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CHAPTER - II LIFE INSURANCE - BASICS AND GLOBAL TRENDS 2.1 DEFINITION OF RISK Insurance essentially is an arrangement where many, who are exposed to similar risk, share the losses experienced by a few. Insurance is a device for risk sharing and risk transfer. When someone states that there is a risk in a particular situation, it means that in the given situation there is an uncertainty about the outcome and the possibility exists that the outcome will be unfavourable also. This loose intuitive notion of risk, which implies a lack of knowledge about the future and the possibility of some adverse consequence, is satisfactory for conventional usage, according to Vaughan, (2003). If the outcome of an event can be predicted with certainty then there is no risk and the existence of risk means that there are at least two possible outcomes of which one is undesirable. The term risk is variously defined as 1) the chance of loss 2) the possibility of loss 3) uncertainty 4) the dispersion of actual from the expected results and 5) the probability of any outcome different from the one expected. Vaughan, (2003) has defined risk as a condition in which there is a possibility of an adverse deviation from a desired outcome that is expected or hoped for. According to Rejda, (2004) risk is defined as uncertainty concerning occurrence of a loss. According to NIA Pune (Online learning), risk is said to exist if there is a possibility of getting an outcome other than the one desired for and a. It is a combination of circumstances in the external environment over which a person has very little control. b. The probability is between zero and one. c. The extent of adverse outcome may not be measurable before risk takes place. Although the terms peril and hazard are used interchangeably with each other and also with risk, each of them is distinct. Peril is a cause of a loss. Fire and Hurricane are classic examples of peril. On the other hand hazard is a condition that may create or increase the probability of loss that arises out of a peril. Hazard can be classified as Physical hazard, and Moral hazard Physical hazard arises out of physical properties that increase the chances of loss. For example storage of highly inflammable fluid increases the probability of loss due to fire in a work place. Moral hazard refers to the increase in loss arising out of dishonest behaviour or nondisclosure on the part of an insured individual. Moral hazard is present in all forms of insurance including life insurance. 2.2 RISK CLASSIFICATION Risk can be classified into several categories but considering the relevance to insurance, it can be classified into • Fundamental and particular risk • Pure and speculative risk 12 2.2.1 FUNDAMENTAL AND PARTICULAR RISK: Fundamental risks are those that affect the entire economy or large numbers of persons or groups within the economy (Rejda, 2004). Fundamental risks involve losses that are impersonal in origin and consequence. The risk of natural disaster arising out of hurricanes, earthquakes and floods is a fine example of fundamental risk that involves losses to large groups. On the other hand, particular risks involve losses that arise out of individual events and are felt by Individuals only. Particular risk is a risk that affects only the individual and not the entire community. Risk arising out of car theft or fire in a dwelling unit is an example of particular risk. 2.2.2 PURE AND SPECULATIVE RISK: The term pure risk is used to designate those situations that involve only the chance of loss or no loss. In a pure risk the possible outcomes are loss or no loss. A person buying a car has the risk of damage due to accident, fire or theft, where the probable outcome of the risk is loss or no loss. Speculative risk describes a situation where there is not only a possibility of loss but also a possibility of gain. Gambling is a good example of speculative risk. The distinction between pure and speculative risks is an important one, because normally only pure risks are insurable. Speculative risk is voluntarily accepted because of its two dimensional nature, which includes the possibility of gain. (Vaughan, 2003) Not all pure risks are insurable, and a further distinction between insurable and uninsurable pure risks may be also made. An uninsurable pure risk may also exist. "War-risk exclusion" inserted by Life Insurance companies in times of war, exclusion of terrorist attack cover to airlines after 9/11 are fine examples of uninsurable pure risks. 