A new car insurance product being trialled by charitable organisation Good Shepherd NZ and insurance company Vero aims
to improve financial security for Kiwis who may be excluded from the car insurance market.
People accessing a Good Shepherd NZ Good Loan to finance a car will now have the opportunity to purchase Vero’s Drive
Car Insurance, a low-cost, comprehensive car insurance product.
Good Shepherd NZ works with people on limited incomes, and Chief Executive Fleur Howard says they were concerned about
how many of their clients were borrowing money to buy cars but weren’t insuring them.
“A car accident can be a double blow for our clients. Not only do they not have the money to repair or replace the car,
but their ability to get to work is affected because they often work irregular hours outside of accessible public
transport schedules.”
She says that insurance can be an important element of financial resilience, but for those who can’t afford to pay the
premiums or excesses the financial fallout can be enormous.
“Imagine having to continue making repayments on a vehicle you can’t afford to repair or that has been stolen, when you
have no way to get to work?”
“One person we spoke to when researching this product was left with a $50,000 repair bill for the other vehicle involved
in an accident - more than she earned in a year,” she says.
“The opportunity to provide more people with an affordable insurance option and prevent these situations from happening,
learning as we go, is really exciting for us - its great progress towards helping people manage a significant financial
risk.”
Vero undertook in-depth research to understand why some of Good Shepherd NZ’s clients did not take out car insurance.
CEO Jimmy Higgins says cost was only part of the reason people opted to go without insurance.
“Our research showed that people’s values and background informed their view of risk, and many of the Good Shepherd NZ
clients we spoke to felt that protecting a material possession like a car was less important than taking care of their
family and community.
“But for some families a car is more than a possession, it’s a connection – to work, family, wellbeing, church,
community. Our challenge is to find ways to ensure that those differences are not a barrier to New Zealanders accessing
the help and support we are here to offer them if something goes wrong.”
Drive Car Insurance was carefully designed to meet the needs identified by the research.
Premiums will be fixed at just $8 per week and customers won’t pay any excess on their first claim, to ensure that
customers can have a conversation about excesses before one needs to be paid. The policies will allow for any driver as
long as they are complying with their licence conditions and will have some more relaxed application criteria than
standard policies.
Higgins says Drive Car Insurance fits with Vero’s financial inclusion action plan and its vision to build futures and
protect what matters for New Zealanders.
“Our vision means providing products and services that match how different people view value and accessibility.”
Drive Car Insurance will be trialled for an initial 12-month period, which Higgins says will help ensure it provides
genuine value to policyholders.
Both Higgins and Howard said they hope the findings from the research that went into developing Drive Car Insurance
would also yield broader insights on how easier access to appropriate and affordable insurance might help New Zealanders
develop greater financial resilience.