In 2020, 59% of all COVID-19 related Sanlam Income Protection payouts were to people younger than 39 years old. This statistic underlines the critical importance of income protection for young professionals, says Sanlam Product Development Actuary, Karen Bongers, noting that the long-term loss of income due to illness or injury is the single biggest financial risk young people face throughout their working lives.
Beyond the financial impact of illness and injury, she says economic realities are resulting in South Africans battling to meet their monthly financial obligations, which makes income protection even more important.
In a recent study, PayCurve noted almost 80% of South Africans are seeking unsecured loans to meet their monthly financial obligations. Another study by DebtBusters showed that 1.6 million South Africans capitalised on payment holidays, with resulting debt repayments of R20.7 billion.
“Imagine a 28-year-old primary breadwinner being rendered unable to work for six months. The knock-on effect for them and their family would likely be immense,” says Bongers. With South Africans’ household savings rate just 0.7% in the third quarter of last year, based on a Trading Economics report, few households are likely to have emergency funds to ‘cover’ a lost income for more than one or two months.
She adds, “Of course, the impact is much worse if the inability to work is permanent. Our claim statistics show that it’s not just older individuals who need income protection. The permanent loss of an income is particularly concerning for younger people, who have many more years of earning potential ahead of them.”