Insurers are already using AI to improve customer service, increase efficiency, provide greater insight into customers’ needs and to prevent fraudulent transactions.
Insurance Europe has today published an insight briefing about the European insurance industry’s views on artificial intelligence (AI).
Insurers are already using AI to improve customer service, increase
efficiency, provide greater insight into customers’ needs and to prevent
fraudulent transactions. Insurance customers are embracing this
innovation in insurance, as it responds to their needs and makes their
interactions with insurers more convenient.
In the future, AI is expected to help insurers to predict risk with
greater accuracy and to use enhanced foresight to rapidly deploy new
products in response to emerging risks.
However, insurers face three challenges in maximising the benefit for both consumers and themselves in their use of AI:
- Firstly, when developing AI systems, insurers face restricted
access to data from the public sector. For maximum societal benefit,
such datasets should be available for free and in a machine-readable
format. The non-personal data for some AI applications is also sometimes
concentrated in the hands of a few entities, resulting in restricted or
expensive access to data that could improve AI systems and better serve
customers. This raises questions over how access to this data should be
governed.
- Secondly, insurers would like to see a holistic approach to
regulation. The EU legal framework already covers areas relevant to AI
such as fundamental rights, privacy and data protection, as well as
product safety and liability. This is then complemented by national
regulatory frameworks. To support the development and uptake of AI, and
to avoid unnecessary regulatory burdens, a horizontal, proportionate and
principles-based AI regulatory framework is needed that builds on
existing EU and national regulatory frameworks.
- Finally, there is currently a lack of effective collaboration
between authorities with responsibilities in the field of
digitalisation. There is a need for all national authorities, whether
they are responsible for conduct of business, prudential regulation,
competition or data protection, to work closely together and ensure
consistency in applying the rules to further develop the digital single
market.
Moreover, the insurance industry supports the deployment of
ethical, trustworthy and human-centric AI via an appropriate, risk-based
and proportionate regulatory framework. The scope of the framework
should be targeted only at those AI applications with proven high risk
and significant effects on the rights of individuals, as not all uses of
AI pose significant risks or directly impact consumers.
In the context of financial services legislation, and insurance in
particular, principles such as transparency, fairness, accountability
and ethics are to some extent already addressed by rules on conduct of
business and disclosure, while rules on advice apply whether the
recommendation is provided by a human or by AI.
Insurance Europe
© InsuranceEurope
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