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Insurance Reform - A Game Changer
Insurance Reform - A Game Changer
Insurance Reform - A Game Changer
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internal structural challenges. The industry is at the crossroads today, with a real risk of losing its relevance if the
status quo continues. The insurance reform bill has therefore come at an appropriate time.
Take for instance health insurance cover. The amount of money individuals spent on medical treatment totaled to
around Rs 3 lakh crore annually in India, of which only Rs 20,000 crore is through insurance cover. The rest Rs 2.8
lakh crore is spent on medical treatment particularly by the poor and lower middle class through their
hard-earned savings or borrowing at high cost or by selling family silver. The general insurance cover, of which
health and motor vehicle insurance formed part of it accounted for only 0.7 per cent of the population. It is
expected to double to nearly 2 percent in the next five years. With life and general insurance cover doubling in
the next five to 10 years more than 700 million lives can be covered providing much needed social safety net
hitherto not available to vast majority of the population. With Jan-Dhan Yojana, which has a mandatory accident
insurance cover, can help in insurance penetration. Crop insurance is yet another area where there is a lot of
potential.
The General Insurance industry has witnessed a strong performance with 18 per cent growth between 2005 and
2014 and is now a $13 billion industry breaking into the top 20 industry globally. It currently provides cover of
more than $ 17,000 billion.
But home insurance penetration is less than 1 per cent; there is significant under-insurance in segments such as
two-wheelers and personal health; corporate (property and indemnity), SME and rural risk coverage are
substantially lower than global benchmarks. These are areas in which there could be significant growth in the
next 5-10 years.
The government sponsored Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) provides coverage to the population below
the poverty line. The health insurance cover provided to poor in Tamil Nadu has worked wonders. It has not only
helped poor get treatment but also helped government earn money through insurance claim. The Tamil Nadu
governments popular health card scheme that provided insurance up to 2 lakh per family or individual has
helped General Hospital in Chennai alone earn Rs 18 crore last year by way insurance claim for treatment of poor
people covered under the scheme. This scheme could win-win for both government and poor people.
The government has recently announced that it would promote universal health coverage. There are several
learnings from other markets as well. In Brazil 40 per cent of the spending on health is through health insurance
unlike in India where it is just 6-7 per cent. Health insurance has potential to penetrate to more than 75 per cent
of 1.2 billion population in the country.
The Insurance Amendment Bill, passed by parliament also safeguards Indian ownership and control and provided
Insurance regulator, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDA) flexibility to discharge its
functions more effectively and efficiently. The Bill amends the Insurance Act, 1938, the General Insurance Business
(Nationalization) Act, 1972 and the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) Act, 1999.
The amended law, which replaces an ordinance enacted in December 2014, also enables foreign reinsurers to set
up branches in India including top global re-insurance company Llyods.
It is not India alone opening up its insurance sector. Many countries allow foreign direct investment in the
insurance sector as domestic companies do not have the wherewithal or resourced to meet insurance
requirement of the entire population. Also reinsurance is critical for sharing the risk cover involving billions of
dollars in the event of natural calamities and large accidents. In US, UK, Japan, France and Germany, FDI up to
100 per cent is allowed in the sector. Even in China up to 50 per cent FDI is allowed. In case of Indonesia it is 80
per cent and Malaysia, it is 51 per cent. Even after the opening up only up to 49 per cent FDI is allowed in India.
Apart from deepening penetration, the opening up of insurance and pension sector helps Indian government and
companies to access long-term funding for infrastructure projects, which require investment up to $1 trillion in
the next five years. Only pension and insurance funds can provide long-term capital of 10-30 years duration as
only they have access to such long term deposits. Unfortunately in India commercial banks fund infrastructure
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projects because access to long-term capital is now limited. Banks by nature get deposits short-to-medium term
and hence lend short-to-medium term. Now by lending long term, banks in India have asset-liability mis-match.
Access to pension and insurance funds will make it easier for long term funding of infra projects. Foreign
insurance players operating in India will now provide access to pension and insurance funds of their parent
companies. The US and Canadian pension and insurance funds are waiting to invest their huge capital in
countries like India this insurance reform will pave the way.
*K R Sudhaman is a freelance Business Journalist and is a former Economics Editor, Press Trust of India,
TickerNews and Financial Chronicle.
(PIB Features)
Email: - featuresunit@gmail.com
himalaya@nic.in
SS-306/SF-306/ 24.03.2015
YSK/ Uma
27-07-2015 03:17