No. |
Member |
Question |
Hansard page
and Hearing date
or Written Questions
|
Response
(Publication date)
|
IAG01QW |
Wilson |
Can you please provide information about inclusion in insurance products in the following circumstances prior to a policy holder’s departure:
(a) The impact on accessing health insurance (i.e. costs for testing and hospital stays) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that already has a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19.
(b) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs incurred for self-quarantine) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that already has a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19.
(c) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs for rescheduling flights) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that already has a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19.
(d) The impact on accessing health insurance (i.e. costs for testing and hospital stays) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, but has subsequently done so.
(e) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs incurred for self-quarantine) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, but has subsequently done so.
(f) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs for rescheduling flights) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, but has subsequently done so.
(g) The impact on accessing health insurance (i.e. costs for testing and hospital stays) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, and may do so in the future.
(h) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs incurred for self-quarantine) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, and may do so in the future.
(i) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs for rescheduling flights) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, and may do so in the future.
|
Written |
(16 April 2020)(PDF236KB)
|
IAG02QW |
Wilson |
Can you please provide information about inclusion in insurance products in the following circumstances following a policy holder’s departure:
(a) The impact on accessing health insurance (i.e. costs for testing and hospital stays) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that already has a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19.
(b) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs incurred for self-quarantine) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that already has a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19.
(c) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs for rescheduling flights) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that already has a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19.
(d) The impact on accessing health insurance (i.e. costs for testing and hospital stays) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, but has subsequently done so.
(e) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs incurred for self-quarantine) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, but has subsequently done so.
(f) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs for rescheduling flights) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, but has subsequently done so.
(g) The impact on accessing health insurance (i.e. costs for testing and hospital stays) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, and may do so in the future.
(h) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs incurred for self-quarantine) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, and may do so in the future.
(i) The impact on accessing travel insurance (i.e. costs for rescheduling flights) for a policy holder that books international travel to a destination that did not have a Smart Traveller advisory issued against it due to the outbreak of COVID-19 at the time of booking, and may do so in the future.
|
Written |
(16 April 2020)(PDF236KB)
|
IAG03QW |
Wilson |
To what extent do your insurance policies for small business cover notifiable diseases under:
(a) The Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cth)? And if not, why not?
(b) The Quarantine Act 1908 (Cth)? And if not, why not?
(c) What differences are there between what is covered under the Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cth) and the Quarantine Act 1908 (Cth)?
(d) Are there any differences that apply based on the policies related to diseases covered under either? |
Written |
(16 April 2020)(PDF141KB) |
IAG04QW |
Wilson |
To what extent do your insurance policies for small business not cover notifiable diseases under:
(a) The Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cth)? And if not, why not?
(b) The Quarantine Act 1908 (Cth)? And if not, why not?
(c) What differences are there between what is covered under the Biosecurity Act 2015 (Cth) and the Quarantine Act 1908 (Cth)?
(d) Are there any differences that apply based on the policies related to diseases covered under either? |
Written |
(16 April 2020)(PDF159KB) |
IAG05QON |
Wilson |
CHAIR: Right. When you say 'contact' do you mean you don't have contact details, or is that simply a process thing?
Mr Harmer: We have, if memory serves me right, written to them four times—I think that was the agreement with ASIC—and we have advertised on our websites et cetera. So it was 38,000 customers out of the 65,000 who received a refund. When they were contacted, some customers wanted to maintain the cover and didn't require a refund.
CHAIR: What share of the gap is that?
Mr Harmer: I don't have those numbers, I'd have to take that on notice. But I don't think it would have been significant.
CHAIR: Okay—can you find out and, yes, provide that on notice? It seems to me that if you have $23 million of $39 million refunded, there is obviously still $16 million that hasn't been. I accept that some people may not be contactable and that others may wish to continue with the policies in some way, shape or form, but that's still quite a significant gap. What measures are being taken now to make sure that gap is filled?
|
Hansard p. 21
29 April 2020
|
(3 June 2020)(PDF115KB) |
IAG06QON |
Wilson |
CHAIR: Yesterday, when we were speaking to some other insurance groups, questions or examples were raised where people were looking at the consequences directly associated with suicide risk, particularly as a result of people with life insurance understanding whether they are covered by their life insurance policies. Unfortunately, the assumption was that, in part, people were making sure that they checked before potentially taking one course of action or another. Have you detected any examples of that through your processes to identify people who are at risk or vulnerable?
