Insurtech Adoption in Bangladesh: Challenges and Solutions to Overcome Adoption Barriers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58932/MULD0045Keywords:
InsurTech, Insurance Industry, Digital Technologies, Bangladesh.Abstract
The idea of insurance was discovered several millennia before Christ (BC). In the second and third millennia BC, traders from China and Babylonia practiced shifting or dispersing risks. Today, insurance is the foundation of the economy, but expanding its penetration is difficult in emerging nations. The fourth insurance industry revolution in the developed world was sparked by the recent advent of Blockchain, IoT, Big Data, and InsurTech. In order to boost insurance coverage in Bangladesh, this study examines the problems with and potential solutions to InsurTech. In order to identify the themes and factors pertaining to problems and solutions in implementing InsurTech in Bangladesh insurance business, this study used a systematic literature review, a rigorous, methodical, and structured process used to gather, evaluate, and synthesize all relevant research on a specific topic. In order to find pertinent material from Google Scholar, a number of keywords were employed. The filtered studies were examined based on inclusion and exclusion standards. This report outlined many obstacles to InsurTech adoption in the Bangladesh insurance sector as well as potential remedies. The proposals could help policymakers improve the insurance industry service delivery.
References
Ali, K. M. M. (2021). TakafulTech for business excellence and customer satisfaction. In M. M. Billah (Ed.), Islamic FinTech (pp. xx–xx). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-45827-0_21
Choudhary, M., & Tanpat, K. (2023). Digital improvements to microfinance in Bangladesh. International Research E-Journal on Business and Economics, 8(1), 1–7.
Dewey, A., & Drahota, A. (2016). Introduction to systematic reviews: Online learning module. Cochrane Training. Retrieved from https://training.cochrane.org/interactivelearning/module-1-introduction-conducting-systematic-reviews
Helal, U., & Munim, B. (2022). Will digital revolution be disruptive for the inclusive finance in Bangladesh? The case of the microfinance industry. EVERGREEN Joint Journal of Novel Carbon Resource Sciences & Green Asia Strategy, 9(4), 909–923.
Khaled, M., Mahbubul, A., & Kazi, S. (2023). Customer FinTech readiness (CFR): Assessing customer readiness for FinTech in Bangladesh. Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity, 9(2), 100–132.
Manoj, B., Naga, P., Swathi, & Hima, J. (2023). FinTech adoption framework for developing countries: A literature review based on stakeholders' perspective. Social Science Journal, 13(3), 1–10.
Muhammad, S., Nazmus, S., Mahbubur, R., Adamu, J., Mochammad, F., Muhammad, A., & Sandra, G. (2023). Sustainability, 15(9), 71–76.
Sahabuddin, M., Ahmad, A., & Islam, M. (2023). Emergence of Islamic finance in the fourth industrial revolution and COVID-19 post-pandemic era. In Z. H. Jumat, S. H. Khateeb, & S. N. Ali (Eds.), Islamic finance, FinTech, and the road to sustainability (pp. xx–xx). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-13302-2_6
Taron, A., Ghosh, S., & Giriraj, A. (2023, August 2). Opportunities and early evidence for scaling bundled index insurance using digital technologies in transitioning and developing economies. SSRN. https://ssrn.com/abstract=4562916 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4562916