Chapter 4 Lack of consumer awareness
4.1
This inquiry focused on issues arising out of the handling of catastrophe-related
insurance claims. However, during the course of the inquiry, the Committee
heard compelling evidence of consumer concerns about issues that precede the
claims handling processes.
4.2
One issue is the low level of consumer awareness of insurance contracts
or policies. The details, and ramifications, of insurance contracts are often
not brought to light until the consumer is affected by a natural disaster, at
which time it is too late to change or alter insurance policies.
4.3
Low levels of consumer rights awareness relating to making claims is
another concern. In order to avail themselves of the protection, assistance and
recompense that insurance policies provide, consumers need to be aware of their
rights to make and pursue a claim. This includes their right to revisit a claim
that has been settled quickly in the aftermath of a natural disaster.
Insurance contracts
4.4
The Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth) (Insurance Contracts Act) imposes
certain requirements on insurance contracts in terms of a prescribed Standard
Cover for home and contents general insurance, which is defined in the Insurance
Contracts Regulations 1985 (Cth). Standard insurance cover includes flood among
prescribed natural disasters, along with fire, storm, earthquake, cyclone and
actions of the sea.[1] Total replacement
policies are also standard, unlike sum-insured policies.
4.5
However, the regulations allow insurers to deviate, or derogate, from Standard
Cover in their products, on the proviso that they ensure that the client is
informed in writing or is otherwise aware of the exclusion. Written notice of
flood exclusion in a lengthy product disclosure statement (PDS) was deemed sufficient
to comply with this stipulation in a 2002 court case.[2]
More recently, the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) explained that ‘whilst in
most circumstances the provision of a PDS will satisfy the need to clearly
inform’, context is also important and FOS therefore ruled in favour of a
consumer who was misled ‘at policy inception’ by the insurer that the policy
provided full flood cover.[3]
4.6
Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) noted that:
… financial products are relatively complex compared to many
other products that consumers purchase. For example, most financial products
cannot be ‘tested’ before they are bought and most involve estimates of the
future risks of particular events. Consumer information problems are therefore
a well recognised and persistent feature of the broader financial services
market. This is why disclosure requirements are an important feature of
regulation in this sector.[4]
4.7
Not many consumers have a good awareness or understanding of the scope
of their cover nor do they read insurance policies in detail.[5]
Product Disclosure Statements are often lengthy and highly technical in nature,
making them difficult for lay people to read and understand. The Committee
supports the Natural Disaster Insurance Review report’s recommendation that
insurers provide a brief Key Facts Statement that summarises the salient
features of the policy, including in particular any exclusions, and defines
Standard Cover.[6]
4.8
As noted in Chapter 3, unfair contract terms laws under the ASIC Act do
not apply to general insurance contracts. Consequently, there are no penalties
for general insurance contracts that contain unfair terms. Mr David Coorey, of
Legal Aid NSW, is very critical of this exemption:
The only standard form contract in this country today that
does not have unfair terms legislation is insurance, and that is unacceptable.
Out of all of the contracts in the country, where a consumer lives or dies,
really, on the fine print of a product, you would have thought that insurance
contracts would be the one contract where you might have legislation that
already applies across the board to every other standard form contract in
Australia.[7]
4.9
Insurers claim that unfair contract terms laws need not apply as
consumers are already protected through their duty of utmost good faith under
the Insurance Contracts Act.
4.10
The Committee found that many consumers around Australia have understood
their insurance policy only after the recent extreme weather events, often to
their detriment. The following section discusses the consequences of widespread
industry derogation of Standard Cover and the impact of:
n lack of awareness of
policy coverage; and
n underinsurance.
Policy coverage
4.11
The lack of awareness of insurance coverage is not a new issue of
consumer concern. More than a decade ago, ASIC published a report based on a
national review of disclosure and sales processes by general insurers.[8]
The review found that many consumers were not aware whether they were covered
for flood or of the difference between ‘storm’ and ‘flood’.
4.12
Circumstances do not appear to have improved since the release of that
report. The devastating Queensland, Western Australian and Victorian floods in
2011 have exposed widespread ignorance of adequate protection from flooding.
4.13
Although it is not known how many internally-handled disputes arose from
insurance claims related to natural disaster events, the latest FOS annual
review of the General Insurance Code of Practice indicates that the number of
insurance claims disputes did not increase dramatically from 2008–09 to
2009–10.[9] However, non-claims
related disputes for home insurance, such as disputes about buying insurance,
increased by 71 per cent in that time, which may attest to the flood events’
role in making a large number of consumers aware for the first time of their
policy coverage.