13 Pure risk that exists for individuals and business firms can be classified as personal risk, property risk, liability risk and risks arising from failure of others. Personal risks are risks that directly affect an individual or his dependants. It consists of the possibility of loss of income or reduction in financial assets as a result of the loss of the ability to earn income. Premature death, dependent old age, sickness or disability and unemployment/loss of employment are perils associated with personal risk. Personal risk is the subject matter in life insurance business. The risk of having the property damaged or lost from several causes leads to property risks for a property owner. Liability risks arise out of unintentional injury to other persons or damage to their property through negligence or carelessness. When a person’s failure to meet his obligation may result in a financial loss for an individual and this risk arising out of the person’s failure can be termed as risk arising from failure of others. (Rejda, 2004). Risk causes financial loss to an individual or to the society at large or to both. The financial loss can be a direct loss or a consequential loss. It is always prudent to take appropriate steps or manage risk to reduce the impact of the risk or reduce or limit the loss arising out of a risk. 2.3 RISK MANAGEMENT According to Vaughan, (2003) risk management is a scientific approach to dealing with pure risks by anticipating possible accidental losses and designing and implementing procedures that minimize the occurrence of loss or the financial impact of the losses that do occur. 14 Risk can be managed by the following ways: • Risk avoidance • Risk retention • Risk reduction • Risk transfer Risk avoidance has been described as a method of managing risk, which involves ceasing to undertake the activity, which creates the risk, or performing it in another way or at some other place (Insurance Institute of India). In risk retention, the individual or business retains or owns all or part of the risk and has voluntarily or willingly subjected himself or herself to the loss arising out of the risk. Risk reduction covers all methods employed to reduce either the probability of loss producing events occurring or the potential size of losses that do occur. Risk transfer can take the shape of physical transfer, wherein the activity, which creates the risks, may be outsourced or contracted out through a specialist. This method is called as non-insurance transfers or transfer of risk by contract. Secondly through a contract the financial loss arising out of risk can be transferred. Insurance is the most preferred way of transferring the impact of risk. Purchasing an insurance contract is a primary approach to risk transfer. 2.4 INSURANCE Insurance is a complicate and intricate risk transfer mechanism and it has two fundamental characteristics. a) Transferring or shifting risk from individual to a group b) Sharing losses, on some equitable basis, by all members of the group 15 Insurance as a risk management tool is available only for pure risk. From the point of view of the insurer, there are certain requirements to be fulfilled before the insurance is provided and these requirements are normally known as elements of insurability of risk 2.4.1 ELEMENTS OF INSURABLE RISK Vaughan, (2003), lists the following as elements of insurable risk. • Presence of large number of exposure units • Loss produced must be definite and measurable • Loss must be accidental • Loss must not be catastrophic There must be a sufficiently large number of homogeneous exposure units to make the losses reasonably predictable. A large number of similar units exposed to the risk help the insurer in estimating the probable loss in financial terms. The purpose of this requirement is to enable the insurer to predict the loss on the law of large numbers. The loss produced by the risk must be definite and measurable and it means that the loss should be definite as to cause, time, place and amount. Life insurance in most cases meets this requirement easily. The loss must be fortuitous or accidental and unintentional. The loss should be beyond the insured’s control. Loss must be the result of a contingency, that is, it must be some thing that may or may not happen. There are two main reasons as to why the loss must be accidental. Firstly if intentional losses were to be paid, moral hazard would 16 substantially increase as a result of which premium would rise. Secondly the loss should be accidental because the law of large numbers is based on the random occurrence of events. A deliberately caused loss is not a random event. This leads to prediction of future experience highly inaccurate. Rejda (2004) mentions that for insurance to work successfully the loss must not be catastrophic and it means that a large proportion of the exposure units should not incur losses at the same time. Pooling is the essence of insurance. If most or all the exposure units in a certain class simultaneously incur a loss, then the pooling technique breaks down and becomes unworkable. Personal risks relate to the loss of ability to earn income and include premature death, dependant old age, sickness or disability and unemployment. A well-designed risk management program for an individual must take care of the biggest risk for self and family that is the loss of income. The principal objective of managing personal risks is to avoid the deprivation of the individual and those dependent on him or her in the event of a loss that causes the termination of income. Achieving this objective generally means making arrangements to replace the income that would be lost as a result of death, retirement, disability or unemployment. Insurance is a common approach to replacing such income. 