Mr Harmer: We would have. I don't have specifics now. I can take that on notice. If your question is about how we've been able to identify customers with mental health issues who need a tailored solution, the answer is yes, but I don't have any examples with me today.
CHAIR: If you could get me data on that on notice that would be good, but it was also whether there were any inquiries about coverage, which is what was raised with us yesterday: people calling up about their life insurance policy and asking whether they were covered in the event of suicide. If so, how were those responded to as an organisation to make sure that was appropriately addressed?
|
Hansard pp. 22-23
29 April 2020
|
(3 June 2020)(PDF102KB) |
IAG07QON |
Leigh |
Dr LEIGH: Thank you very much, Mr Harmer, for joining us today. During the bushfire crisis earlier this year, you put in place an embargo on some 20 postcodes in Victoria and New South Wales. Why did you do that, and how long did the embargo last?
Mr Harmer: Firstly, the embargoes lasted, I think, from a few days to some weeks. Again, I don't have specific details. If required, I can take that on notice. The embargoes are put in place to avoid people who would otherwise be uninsured simply getting in contact with us as the fire approaches their property to then take out insurance.
|
Hansard p. 23
29 April 2020
|
(3 June 2020)(PDF114KB) |
IAG08QON |
Mulino |
Dr MULINO: Thanks for giving evidence today. How many disputes have already arisen in relation to COVID-19 claims?
Mr Harmer: I do have some numbers here. At the moment, across our travel insurance claims, which is where we've seen the early activity, we have two quite different products in market—one through the CGU brand, which is underwritten by ourselves, and another through our NRMA, SGIO and SGIC brands, which is underwritten by Zurich Insurance through their agency Cover-More; we distribute that product on their behalf. We are not large travel insurers, in the first instance. We have something in the order of 4½ thousand claims to date: about 2½ thousand of those have already been paid; I think there are about 400 to 500—I will take that on notice and make sure I'm giving you accurate information—that have been declined; and the remainder are still working their way through the system. I think it would be safe to assume that some of those, at least—I wouldn't hazard a guess as to percentage—will be for cancellation cover where, in fact, the policy was taken out after COVID-19 becoming a known event; therefore, they won't be covered.
Dr MULINO: It'd be great to get an update on that in a couple of months as well, please.
Mr Harmer: Yes.
|
Hansard pp. 27-28
29 April 2020
|
(3 June 2020)(PDF120KB)
Attachment
(3 July 2020)
(PDF120KB)
|
IAG09QON |
Mulino |
Dr MULINO: The other aspect of COVID-19 that I'm interested in—and this is a fast-changing situation, so I don't think it's necessarily going to flow through much—is the extent to which the economic impacts of COVID-19 are going to be reflected in people either not renewing or not taking up, or perhaps even changing the profile of, their insurance. To some degree, that's going to be muted in the short term by you providing flexibility and deferring people's premiums. Even allowing for that, are there any areas of your business where you've seen people not renewing, or, if you look at this year's business compared to last year's, where there is what you may see as a change in take-up rates or organic growth?
Mr Harmer: Let me try and break that down between retail and commercial. Presently, we're not seeing a noticeable increase in nonrenewals from our existing home and motor customers, in large part, I suspect, because of the work of our customer care team, who are able to actually resolve the customers' issues or concerns in a way that allows them to stay insured. We are seeing more cancellations from small businesses, and I expect that to increase as time unfolds, as you point out. New business rates at the moment are probably at around 20 per cent of what we would normally expect to see, and that may well be a function of not just the economic slowdown but also uncertainty, with customers feeling they should just stay with the insurer they have. I think you're absolutely right: the longer this challenge is in front of us, the more concerns we will have about the level of insurance penetration in the country.
Dr MULINO: It would be great if we could get updates on that in, say, two and three months just to get a sense of where there might be some areas of concern.
|
Hansard p. 28
29 April 2020
|
(3 June 2020)(PDF105KB)
|
IAG10QON |
Mulino |
Dr MULINO: …The last question I have goes back to some of the issues that you were discussing with Mr Bandt and Dr Leigh, and it's about affordability. I think, as you've alluded to, there's a broader insurance issue across the country as a whole that's been evolving for some time now; climate change is likely to exacerbate that. Then there are some more-localised issues, like storms in FNQ. I'm just wondering: do you have data over the last few years that might point to communities where this is manifesting itself in people not taking up insurance or not purchasing enough insurance? I'm thinking here across, for example, both home and contents insurance and small-business insurance.
