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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Why should private health insurance players be unhappy with GAB activities?

Health insurance document

I chanced upon an article online on January 24, 2023, from cedidollar.com and same repeated on myjoyonline.com captioned, “Private Health Insurance players unhappy with GAB activities” in which the report purports that, there is simmering tension in the Private Health Insurance Industry over unfair business practice by a Private Health Insurance Scheme (GAB Health Insurance Company (GHIC) wholly owned by the Ghana Association of Banks (GAB).

The publication whet my appetite to read further to add to my wealth of knowledge, especially about the private health insurance industry, where not much is known about compared to other industries, and to help me with appreciation of its dynamics.

In my untamed curiosity, I looked out for the basis of the supposed simmering tension and disquietedness. Why the purported simmering tension within the industry? Why is GAB involved in the matters of Private Health Insurance and subsequent incorporation of a private health insurance company? Is GAB Health Insurance engaging in unfair trade activities? Is GAB coercing its members to join GAB Health Insurance Scheme? Is GAB Health Insurance ‘flouting’ a pre-requisite undertaking prior to obtaining operating license from the Regulator (NHIA)? What is unique about GAB Health Insurance from the perspectives of employers, employees and health service providers causing the simmering tension and disquietedness in the Private Health Insurance Industry?

 

GHIC’s entry

GAB Health Insurance Company Limited (GHIC) was founded in April 2018 by the GAB and licensed by the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) in October 2020.

Its objective is to address employee health benefit programs for banking and non-banking clients. Although its shareholder is GAB, it operates in the open market as any other private commercial health insurance company in Ghana.

 

Allegations of coercion

In the publication, a member of the Private Health Insurance Oversight Committee of the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) and spokesperson of the Private Health Insurance Association, Ghana (PHIA-G), purports that GAB is coercing member-banks to stop doing business with existing companies to join the GHIC scheme.

Interestingly, the evidence on the ground does not support this, thereby making the assertion inaccurate and without merit.

For the records, GHIC has been in operations for a little over two years. However, within the period, only 30% of GAB-member banks have joined the GHIC scheme.

It is also noteworthy that the clientele mix of GHIC is made up of 69% for non-banking clients and 31% for the banks.

So, where is the evidence of GHIC monopolising and coercing all banks in Ghana to join its scheme?

If this assertion was true, all the 24 member-banks of GAB would have joined the GHIC scheme over the two-year period. But that is not the case.

Also, prior to the operationalisation of GHIC, about 50% of its current clients had no formal health insurance. For some of its banking clients that were with other private health insurance providers, GHIC had to competitively bid for the business.

There are several banks that GHIC participated in their open competitive bid but did not win. For others, GHIC decided not to bid for various reasons.

 

Critical questions

Thus, among the important questions to ask in the face of the alleged coercion of members of GAB to join the GHIC scheme and the mischief as intended by the members of the PHIA-G are as follows:

  • Is PHIA-G implying that all the management members, officers and board of directors of the banks who have signed onto the GHIC scheme and/or those intending to do so were or are being coerced by GAB Health Insurance?
  • Does it mean that the officials of the non-bank clientele on the GHIC scheme, who constitute 69% of the scheme’s clientele base, are being coerced?
  • One may further ask that in the face of the current economic challenges where cost-cutting, ue creation and addition are at the heart of organizational buying, and especially considering the caliber of the corporate clients at the center of PHIA-G’s allegations, how could the allegations of coercion be tenable?
  • Again, where lies the relevance of Adam Smith’s celebrated “Rational Choice Theory,” which assumes that individuals will carefully euate all decisions, weighing the costs and benefits of each potential path, and then choosing what they believe will maximise the benefit to themselves”?

If this theory is anything to go by, then are the allegations of coercion not even insulting to the logic and intelligence of the bank’s officials involved in the decision to join the GHIC scheme as PHIA-G has been unable to adduce evidence to buttress their allegations. Besides, where lies the right of the consumer to make choices of purchase?

 

Claim of ‘prerequisite’ condition

The story also alleged that there was a prerequisite verbal agreement with GHIC not to go after banks already doing business with existing schemes, hence GHIC has flouted this agreement. While the evidence on the ground disproves this, one wonders how this can be entertained in a free and competitive market.

At no point in time in the annals of private health insurance licensing in Ghana has there been a pre-requisite condition among a license applicant, the Regulator, and an existing player to the effect that the applicant should not go after existing clients.

In the wider insurance industry in Ghana, including health, clients switch from one provider to the other depending on the customer experience, among others.

There is a plethora of evidence within the private health insurance industry, even before the existence of GHIC, where clients moved from one health insurance provider to the other, mostly based on customer satisfaction and experience.

Why is this an issue now? We should avoid the risk of creating an industry where someone can compel a client, who is dissatisfied with a service provider, not to move to a better alternative.

 

Unfair trade activities?

The allegation of “unfair trade activities”, in my opinion, is a serious issue with far reaching consequences, including fines and imprisonment when culpability is established.

