership with the Department of Home Affairs, FNB Life routinely checks via the National Population Registry if any of its policyholders are deceased.
If it is found that a policyholder has passed away, the life insurer proactively processes a payout to beneficiaries, many of whom had no idea that the policies existed. Old Mutual pays out 99% of its valid funeral claims within 48 hours. The family from Stanger fell into the 1%. They lodged their claim on Monday 11 November and the funeral claim was paid on Friday 15 November. Old Mutual claims that “the settlement and payment of the claim was already in progress and was not expedited by the regrettable event that took place at the branch.” It would not be difficult for the regulators to verify the claim, so we can assume there is truth to the statement.
The impact of fraud
Fraud unfortunately plays a large role in the delay of payments, not because the deceased or their family have acted fraudulently, but because crime syndicates have found ways to defraud insurers, especially when it comes to funeral cover.
There have been cases where syndicates have taken out funeral cover on an already deceased individual and worked with the morgue to keep the body on ice until the waiting period is over. There are even cases where drug dealers take out funeral cover on their addicted clients and provide them with sufficient drugs to ensure a timeous death. The case’s forensic investigation process would shock most of us. In this case the claim was assessed further as the policy was less than a year old which raised an enquiry.
The extreme reaction of the family may have come from poor communication by Old Mutual or a general distrust in the financial industry, but no doubt financial desperation was the root cause.
This article first appeared in City Press.
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