4.14
The Queensland Minister for Finance, Natural Resources and the Arts, the
Hon. Rachel Nolan, described the situation in Queensland where:
… many thousands of people who in good faith believed that
their comprehensive insurance included flood cover were shocked to find that
their policies accommodated flash but not riverine flooding.[10]
4.15
Legal aid organisations observed similar low levels of consumer
awareness of insurance policies. The Victorian Legal Assistance Forum (VLAF)
noted that people have limited understanding of ‘the scope of coverage for
different types of water inundation and particular exclusions’.[11]
The Insurance Law Service (ILS) advised the Committee that:
Our contact with consumers in the wake of this event showed
the extent to which what they were actually covered for mismatched their
expectations of insurance. I think, if a product is that far out of line with
what people think it is and think it should be, then we have an issue.[12]
4.16
In fact, most insurance policies do derogate from Standard Cover when it
comes to flood.[13] In some cases, certain types
of flood, such as storm water inundation, are covered but not others, such as
riverine. Furthermore, where flood is included, or offered as an extra option,
there may be a clause located somewhere in the lengthy PDS that caps the amount
recoverable from flood damage.
4.17
In contrast, BT Financial Group, which manages the Westpac Group of
insurance businesses Westpac, St. George, BankSA, Bank of Melbourne and RAMS,
offers flood cover in all their policies. The Chief Executive Officer of BT
Financial Group explained that ‘in our experience, expecting Australians to
understand the nuances of flood cover is tough.’[14]
4.18
The general insurance industry blames the lack of flood mitigation
measures and flood mapping data for difficulties in pricing risk accurately and
therefore being able to provide flood cover. However, Ms Jenny Lawton, Victoria
Legal Aid lawyer, counters that:
… until we can achieve better mitigation, better flood
mapping and better information, there is a case to be made for preventing the
insurance industry from derogating from the provision of flood cover.[15]
4.19
The 2000 ASIC report also expressed concerns that insurance sales
representatives were not adequately trained to offer or provide information on the
complexities of flood insurance.[16]
4.20
Insurance Australia Group (IAG) argues that their employees have a
script for advising clients of the exclusions, such as flood cover. The IAG
advised the Committee that ‘in Victoria and Queensland the number one issue on
that list of key exclusions would be flood.’[17]
4.21
However, FOS has found against insurers where a consumer believed that
their policy covered all instances of flood and the insurer cannot prove that
it advised through a PDS or via telephone of the derogation of cover from Standard
Cover.[18]
4.22
The ICA has suggested that the industry should make a:
… commitment to simplify and
improve insurance product disclosure statement summary arrangements to enhance
consumer understanding of insurance cover.[19]
4.23
In order to reduce the confusion over policy coverage and definitions of
‘flood’, the Australian Government drafted the Insurance Contracts Amendment
Bill 2011 (Cth). The bill, which was introduced in Parliament in November 2011,
makes it a requirement of insurers to provide and clearly inform clients of key
policy information in a Key Facts Statement. In addition, insurers will be
required to utilise a standard agreed definition of ‘flood’ in policy wording. The
Australian Government will define both the Key Facts Statement and the
definition of ‘flood’ in the Insurance Contracts Regulations.
Underinsurance
4.24
Underinsurance is not a new issue. In 2005, ASIC issued Getting Home
Insurance Right, a report on widespread underinsurance in the wake of the
Canberra bushfires of 2003.[20] This report was followed
by Making Home Insurance Better in 2007, which examined how the
situation had improved since the 2005 report, as well as the extent of
underinsurance following Cyclone Larry in Queensland.[21]
4.25
Underinsurance is attributed in large part to the prevalence of sum-insured
policies over total replacement policies.[22] A sum-insured policy
provides insurance cover only up to a specified sum whereas a total replacement
policy provides insurance for the total cost of replacing or repairing a home,
regardless of the final cost. Where there is a difference between the sum
agreed and the final cost, sum-insured clients must pay for the difference out
of their own pocket.
4.26
Moreover, there are many risks inherent in sum-insured policies, which
ASIC covers comprehensively in its reports. In summary:
n calculating future
rebuilding costs is difficult and complex but is the responsibility of the
client;
n calculations may not
be updated on a yearly basis to consider renovations, changes in building codes
or increases in the cost of building materials and labour; and
n calculations cannot
predict the drastic price increases that follow a large-scale natural disaster
due to high demand on materials and labour.
4.27
Again, sum-insured policies deviate from the prescribed Standard Cover. The
Committee is concerned that consumers are not aware that sum-insured policies
can leave them underinsured in the event of large-scale or total damage or
loss. The VLAF encountered low consumer awareness of the difference between
sum-insured and total replacement policies.[23]
4.28
Insurers point out that sum-insured policies:
… provide clarity on values for the consumer, limiting
insurers’ potential loss, keeping the exposure stable for reinsurers and
therefore keeping products more affordable for consumers.[24]
However, the Committee heard that total
replacement policies are not necessarily more expensive than sum-insured
policies.[25]
4.29
The lack of available insurance cover is another reason for
underinsurance. For example, while farms may have access to home and contents
insurance, equipment such as fencing, bores, and water tanks may not be
covered. Flood insurance for crops and livestock is not available in Australia,
and neither is multi-peril crop insurance that protects from all disasters.
