June that PPI providers overcharge customers by £1.4bn a year, against annual sales of £5.5bn. So what's changing? The Competition Commission stopped short of banning PPI altogether. But it is banning "single premium policies", where the premium is paid up front and often added to the original loan as a lump sum. Providers will also be stopped from pushing customers to take PPI immediately. They will have to wait 14 days and tailor any quote to ensure the policy is suitable.
Fine, say the banks – but loan rates will rise because the income from PPI sales often subsidises interest charges. And the changes come just as people need cover going into a recession. This is "nonsense", as The Independent's Julian Knight puts it. There's "never a good time to be mis-sold a policy". The extra transparency should stop millions from buying cover they either don't need, or that doesn't do what they expect. If you think you may have been sold an unsuitable PPI plan – some campaigners reckon there's a problem with up to half of them – you can complain to...finanacial.
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