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News & Trends - MedTech & Diagnostics

MTAA calls on Government to ensure health insurers return profits made on the back of pandemic

Health Industry Hub | September 3, 2021 |

MedTech News: Health insurers should immediately pay back to their members hundreds of millions of dollars in windfall gains from the COVID-19 pandemic, after doubling their profits in 2020-21, according to the Medical Technology Association of Australia (MTAA).

Figures compiled by the industry regulator, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), show insurers bagged a net profit of $1.5 billion last financial year – almost double their 2019-20 result – underpinned by soaring premium revenues and virtually flat claims.

MTAA CEO, Ian Burgess, said the unique circumstances of the global pandemic had delivered insurers a massive windfall at the expense of households already under pressure from rising living costs and stagnant wages.

“Insurers have said that they will not seek to profit from the COVID crisis. Now it’s time for them to deliver on that promise,” Mr Burgess said.

“They should immediately reimburse members who have paid high premiums for services that, because of the pandemic, they have not been able to use.”

Big corporate insurers have revealed huge spikes in profit in their end of financial year reports to the market. Medibank Private reported its operating profit soared 14.4% in 2020-21 to $538.6 million, underpinned by a 4.6% jump in membership while claims grew just 1.4%. Fellow insurer NIB’s net profit leapt 84% to $160.5 million as its biggest-ever influx of members pushed net premium revenue up by 4.1%.

Insurers are estimated to have amassed an extra $1.4 billion because of deferred claims.

Mr Burgess said it was understandable that during the pandemic people had sought the extra security provided by private health insurance.

But measures such as the repeated deferral of elective surgery and restrictions on allied care like physiotherapy and chiropractic meant health fund members were not able to access the services they had paid for, he said.

“While most of Australia has been doing it incredibly tough, the insurers have been cleaning up. These are some of the best trading conditions they have ever had,” Mr Burgess said.

“People take out insurance so that the support is there when they need it the most.

“Insurers should not take advantage of the pandemic to generate bumper profits and pay executives big bonuses.”

Some insurers deferred premium increases last year, but Mr Burgess said this was not enough.

“Deferring premium increases won’t cut it. The many millions that health insurers have hoarded in the last 12 months is not theirs. It belongs in the pockets of members,” he said.

Mr Burgess said that unless the health insurance funds act immediately to restore the money to their members the Federal Government should explore all legislative and regulatory options to ensure it is returned.


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