Committee comment
4.30
The Committee believes that deviation from the prescribed Standard Cover
for general insurance has led to extensive confusion for consumers over what a
particular insurance policy covers. Not only do some policies cover flood and
others omit flood, various policies contain different definitions of flood,
including some types and excluding other types. In the event of heavy rain,
storms and flooding, this requires insurers to make significant efforts to
differentiate between types of water behaviour. Such investigations can be the
cause of the lengthy delays and protracted disputes that have outraged many
consumers around the country.
4.31
The Committee agrees with the argument put to the NDIR by consumer
groups that:
… the duty of utmost good faith in the Act is not equivalent
to unfair contract terms laws as reliance by an insurer upon a term of an
insurance contract (such as an exclusion clause) is not, as a matter of law, a
breach of the duty of utmost good faith and, in any event, there are no
penalties applicable to a breach of the duty.[26]
4.32
Noting that the Treasury Department has released an options paper and a
draft Regulation Impact Statement for feedback on unfair terms in insurance
contracts, the Committee recommends that the exemption for general insurers to
the unfair contract terms laws contained in the ASIC Act be rectified.
4.33
The Committee supports the Insurance Contracts Amendment Bill 2011,
which proposes a standard definition for flood, and recommends that the
Australian Parliament pass the bill. Moreover, the Committee recommends that
insurers not be allowed to derogate from this definition.
4.34
Although underinsurance is a problem for any total loss, it can prove to
be a disaster in times of catastrophes and mass devastation. The resulting
surge in demand for building resources and labour increases the cost of
rebuilding by large margins. The Committee heard consistently about this
problem in its travels to disaster-affected communities.
4.35
Derogation from Standard Cover has also led to a total replacement
policies becoming the minority. Many consumers may not be aware of what
sum-insured policies mean, or that alternatives are available in the market.
When addressing this issue, the NDIR recommended:
That subsection 35(2) of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 be amended so that policyholders
are not deemed to be clearly informed of a deviation from ‘standard cover’ by
simply being provided a copy of the insurance policy or product disclosure
statement.[27]
4.36
While the Committee supports the above NDIR recommendation, it also
considers that the further step of making Standard Cover mandatory would
minimise the distress and financial problems of underinsurance caused by
sum-insured policies.
4.37
The
Committee makes a number of recommendations for the Australian Government to
implement with regard to the frequent derogation of insurers from Standard
Cover. In order to set out the comprehensive and extensive set of reforms for
the insurance industry, the Committee presents all of its recommendations in
Chapter 7.
4.38
The Committee is concerned that some types of insurance are simply
unavailable in Australia, such as flood and multi-peril insurance for farmers.
The Committee notes that in the few countries where multi-peril crop insurance
is available, it is heavily subsidised by the government. On the other hand,
the absence of insurance means that in the event of major catastrophes,
governments are likely to step in and meet some financial costs.
Consumer awareness of rights in making a claim
4.39
Consumer awareness of rights is a crucial element of adequate consumer
protection. It is ‘an important element of good practice in self-regulation.’[28]
4.40
The lack of understanding of policy coverage described above contributed
to consumer confusion over whether they could lodge a claim. Legal Aid NSW
posits that ‘the most fundamental right that consumers have in relation to
insurance is to be advised of the right to make a claim in relation to their
insurance policy’.[29]
4.41
For a claim to be processed and assessed, it first needs to be lodged.
For a claim to be lodged, consumers require accurate information about their
right to make a claim. The Committee received evidence of consumers being
advised at first contact (usually via telephone) that they were ineligible to
make a claim according to the terms of their insurance policy. On the basis of
this advice, made without any visual or evidentiary assessment, some consumers
were excluded from the claims process.
