Is your income protected?
Updated | By Press Release
A survey has revealed that South Africans are not protecting their incomes, despite many of them running the risk of temporary illness, injury or retrenchment.
A survey released by FMI has found that South Africans aren’t protecting their income.
Seven out of every 10 South Africans will experience at least one injury or illness in their lifetime that will prevent them from earning an income.
It further states that people are nine times more likely to experience a temporary disability than to have their car stolen or be hijacked in South Africa.
Despite all these potential issues, less than 50% of the people surveyed by FMI (a division of Bidvest Life Limited) in their recent #RealityCheck consumer survey believe they will have a temporary injury in their working lifetimes and do not have any form of income protection or disability cover.
“South Africans grossly underestimate the risk of temporary illness or injury – and conversely, overestimate the risk of permanent disability, critical illness or death. Half of the people we surveyed see life insurance as only ‘death cover’. The result is that people are twice as likely to buy Life cover over Disability cover, potentially leaving themselves without income insurance when an illness or injury strikes,” said FMI’s CEO Brad Toerien in a press release.
The survey found that the effects of not earning an income include running out of money within three months, having their house and assets repossessed, and being unable to pay school fees. Business-owners and self-employed respondents said they would lose their business without an income and in total, over a third of the respondents would experience catastrophic results such as losing their homes without an income for longer than three months.
Another problem highlighted by the survey is that many South Africans are uninsured because they don’t see the need for life insurance, and many have life cover when what they actually need is income protection. Compounding the problem is that the vast majority of disability cover currently sold in South Africa is lump sum cover, as opposed to income benefits.
However, given a choice, 61% of survey respondents would choose a monthly income pay-out over a once-off lump sum.
“The challenge with a lump sum pay-out is that it’s impossible to know how much cover you need when you buy your policy, and there are clear investment, longevity and inflationary risks. While they’re great to settle debts or once-off expenses, we don’t believe they should be used to provide an ongoing monthly income. Income benefits are easier to understand and plan for because they mimic the income stream you are trying to replace," said Toerien.
“And, human nature being what it is, there’s a very real behavioral risk of receiving a lump sum. With monthly Income benefits that simply replace your salary, you won’t be tempted to spend it on expensive cars and luxury holidays, instead of looking after your family’s immediate and future needs,” he added.
South Africans also underestimate how much their total future income is worth, the survey suggests. More than half (51%) of respondents estimated they would earn no more than R10-million during their lifetime. In reality, a 25-year-old earning R15,000 a month will earn around R28-million during their working lives (based on a 6% annual salary growth, assuming retirement at age 65).
“The bottom line: your income enables your lifestyle and your future dreams and is core to you and your family’s financial future. You can’t live without it. In today’s economy, we should be aware of the risks, and do more to protect our income,” concludes Toerien.
ALSO READ: Expert Advice: Why you should have a retirement annuity
Show's Stories
-
SA shocked over R50,000 local designer dress
South Africans expressed their shock after discovering the R50,000 dress...
The Drive with Rob & Roz 1 day, 3 hours ago -
What is the difference between sell-by and use-by dates?
As the authorities discover more spaza shops illegally selling food item...
The Workzone with Alex Jay 1 day, 4 hours ago