2.5 DEFINITION OF INSURANCE – DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES Insurance, defined from the individual’s point of view, is an economic device whereby the individual substitutes a small certain cost (the premium) for a large uncertain financial loss (the contingency insured against) that would exist if it were not for the insurance. 17 INSURANCE – ECONOMIC AND LEGAL PERSPECTIVE According to Life Insurance Underwriting (Online learning of NIA, Pune) Insurance can be defined under two different perspectives, economic and legal. Economic Perspective – Insurance is a financial intermediation function by which individuals exposed to a specified contingency each contribute to a pool from which covered events suffered by participating individuals are paid. Individuals purchase the right to collect from the pool if the insured contingency occurs. Insurance then is a contingent claim contract on the pool’s assets. Legal Perspective – Insurance is an agreement (the insurance policy or the insurance contract), by which one party, like policy owner, pays stipulated consideration, called premium, to the other party called Insurer in return for which the insurer agrees to pay a defined amount of money or provide a defined service if a covered event occurs during the policy term. The term, insurance has also been defined as the device in which a sum of money as a premium is paid as consideration of the insurer’s incurring the risk of paying a large sum upon a particular eventuality. Insurance is a contract between one party i.e. the insurer or the insurance company and the other party. I.e. Insured 2.6 LIFE INSURANCE Life insurance is a plan by which a group of people can pool their money to share risks. It is a protective measure, and it can be a way to build savings. Premiums are paid to an insurance company. The policy states what the company will do and when, and 18 tells how much money the company will pay the policyholder or the beneficiaries under various conditions (Stephenson J, 2000). In most lines of insurance, an attempt is made to put the individual back in exactly the same financial position after a loss as before the loss. This is called law of indemnity. This principle of indemnity is not possible in life insurance business for obvious reason that we cannot place a value on a human life nor we can get a dead man alive. What a life insurance product aims to achieve is to put the family back on a similar financial position. In India, Life Insurance Business is defined under Section 2(11) of Insurance Act 1938, which reads as follows: “Life insurance business” means the business of effecting contracts of insurance upon human life, including any contract whereby the payment of money is assured on death (except death by accident only) or the happening of any contingency dependent on human life and any contract which is subject to payment of premium for a term dependent on human life and shall be deemed to include - the granting of a) Disability and double or triple indemnity accident benefits, if so provided in the contract of insurance; b) Annuities upon human life; and c) Superannuation allowances and annuities payable out of any fund applicable solely to the relief and maintenance of persons engaged or who have been engaged in any particular profession, trade or employment or of the dependents of such persons. 19 2.7 PRINCIPLES UNDERLYING LIFE INSURANCE The specific or unique principles that are of paramount significance to life insurance contract, as per Life Insurance Underwriting, NIA Pune are • Law of Large Numbers • Principle of Indemnity • Principle of Insurable Interest • Principle of Utmost good faith 2.7.1 LAW OF LARGE NUMBERS Insurance and more particularly Life Insurance relies on the law of large numbers to minimize the losses and make it viable. The law of large numbers, shows that, in insurance the greater the number of similar exposures to a peril, the less observed loss experience will deviate from the expected loss experience. The Law of Large Numbers does not suggest that the losses to particular individual will become more predictable. Rather it suggests that the larger the group (of people) insured, the more predictable will be the loss experience of the entire group, other things being similar. 