In an open market like Ghana, one wonders how allegations of “unfair trade activities,” can stand test of reality in an active industry like the private health insurance sector.

Deemed as any business practice or act that is deceptive, fraudulent, or causes injury to a consumer or a competitor, “unfair trade activities” include acts that are unlawful, such as those that violate a consumer protection law, or level playing field. Some examples of unfair trade methods are the false representation of a good or service; false free gift or prize offers; non-compliance with normative standards; false advertising; undercutting or deceptive pricing.

Indeed, as indicated by the spokesperson of the PHIA-G, Ghana’s market is a free and competitive one hence the factors of demand and supply must be allowed to play without any strings.

And that is why the GAB has neither issued a fiat to its members nor showed any intention of doing so to member-banks. All member-banks of GAB are independent of the operations of the Association or GHIC.

Indeed, GAB has given the strongest indication elsewhere that as a responsible organization and a key player in Ghana’s economic development architecture since independence, it has not and will not engage in or promote unfair trade activities of any shape or kind.

 

Reorientation

While it is obvious that the emergence of the GHIC would toughen up competition, it should be seen by all key stakeholders in the Ghanaian private health insurance industry as an addition to the efforts already put in motion to push boundaries and open up the industry to the desired growth, which, without doubt, have eluded the sector since its inception.

A major concern to all and sundry is to ultimately rise to the occasion in relation to the clarion call made by the Chief Executive of the NHIA, Dr. Bernard Okoe Boye, for “private health insurers to work harder in supporting the NHIA’s agenda to attain Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2030”.

In a speech delivered by the CEO of the NHIA during the Ghana Insurance Awards 2022, Dr Okoe said among others that out of Ghana’s 30 million population, the NHIS has about 15 million active members while about half a million are on private health insurance.

This, he said meant that close to 13.5 million  are yet to be registered on private health insurance for, which reason he was throwing the challenge to private health insurance operators to push harder.

Juxtaposing these staggering statistics to the fact that the private health insurance industry has been operating for close to 20 years, one of the conclusions that could be drawn is that the industry has grown at a very decreasing rate for which creative and innovative approaches and new ways of doing things are necessary.

One then wonders why the disquietedness of the existing players in the industry over GHIC operations in the face of the huge growth opportunities.

Again, it is important to emphasis that the reported disquietedness of the private health insurance industry players is unnecessary for the simple reason that, GHIC, as new entrant in the private health insurance space, may have introduced a new concept but in actual sense not peculiar to our Ghanaian jurisdiction and in other jurisdictions where  health insurance has been practiced for more than a century.

 

GHIC advantage

For all intent and purposes, GHIC is doing a fantastic job, judging from its achievements so far. If I were a competitor to them, instead of crying wolf when there is none, I would have studied their business model, and tried to mimic some of their innovative ideas. But here lies the missing link.

 

Employer experience

For employers, superior health insurance benefit is a differentiator in a highly competitive private health insurance market.

GHIC seem to adequately fulfil this expectation, hence the clamor for them. For employers that have already joined the GHIC scheme, the selling point has been ue-for-money, customer-centric approach, and GHIC’s ability to adequately tailor-make products and services to meet the health needs of their staff.

Further checks by revealed that banks that had no formal insurance scheme enjoyed a smooth transition to formal scheme under GHIC. Employers retorted that their transition to GHIC was well aided with analytical research of past health experience and budget implications, tailor-made recommendations that ultimately helped with management decision-making.

Employee experience

Health service provider ecosystem

Further engagement with health service providers, who are critical in the health insurance sector, also reveals excellent satisfaction with GHIC’s partnership. They emphasised GHIC’s professionalism in the prompt payment of claims and timely resolution of operational issues.

Conclusion

In the nutshell, the accusations levelled against GHIC for unfair trade activities by the private health insurance players are false. My research concludes that there is no evidence of coercion such as a collusive agreement or circumstantial evidence of suspicious push for GAB member-banks to join GHIC scheme.

Undoubtedly, what the private health insurance players seek to achieve in the article, “Private Health Insurance players unhappy with GAB activities”, is a clear case of market division scheme, where the competing health insurers allocate specific customers or types of customers, or territories among themselves.

In this case, they want to establish a market practice whereby one competitor will be allowed to sell to or bid on certain contracts. In return, the player will not sell to or bid on contracts allocated to the other conspirator players.

In other words, the players are merely trying to make sure that each got a fair share of the bank’s health insurance market without any competition.

Such market division or allocation scheme or agreements in which competitors divide markets among themselves is against the principle of free market. Ghanaian consumers have the right to expect the benefits of free and open competition — the best goods and services at the lowest prices.

Public and private organizations often rely on a competitive bidding process to achieve that end. When competitors collude, prices are inflated, and the customer is cheated.

Price fixing, bid rigging, and other forms of collusion are illegal and are subject to criminal prosecution by the laws of Ghana.

Finally, it is clear that the GHIC is a good addition to the private health insurance market and must be applauded for its innovative and customer-centric services instead of being vilified by the other private health insurance players.

By Thomas Moore Adingo

 

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