Mr Harmer: I think we would have some of that data; certainly we would have that data at an industry level. I'm just trying to think logically. We may not be entirely sure of our market share or the level of insurance penetration in those sorts of local areas, but, potentially, industry data could give us a view on that.
Dr MULINO: Yes, because we were talking earlier about the fact that we could imagine moving towards a two-track world, where insurance is unaffordable for parts of the community. As you say, that data's probably best done at the industry level, because individual firms' market share changes in particular communities. But it would be interesting to see the extent to which that's already arising, and Far North Queensland might be an example of that. There's been concern for some time now about storm insurance in particular, and I imagine there are some people who get insurance that excludes that and some people who probably just don't insure at the moment.
Mr Harmer: I think that would be correct. Anecdotally, I would say, for example, that there are people living on the banks of the Bremer River who choose not to buy flood insurance, when they're probably exactly the people who do need flood insurance. In fact, they probably need it as an investment in mitigating the floods.
Dr MULINO: Yes. That data may help us at the government level—and at the community level, more broadly—to think about which mitigation projects should be prioritised, if we see pockets of underinsurance.
Mr Harmer: Yes, I'm sure that's right.
|
Hansard p. 28
29 April 2020
|
(3 June 2020)(PDF133KB) |
IAG15QON
|
Leigh |
Dr LEIGH: There's a current investigation being handled by your board chair into matters brought to the attention of the board by a whistleblower in March regarding a senior IAG executive. Current and former staff are being interviewed. The whistleblower was promised a response by the IAG independent investigator in late May, but hasn't got one. Is that correct?
Mr Hawkins: The whistleblower process within our company would be dealt with directly by the board. We have quite a process there that the executive team are not involved in, so I don't know if I can respond to the specifics of that question other than to say maybe I can take that on notice. It sounds like that doesn't sound reasonable, if the response hasn't occurred over a period of time, and I'll ensure that that message is provided up to the process of IAG.
Dr LEIGH: Well, when does IAG intend to finalise the investigation?
Mr Hawkins: We don't have that information—people like me and others in the executive management team. If it's a whistleblower incident, it's part of the protocol and the process of the company. So, to provide that information. I will need to engage with the board and the chairman in particular around the particular incident and the timing of the feedback to the individual whistleblower.
Dr LEIGH: Has Nick Hawkins been interviewed or briefed as part of the investigation?
Mr Hawkins: Currently, we occasionally do have whistleblower incidents. I'm not familiar with, in particular, this one, and that would normally be the case as well. We have protocols and processes in place to protect the whistleblower in particular and to ensure we have due process.
Dr LEIGH: Just to be clear, have you been interviewed as part of this?
Mr Hawkins: I'm not familiar with the particular issue but, no, I haven't been interviewed.
Dr LEIGH: It just goes to how seriously you take the investigation if you're not getting back to the whistleblower within three months. It does suggest that maybe IAG is taking a fairly lax approach to whistleblower claims.
Mr Hawkins: Can I go back, put that into our process and get feedback?
Dr LEIGH: I appreciate your desire to take it on notice. So you haven't been interviewed and you're saying you haven't been briefed on it either?
Mr Hawkins: The process for whistleblowers at IAG, as I think I've just said, is that, for the protection of the whistleblower as such, there is a process that goes through to the board. There is an independent process around that to ensure that management are not involved in the investigation of any particular issue. There was a three-month delay, which is disappointing, I must say. That doesn't sound like our process [inaudible]. There may be several here, by the way. We ensure that we're appropriately giving feedback to any of those parties involved.
|
Hansard pp. 45-46
25 June 2021
|
(3 August 2021)
(PDF79KB)
|
IAG16QON |
Wilson |
CHAIR: I want to ask a quick follow on question to the one raised by the deputy chair around net zero for IAG. What is your greenhouse gas emissions profile?
Mr Hawkins: At the moment, we buy to be neutral
CHAIR: You buy to be neutral—so you're already neutral?
Mr Hawkins: At the moment the profile of our company [inaudible] and that's been the case for, I'd say, 10 years.
CHAIR: Is that scope 1, scope 2 and scope 3 emissions?
Mr Hawkins: I'll come back to you on that, sorry, but I believe it is.
CHAIR: You'll take that on notice then.
Mr Hawkins: I will.
|
Hansard p. 46
25 June 2021
|
(3 August 2021)
(PDF85KB)
|