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Some days, they all seem to have a vested interest

Tony Bridgland finds that crime pays sometimes - but that it's not the criminal who benefits

Jeffrey Archer's ticker raised an interesting conundrum recently when he tried to use his private health insurance while doing porridge, but was told to wait his place in the NHS queue along with all the other lags.

It wasn't as if the man would have been gaining unfairly - from his point of view, he had paid his premium and was entitled to avail himself of the insurance benefits required.

His crime had nothing to do with it. It was a case of vindictiveness - or political correctness, if you like

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Analysis: Are employee benefits the new diversification frontier for GI brokers?

This year, Top 100 UK brokers Jensten, Lloyd & Whyte and Clear have all joined amii, a trade body representing intermediaries advising on health insurance, protection and wellbeing services, while others have acquired in this space. Sam Barrett looks at why firms more closely associated with general insurance broking are branching out to capitalise on opportunities in the employee benefits market.

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