4.42
Legal aid organisations are concerned about this practice, which
deprives affected consumers of a proper assessment of their policy. Caxton
Legal Centre reported that:
… while not a majority, a disturbing number of our clients
were advised over the telephone at the time of making their initial claim that
they should or could not make a claim. The concern regarding this figure is
that our clients all subsequently went on to make a claim, disregarding the
advice they were provided by their insurer. We can only estimate that for all
those who disregarded the advice, there will be a number who took the advice
and did not claim at all.[30]
4.43
Legal Aid Queensland found a similar practice among its clients, who:
… were told over the phone that they would not be covered and
ought not to bother lodging a claim or … were led to believe lodging a claim
would be futile.[31]
4.44
The Committee was appalled to received a joint submission from consumer
and legal groups that reported some of their clients had been ‘advised
summarily by call centre staff that their policy wouldn’t cover the loss and
there was no point submitting a claim’ and had not been told of their right to
make a claim.[32]
4.45
The Collaborative Insurance Law Service (CILS) survey shows that of
their clients whose claims had been denied, 20 per cent had been told on
the phone that they were not covered for the particular event.[33]
A claimant reported in the Committee’s survey that an insurance claim was
denied immediately on the basis of the property’s postcode.[34]
4.46
The Committee heard similar evidence from Buloke Shire Council. Naomi
Grant, Council Recovery Manager, told the Committee that:
A lot of claimants were simply told, ‘No, you’re not
covered,’ at the first phone call. … Whereas their next-door neighbour has called
and that call person has said, ‘Oh, I think we should check this out; let me
give you a claim number.’ It can be as simple as that.[35]
4.47
Campaspe Shire Council undertook a survey of 180 flood-affected
residents in Rochester, Victoria, which found that ‘many people reported that
they were not given accurate or useful information about their right to make a
claim’.[36] Buloke Shire Council
reported that a resident had been advised at initial telephone contact that his
claim would not be accepted, and it was only at the persistence of family
members that four months later his claim was lodged and accepted.[37]
4.48
The IAG advised the Committee that its staff are trained to encourage
claims to be lodged:
When a customer calls to lodge a claim for an incident/event
that is not covered under their policy, we advise them directly that the policy
does not provide cover. If there is uncertainty of cover or insufficient
information, consultants encourage customers to lodge a claim for
consideration.[38]
4.49
In August 2011, ASIC reported their concern that decisions made at the
point of first contact tended not to be recorded or confirmed in writing,
‘reducing the opportunity a policy holder may otherwise have to seek further
advice and/or dispute the decision’.[39] Their report recommended
that ‘decisions by frontline staff that result in a claim being denied should
be reviewed before the decision is confirmed’.[40]
4.50
The national consumer advocacy organisation, Choice, awarded the entire general
insurance industry a Shonky Award in 2011 for its shoddy customer service
practices in relation to that year’s flood events.[41]
Choice identified the practices of dissuading clients from lodging claims and
denying claims without assessment as two particularly ‘shonky’ tactics.
4.51
Concurrently with this inquiry the Insurance Council of Australia (ICA)
has been in consultation with ASIC and other relevant bodies regarding the
necessity of advising clients that they can make a claim even if the policy
they hold indicates that the claim would not be successful. The ICA advised the
Committee that it is working on amendments to the General Insurance Code of
Practice (the Code) that include mandatory training of employees to give all
clients who contact the insurer the opportunity to make a claim and have its validity
properly assessed.
4.52
Specifically in relation to claims arising from natural disasters, the Code
advises that clients, whose claims have been within one month of lodgement, can
request a review of the cash amount in the subsequent six months.[42]
This clause is a type of ‘cooling-off period’ to protect claimants who may feel
differently many months after a traumatic event than they did in the immediate
aftermath. They may come upon additional information of relevance or may find, upon
commencing building or making repairs to their damaged home, that the extent of
the damage was greater and more costly to address than initially thought.
4.53
Consumers, however, must be aware of their right to request that their
claim be re-visited in order to avail themselves of this right. This is another
piece of information that consumers should be made aware of at the time they
lodge a claim.
4.54
Mr John Price, Ombudsman General Insurance, FOS, explained that:
They should be informed of their rights … when there is a
cash settlement of a matter within the first early period of a dispute. That
is, you still have six months to go back and review that. Now, that is
something that [insurers] have to inform them of. The code requires the
industry to inform people of that.[43]
4.55
Disconcertingly,
FOS advised that five insurers had failed to advise 3 549 clients of their
right to have early determinations arising from recent natural disaster-related
claims reviewed, before FOS identified the problem and directed the insurers to
address the error.[44]
Committee comment
4.56
The Committee finds it disgraceful that initial contact with insurers
may have deterred some policyholders from making claims and thus having them
properly assessed. It is not the position of frontline staff to make decisions
about the strength of a claim, particularly when it hinges on the
identification of the cause of damage, something that cannot be done over the
telephone.
4.57
The Committee commends the Insurance Council Board for putting forward a
clause for inclusion in the Code that specifies that policyholders have a right
to make a claim.
4.58
However, the Committee is of the opinion that FOS will need to monitor
carefully insurers’ compliance with this measure. Even where specific
provisions, such as informing claimants of their right to a review of a claim
determination relating to a catastrophe, are made in the Code, insurers have
overlooked or neglected their responsibilities to adhere to these regulations.
4.59
The Committee commends FOS for rectifying the situation where five
insurers failed to advise of review rights, but finds it worrying that this
occurred in the first place, affecting 3 549 policyholders before the
issue was brought to light.