Context: Health insurance contributed ₹1.18 lakh crore in FY 2024–25, making up 36% of general insurance premiums. The sector has come under scrutiny for high claims ratios, pricing issues, and uneven access, prompting a need for reform and analysis.
1. Coverage Distribution and Premium Imbalance
Disparity in Coverage vs Premium Share
Retail Health Insurance:
Covers 5.58 crore lives
Generates ₹41,501 crore (39%) in premiums
Average premium: ₹7,437
Group Health Insurance:
Covers 25.59 crore lives
Generates ₹55,666 crore (52%) in premiums
Average premium: ₹2,175
Government Schemes:
Cover 26.11 crore lives
Generate only ₹10,513 crore (9.8%)
Average premium: ₹402
High Loss Ratios Across Segments
Overall incurred loss ratio: 88.15%
By segment:
Group health: 94%
Government schemes: 115.28%
Individual health: 75%
Implication: Public-funded schemes are financially unsustainable in current form.
Insurer-Wise Claims Experience
Public sector insurers: 103% incurred claims ratio
Private insurers: 89%
Standalone health insurers: 65%
Insight: Reflects differing risk appetites and pricing models
2. Geographic and Provider Concentration
Urban-Centric Premium Collection
64% of premiums come from just five regions:
Maharashtra (29.5%)
Karnataka (11%)
Tamil Nadu (10%)
Gujarat (7%)
Delhi (6.5%)
Concern: Geographic skew limits national risk pooling.
Private Sector Dominance in Care Delivery
Urban hospitalisations: 65% private
Rural hospitalisations: 54% private
Outpatient care:
Urban: 74% private
Rural: 67% private
Implication: Heavy dependence on private providers
High Costs for Serious Illnesses
Private care cost multiplier:
Cardiac cases: up to 6.8x higher
Respiratory cases: up to 5.2x higher
Impact: Drives premium escalation and financial stress.
3. Key Systemic Issues
Incomplete and Denied Claims
Claims paid (FY24): 71.31% (₹83,493 crore)
Claims unpaid: 22.22% (₹26,037 crore)
Disallowed under policy terms: ₹15,100 crore
Repudiated: ₹10,937 crore
Pending claims: ₹7,584 crore
Takeaway: Highlights gaps in underwriting, clarity, and service.
Need for Better Oversight
Current issues:
Wide variation in settlement rates across insurers
Lack of uniformity in practices
Suggested reforms:
IRDAI-led review
Policy standardisation
Board-level monitoring for greater accountability
Provider Pricing Disparities
Cost variation even within same hospital groups in different cities
Outcome: Makes premium pricing unpredictable
Need: Uniform national pricing norms for consistency
4. Reform Recommendations and Structural Changes
Promote Standard Policies
Scale up Arogya Sanjeevani with uniform benefits and terms
Aim: Reduce disputes and introduce pricing discipline
Establish a Healthcare Regulator
National regulator needed to:
Ensure pricing transparency
Control medical inflation
Manage technological shifts in treatment and insurance
Strengthen Tier-2/3 Infrastructure
Finance expansion via:
Health bonds from municipalities and hospitals
Bonds made eligible for insurer investment
GST Relief for Seniors
Proposal: Zero-rate GST (currently 18%) on health insurance for senior citizens
Goal: Improve affordability and uptake
Process and Outreach Reforms
Insurers should:
Adopt digital tools
Improve claims efficiency
Strengthen fraud detection
Cut costs via direct sales, reducing intermediation
5. Public Sector Impact and Future Strategy
Welfare Gains from PMJAY
Coverage: ₹5 lakh per family
Outcome:
₹1.25 lakh crore reduction in out-of-pocket expenses
73.98 crore Ayushman Bharat accounts
1.75 lakh wellness centres
Evidence of broad inclusivity and welfare gains
Need for Integrated Reform
While campaigns like that of the General Insurance Council help raise awareness,
A fragmented approach is insufficient.
Comprehensive reform is essential to realise systemic and long-term welfare gains.