2.7.2 PRINCIPLE OF INDEMNITY Insurance contracts provide compensation for an insured’s loss. Indemnity means the insured should be in the same financial position after as before the insured loss. But life insurance is an exception to this rule, as the economic value of a human life cannot be measured precisely. One could not be put precisely in the same financial position occupied before the loss. Nevertheless, life insurance underwriting takes care 20 not to overinsure by preventing insures from acquiring more life insurance than their financial position justifies. 2.7.3 PRINCIPLE OF INSURANCE INTEREST It is the interest that the owner of the insurance has on the continuance of the life insured. If the person does not have any interest in the life that is insured, it becomes gambling. Insurable Interest can also be termed as the financial loss that the insured’s dependent will suffer in case of the death of the life insured. This insurable interest should exist at the time of purchase of the life insurance policy. People are presumed to have unlimited insurable interest in their own lives. A husband and wife have unlimited insurable interest on each other’s lives. Similarly, insurable interest can be present in close family relationships such as parents – children. Beyond such close relationships, insurable interest exists in financial relationship. For example creditors have insurable interest on the lives of debtors to the extent of the debt outstanding. Partners have insurable interest on the basis of each other, employers on the lives of key employees. 2.7.4 PRINCIPLE OF UTMOST GOOD FAITH A person buying life insurance is deemed to have the highest standard of honesty in dealing with the insurer. The insurance contract depends upon various facts about the life to be insured which are known only to the insured and not the insurer. Hence contracts of insurance are termed as contracts of Utmost Good Faith. The penalty for lesser level of truthfulness is the insurer’s right to void the contract. 21 2.8 RISK EVALUATION CONCEPTS IN LIFE INSURANCE There are two main approaches to evaluate the risk of premature death as per Life Insurance Underwriting (Online learning, NIA Pune), which are, 1. HUMAN LIFE VALUE 2. NEED ANALYSIS Human life value concept deals with human capital, which is a person’s income potential. Human life value concept goes beyond the numbers and into considering the entire impact caused by the loss of a human being. Dr. S.S. Huebner, a distinguished professor of insurance at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, and Chairman of the Department of Insurance, regarded as the father of insurance education in the United Sates, had the following concerning the obligation to insure: “From the family stand point, life insurance is a necessary business proposition which may be expected by every person with dependents as a matter of course, just like any other necessary business transaction which ordinary decency requires him to meet. The care of his family is man’s first and most important business. The family should be established and run on a sound business basis. It should be protected against needless bankruptcy. The death or disability of the head of this business should not involve its impairment or dissolution any more than the death of the head of a bank, railroad or store. Every corporation and firm represents capitalized earning capacity and goodwill. Why then, when men and women are about to organize the business called family should there not be capitalization in the form of life insurance policy of the only real value and goodwill behind the business? Why is it not fully as reasonable to have a life insurance policy accompany a marriage certificate, as it is to have a marine insurance certificate invariably attached to a foreign bill of exchange? The voyage in the 22 first instance is, on the average, much longer, subject to much greater risk and in case of wreck, the loss is of infinitely greater consequence”. (NIA Pune) The growth of life insurance implies an increasing development of the sense of responsibility. The idea of providing only for the present must give way to recognition of the fact that a person’s responsibility to his family is not limited to the years of survival. Emphasis should be laid on the “crime of not insuring” and the finger of scorn should be pointed at any man, who although he has provided well while he was alive, has not seen fit to discount the uncertain future for the benefit of a dependent household. Life Insurance is a sure means of changing the uncertainty into certainty and the opposite of gambling. He who does not insure gambles with the greatest of all chances and if he loses makes those dearest to him pay for forfeit. 