Timpson to propose remedies for splitting joint life cover under economic abuse

Johnny Timpson is working with an insurance law expert on options for legal or regulatory remedies enabling insurers to split life cover policies where there is evidence of economic abuse.

Timpson (pictured) spoke to Health & Protection following the publication of charity Surviving Economic Abuse’s report earlier this week on Insurance and Economic Abuse, which was funded by the Aviva Foundation.

The report contains 10 recommendations for insurers to take action on economic abuse. These include carrying out tailored training to equip staff to recognise economic abuse, conducting product reviews and developing new processes and ways of working.

Timpson, who is an adviser to the charity and helped develop the recommendations, told Health & Protection he has been working with professor Jim Davey, who is professor of law at the University of Bristol law school and an insurance law specialist.

He explained that joint life policies were often used as a form of coercive control where a partner can find themselves covered by a policy they have not given their consent to and that action needs to be taken so these can be split into separate policies.

“You can only do that with the consent of both parties,” Timpson continued.

“And when you have an abusive party which is also the one paying the premiums that refuses to give consent to either cancel the policy or split it, there’s nothing the insurer can do at the minute.

“So what professor Davey and I are looking at is either a legal remedy, as they have in the US, or a regulatory remedy that would enable insurers to split policies where there is evidence of economic and financial abuse.

“That’s a paper Jim and I are working on now and we will be bringing out via the charity shortly for discussion with the industry at the Insurance Institute of London over the coming months.”

 

Recommendations to tackle abuse

The 10 recommendations put forward by Surviving Economic Abuse in its report are:

Individual organisations

Insurance industry more broadly

 

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