A survey conducted by GfK on behalf of Zurich Insurance Group analyzed how the people in seven different European countries are dealing with their insurance needs in the light of the ongoing economic crisis. Insurance coverage was one of those needs that the survey found wasn’t expendable.
When it comes to reducing expenses, Europeans “see the greatest potential in the more discretionary areas of dining out, holidays and clothing. By contrast insurance, education and rent are viewed as essential,” according to the findings.
Not surprisingly, the economic crisis worries people in Mediterranean countries the most. The survey found that “about 70 percent of those interviewed in Portugal, 65 percent in Italy and 59 percent in Spain are highly concerned about the ongoing financial crisis.”
By contrast in “Austria (44 percent) and Germany (38 percent) the percentage is significantly lower, yet, the Russians (31 percent) and the Swiss (28 percent) are the least concerned.”
Interestingly enough the survey found that overall those responding “believe that people themselves are more likely than politicians to find a way out of the crisis. While in Spain, one in six and in Russia, Portugal and Italy, one in seven are afraid of losing their job; in Germany and Switzerland under 5 percent and in Austria only 1 percent of those interviewed are afraid of being made redundant.”
It also found that the “Swiss, Germans and Russians say they are most likely to reduce their costs for dining out if they have to cut their family budget. The Austrians, Portuguese and Spanish would cut their travel budget and the Italians would spend less for clothing and fashion items.
“A quarter of Swiss, Germans and Russians and almost one third of Austrians would be prepared to pay less for their car or motorbike. Yet, they are very reluctant to cut back on insurance, education and rent, seeing these as essential rather than luxury expenses.”
There was more or less unanimous agreement from people in all of the countries surveyed that “despite the economic crisis the need for good insurance coverage has not changed. Over 91 percent of those interviewed in the Mediterranean countries and Switzerland would maintain their insurance even when forced to trim the family budget. And even in Russia, where the highest percentage of respondents said they would cut insurance costs, only 82 percent would do so.
“The majority of Russians and Spanish would not skimp on their car insurance. Very much to the contrary are the Austrians, who are most likely to reduce car insurance if they had to save on insurance costs. For Italians, accident insurance is the most important coverage, while Portuguese value their household goods insurance, and the Swiss and Germans wouldn’t want to relinquish their third party liability coverage.
“If they had to save on insurance costs, the Swiss, Portuguese and Germans are likely to look at life insurance, the Spanish at health insurance and the Russians and Italians at theft and fire insurance.”
When pension and savings accounts are involved the survey found that “one third of Swiss and Austrians regard private pension provision in the current environment as important and they invest in life insurance or in a private pension scheme.
“36 percent of the Portuguese and about one quarter of Germans, Russians and Spanish consider pension provision as important, yet say that they don’t have money left for it. One in three Italians has not yet considered private pension savings. One fifth of Germans and Russians and one quarter of Spanish are afraid that their private pension provision will not suffice. The Swiss (8 percent) are least concerned about it.”
Zurich said the representative survey was conducted by GfK in Austria, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Russia, Spain and Switzerland. 4,067 people aged 14 and older were interviewed between October 24 and November 14, 2012.
Source: Zurich Insurance