
Non-life insurance
Non-life insurers dominate the Kenyan market and collect two-thirds of
total premiums. Nearly half of non-life covers are generated from automotive
insurance. Almost another quarter comes from health. But still given the
relative prosperity in Kenya, Insurance penetration remains small with the
report citing fraud as a major concern. “A whole 95 per cent of respondents
claim insurance fraud is what is keeping them from getting covers,” the report
reads. “Already the most mature among the seven countries in our survey, significant
upside potential exists in Kenya,” says Steve Osei-Mensah, EY East and Central
Africa Insurance and Actuarial Advisory leader. “During the first quarter of
2015, premiums grew by 16.4 per cent, according to the Insurance Regulatory
Authority. And for all of 2014, gross direct premiums grew at more than 20 per
cent,” Mr Osei-Mensah added. Kenya has also been a leader in developing its
M-PESA mobile money platform. A number of insurers already employ it to fund
basic insurance coverage, though some executives doubt it can ever replace the
traditional system of using agents and brokers for higher-priced or more
sophisticated covers.
By Lee
Mwiti
http://www.standardmedia.co.ke
February 17th 2016 at 00:00 GMT +3
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