Some nine in 10 Brits are in danger ofsuffering fromfinancial hardship should serious illness strike,withpeople beingmore likely to insure their mobile phones (12%) than protect theirhealth, Scottish Widows has found.
Some nine in 10 Brits are in danger ofsuffering fromfinancial hardship should serious illness strike,withpeople beingmore likely to insure their mobile phones (12%) than protect theirhealth, Scottish Widows has found.
Despite more than a fifth (21%) of people admitting their household wouldn’t survive financially if they lost their income due to long-term illness, fewer than one in 10 (9%) have a critical illness policy.
Taking out life insurance also appears to be falling down the population’s priority list, with just 27% having a life policy, equivalent to 14 million people. This has dropped by 7% compared with 2017, a year-on-year decrease of 3.6 million individuals, data from the Office for National Statistics shows.
Gary Burchett, protection director at Scottish Widows, said: “It’s a worrying truth that people are more likely to insure their mobile phones than their own health.
“On a societal level, we increasingly think in the short-term, caring more about tangible things in our day-to-day lives.
“On a more fundamental level, we’re programmed not to think about the worst happening. Together, these are dangerous inclinations, as people aren’t thinking about insuring their health or life until it’s too late.
“Insurance providers have a role to play in building trust with consumers and helping people prepare financially in case the unexpected should happen.
“With the legislation establishing our new single financial guidance body having received royal assent, we view it as essential that of the many things the new body must consider, consumer financial resilience to income shocks resulting from health events is a major one."
This is an especially precarious position for the two-fifths (42%) of UK households that are reliant on just one income, and it’s clear that many are in lack of a ‘Plan B’.
Despite 43% of people saying they’d rely on their savings if they or their partner were ill and unable to work, a third (35%) admitted their savings would last no more than three months if unable to work. And more than half (54%) say they’d last no longer than a year.
Three in10(30%), or 15.5 million people, said they aren’t saving anything at all.
One in five (19%) said they’d rely on state benefits if they or their partner were unable to work for six months.
But there are many welfare reforms resulting in significant changes to benefits such as child and working tax credits, income-based job seeker’s allowance, income support, housing benefits and bereavement benefits.
Scottish Widows argued that families need to do all they can to protect themselves and their families.
On top of this, people are leaving themselves and their families unprepared for other aspects of illness or bereavement.
One in five (20%) people weren’t sure who would take care of them if they fell ill, and nearly half (48%) don’t have the protection of a will, power of attorney, guardianship or trust arrangement in place for their families.
When asked why they haven’t taken out life or critical illness insurance, almost a third (30%) of the UK’s primary breadwinners said they don’t see the need for cover.
On average, people thought that just a third (34%) of individual protection claims are paid out by insurance providers each year, based on the misconception that insurers will do anything not to pay.
In reality, however,virtually all protection insurance claims (97.8%) were paid in 2017.In addition, almost four-fifths(78%) of people were unaware that cover often comes with practical advice and emotional care, as well as financial support, without having to make a claim.