2.8.1 THE HUMAN LIFE VALUE CONCEPT The Human Life Value (HLV) concept is a part of the general theory of human capital. While Human Capital is the production potential of an individual, HLV is a measure of the actual future earnings or values of services of an individual – that is, the capitalized value of an individual’s future net earnings after subtracting self maintenance cost such as food, clothing and shelter. From the standpoints of one’s dependents, an individual HLV is the measure of the value of benefits that the dependents can expect from their breadwinner or supporter. Similarly from the viewpoint of an organization, the HLV of an employee is the value of his/her services to the firm. Thus there is not necessarily one single HLV. A given HLV is a function of its purpose and value to others. The insurable value of an individual’s economic possibilities is the monetary worth of the following qualitative forces in that individual: (i) ethical behaviour (ii) good 23 health (iii) willingness to work (iv) willingness to make an investment in the mind and (v) creative ability and judgment. The HLV may be defined, quantitatively as the present value of the expected net earnings of an individual. The appraisal of an individual’s potential earnings involves taking the present value of future projected earnings. The following are the limitations of Human Life value approach in measuring the correct amount of life insurance cover. (Rejda, 2004). Firstly, HLV does not take into account other sources of income other than salary. Secondly, in a simple HLV approach, the earnings and expenses are assumed to remain constant. Thirdly the amount of income allocatable to the family is a critical factor in determining the value. This amount is subjected to several factors like birth or death in the family, divorce etc. Fourthly, the appropriate discount value assumption is critical. The amount of provision can change significantly, only by the change in discount value used, even though all the other key family specific factors are kept constant. Finally HLV ignores the effect of inflation on earnings and expenses. 2.8.2 NEEDS ANALYSIS Needs analysis focuses on the income and cash needs that must be met following an individual’s premature death and compares those needs to resources already available. According to Stephenson J (2000) families usually purchase life insurance for financial protection. If an insured wage earner dies, the insurance money can provide financial security for the surviving family members. When both husband and wife are wage earners, life insurance may be needed for both. If there are young children to be cared for, a fulltime homemaker may consider life insurance. There is 24 seldom, if ever, a good reason to purchase life insurance on children. First consideration should be given to a policy that protects the family against possible loss of income. Building savings for future needs should come after buying this loss-of -income protection for the family. Stephenson J (2000) also mentions that the type and amount of financial protection a family needs from life insurance will be largely determined by: • Family income • Other resources available • Family plans and objectives • Size and composition of the family, and • Stage in the family life cycle Life insurance needs change with time. A typical family's needs begin when the first child is conceived and reaches a maximum amount when the last child is conceived. The insurance need drops to zero several years before the expected retirement age. An insurance policy should provide this lifetime pattern of insurance coverage. That is, it should provide a maximum amount of protection while the family is growing and taper off, as the family gets older and smaller. 2.9 LIFE STAGES ANALYSIS The life insurance needs vary for different individuals and it is depended interalia on the income, number of dependants and current life style. An individual will necessarily travel through various stages of life (Figure 2.1) and the time of incidence of which may be different for different individuals. Similarly the nature of insurance also changes as the individual travels through different stages in life. In the initial years of 25 married life, he needs life insurance cover that graduates into long-term savings related products and culminates to pension and annuities. Figure 2.1: Life stages of an individual Source: ICFA Program guide, CII, London Figure 2.2: Trends of needs and resources for family Source: Mary J Stephenson (2000) 26 Figure 2.2 describes the need for insurance, security / insurance provision for an individual. The need for dependency for insurance decreases as the individual starts savings and makes investments and the need is the highest at the time of birth of children and when the children grow old and become independent, the quantum of life insurance cover reduces significantly. 