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Economy & MarketsMonday, July 6, 2026

Insurers pivot to prevention as ageing populations redraw the retirement contract

Demographic pressure is turning insurers into active health and longevity partners, shifting the industry’s centre of gravity from claims payment to continuous care.

Italy’s demographic trajectory has made elderly care a structural economic force. The country counted 14 million over-65s in 2025, representing 24.7 per cent of the population, a share projected to reach 35 per cent by 2050. With fertility falling—355,000 births in 2025, a 3.9 per cent annual decline—the silver economy already generates more than €400 billion in spendable income each year. That reality is redrawing the perimeter of the insurance industry, as executives gathered at the Insurtech Days in Milan made clear: the traditional model of underwriting risk and paying claims is being replaced by a paradigm built on prevention, protection and continuous care.

At the same Milan forum, Matteo Cattaneo, CEO of Reale Services, described a deliberate expansion of the insurer’s role, moving beyond policies to deliver a broader value of health and welfare services. Massimo Tessitore, CEO of InSalute Servizi, framed the shift as a transition to a proactive ecosystem in which insurers manage client health rather than premiums and claims. The mechanism relies on what Tessitore called “precision prevention”—using predictive data and models to target interventions at the right person, at the right life stage, rather than offering indiscriminate screening. Cristian Losito, a partner at EY, noted that shrinking household size makes elderly care more critical, positioning all connected assistance services at the centre of the economy and requiring a “longevity ecosystem” that integrates technology, infrastructure and insurance.

Viewed from Latin America, the same pressures are reshaping personal finance advice. In Colombia, Cibest Capital is urging workers to begin retirement planning from their first job, projecting future health costs and adopting budgeting rules such as the 50/30/20 model. Argentine advisers frame life insurance not as a death benefit but as income-protection strategy, designed to sustain a family or business through a disruption. US financial analysts, meanwhile, caution that carrying high-rate debt into retirement—when income is largely fixed—can quickly become unmanageable, reinforcing the need for early, structured planning.

The next milestone is the operational build-out of these longevity ecosystems. Insurers and health-service platforms are working to align incentives across providers, policyholders and national health systems so that prevention spending is offset by lower emergency-care costs. Whether that alignment proves durable will depend on the emergence of long-term client relationships, not annual policy renewals, and on the capacity of predictive models to deliver measurable health outcomes at scale.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Prospettiva di offerta vs. domanda
25%Medium
2 blocs · positions from +0.20 to +0.70
consumer advisoryindustry celebration
EURLAT
Divergence between press blocs
Continental European press+0.70aligned
Latin American press+0.20neutral
Continental European press+0.70
Voice

The European insurance industry reinvents itself as a health manager, shifting focus from compensation to prevention, and positions itself as an indispensable partner for an aging society.

Mechanismuniversalizzazione

Through CEO and expert statements, a narrative of inevitable evolution is created, presenting the change as a natural response to demographic trends, without mentioning possible criticisms such as costs or conflicts of interest.

Omission

Possible client resistance or risks of conflict of interest when the insurer also becomes health manager are not mentioned, nor are additional costs for consumers discussed.

TriumphPaternalismPragmatism
Latin American press+0.20
Voice

The citizen must take charge of their own financial planning for old age, using tools like life insurance to protect income, in a context of a changing pension system.

Mechanismpersonalizzazione

A practical advisory tone is adopted, making the individual responsible and presenting planning as a personal duty, without questioning the shortcomings of the public system.

Omission

The role of insurance companies in promoting these products nor possible fees or conflicts are discussed, unlike the European bloc which focuses on industrial supply.

PragmatismDetachment

Broaden your view

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Upd. 08:24 PM3 languages · 5 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
5 outlets|3 languages|2 min read
Monday, July 6, 2026

Insurers pivot to prevention as ageing populations redraw the retirement contract

Demographic pressure is turning insurers into active health and longevity partners, shifting the industry’s centre of gravity from claims payment to continuous care.

Italy’s demographic trajectory has made elderly care a structural economic force. The country counted 14 million over-65s in 2025, representing 24.7 per cent of the population, a share projected to reach 35 per cent by 2050. With fertility falling—355,000 births in 2025, a 3.9 per cent annual decline—the silver economy already generates more than €400 billion in spendable income each year. That reality is redrawing the perimeter of the insurance industry, as executives gathered at the Insurtech Days in Milan made clear: the traditional model of underwriting risk and paying claims is being replaced by a paradigm built on prevention, protection and continuous care.

At the same Milan forum, Matteo Cattaneo, CEO of Reale Services, described a deliberate expansion of the insurer’s role, moving beyond policies to deliver a broader value of health and welfare services. Massimo Tessitore, CEO of InSalute Servizi, framed the shift as a transition to a proactive ecosystem in which insurers manage client health rather than premiums and claims. The mechanism relies on what Tessitore called “precision prevention”—using predictive data and models to target interventions at the right person, at the right life stage, rather than offering indiscriminate screening. Cristian Losito, a partner at EY, noted that shrinking household size makes elderly care more critical, positioning all connected assistance services at the centre of the economy and requiring a “longevity ecosystem” that integrates technology, infrastructure and insurance.

Viewed from Latin America, the same pressures are reshaping personal finance advice. In Colombia, Cibest Capital is urging workers to begin retirement planning from their first job, projecting future health costs and adopting budgeting rules such as the 50/30/20 model. Argentine advisers frame life insurance not as a death benefit but as income-protection strategy, designed to sustain a family or business through a disruption. US financial analysts, meanwhile, caution that carrying high-rate debt into retirement—when income is largely fixed—can quickly become unmanageable, reinforcing the need for early, structured planning.

The next milestone is the operational build-out of these longevity ecosystems. Insurers and health-service platforms are working to align incentives across providers, policyholders and national health systems so that prevention spending is offset by lower emergency-care costs. Whether that alignment proves durable will depend on the emergence of long-term client relationships, not annual policy renewals, and on the capacity of predictive models to deliver measurable health outcomes at scale.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Prospettiva di offerta vs. domanda
25%Medium
2 blocs · positions from +0.20 to +0.70
consumer advisoryindustry celebration
EURLAT
Divergence between press blocs
Continental European press+0.70aligned
Latin American press+0.20neutral
Continental European press+0.70
Voice

The European insurance industry reinvents itself as a health manager, shifting focus from compensation to prevention, and positions itself as an indispensable partner for an aging society.

Mechanismuniversalizzazione

Through CEO and expert statements, a narrative of inevitable evolution is created, presenting the change as a natural response to demographic trends, without mentioning possible criticisms such as costs or conflicts of interest.

Omission

Possible client resistance or risks of conflict of interest when the insurer also becomes health manager are not mentioned, nor are additional costs for consumers discussed.

TriumphPaternalismPragmatism
Latin American press+0.20
Voice

The citizen must take charge of their own financial planning for old age, using tools like life insurance to protect income, in a context of a changing pension system.

Mechanismpersonalizzazione

A practical advisory tone is adopted, making the individual responsible and presenting planning as a personal duty, without questioning the shortcomings of the public system.

Omission

The role of insurance companies in promoting these products nor possible fees or conflicts are discussed, unlike the European bloc which focuses on industrial supply.

PragmatismDetachment

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