2.10 IMPACT OF LIFE INSURANCE ON AN INDIVIDUAL Life insurance products have manifold impact on the economic well being of the customer and his family. The benefits to an individual can be classified into the following: (Bodla, et al 2003) • Risk cover • Compulsory savings • Credit protection • Savings for a need • Tax relief Any life insurance product is aimed at addressing two most important risks in human life i.e. risk of early death and the risk of living longer. Life risk cover provided by a life insurance policy ensures that the insurance company pays the full sum assured to the dependants of life assured. The availability of a corpus helps the dependants to continue to maintain their life style. Life insurance contracts are normally taken for longer term with a commitment from the individual that he is agreeable to pay the premium every year. This condition brings in a compulsion and ensures that the individual pays the premium or does the 27 savings year after year. Non-payment of premium leads to cessation of the policy and cessation deprives the most valuable life protection. Life insurance can be taken to cover the exposure of credits or borrowings. In the event of death of the borrower, the life insurance policy benefit payout can settle the outstanding borrowing and can save the family from a potential bankruptcy. Being of long term in nature, life insurance can be used for accumulating savings for specific long-term needs like money for higher education, marriage and retirement planning. In addition, in a few countries like India, premium paid also entails an individual to certain tax benefits under the Income tax regulations. 2.11 IMPACT OF LIFE INSURANCE ON THE ECONOMY Life insurance has a significant impact on the macro economy of a country. The impact can be classified into the following (Bodla, et al 2003) • Savings and insurance • Capital formation • Insurance as a financial intermediary • Economic development 2.11.1 SAVINGS AND INSURANCE The internal savings of a country flows from three sectors (Table 2.1). • Household sector • Private corporate sector and • Public sector 28 The savings from the household sector constitutes a significant proportion of the total savings in the country (Bodla, et al 2003). Household savings comprises of physical savings and financial savings. Physical savings refers to savings by household to purchase physical assets like gold, land, buildings etc. Financial savings means savings in financial instruments like deposits, bonds, shares, mutual fund, insurance and small savings. 46.7 percent of household financial savings are made in bank deposit. (Table 2.2) Indian economy continues to have high savings rate and from the table given below (2.3), it can be observed that GDS has always been higher than 24 percent since 2000-01. Life insurance constitutes one of the most important components in the financial savings for households and it is above 13 percent of the household financial savings. (Figure 2.3). Table 2.1: Sectorwise Domestic Savings (at current prices) Sectorwise Domestic Savings (at current prices) Household Sector (Rs in Crores) Public Sector Gross Domestic Savings Net Domestic Savings Financial Savings Physical Savings Total Private Corporate Sector 1999-00 206602 210124 416726 87234 -16659 487301 300652 2000-01 215219 231098 446317 87017 -37062 496272 293540 2001-02 247476 255198 502674 81669 -46377 537966 316805 2002-03 253256 312152 565408 99767 -16181 648994 413392 2003-04P 316444 332190 648634 120852 28026 797512 540942 2004-05E 320777 366302 687079 150947 69390 907416 612658 Source: IRDA Reports P- Provisional, E-Estimates 29 Table 2.2: Composition of Gross Financial Assets of the household sector (in percentages) 2005-06# 2004-05P 2003-04P 2002-03P 2001-02P 2000-01 8.8 8.5 11.2 8.9 9.7 6.3 46.7 36.4 37.4 38.3 36.8 38.1 Non-banking Deposits 0.8 0.8 1 2.7 2.6 2.9 Life Insurance Funds 14.2 16 13.7 16.1 14.2 13.6 Provident and Pension Funds 10 12.9 13.6 15 16.1 19.3 Claims on Government 14.7 24.4 23 17.4 17.9 15.7 Shares and Debentures 4.9 1.1 0.1 1.7 2.7 4.1 Total 100 100 100 100 100 100 Currency Bank Deposits Source: ICRA Report, May 2003.IRDA ANNUAL REPORTS P- Provisional, #-estimates Table 2.3: Percentage contribution of components of Gross Domestic Savings 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04P 2004-05E GDS as a % of GDP 25 24 24 27 29 29 Household sector savings as a % of GDS 86 90 93 87 81 76 50 48 49 45 49 47 12 14 14 16 14 16 Financial Assets as a % of Household savings Life Insurance Fund as a % of Financial assets of Household Source: RBI Reports, P- Provisional, E-Estimates 30 Figure 2.3: Life insurance premium as a percentage of household savings Source: RBI Report P- Provisional, #-estimates 2.11.2 CAPITAL FORMATION Capital formation envisages three essential steps, which are 1. Real savings 2. Mobilisation and channelising of savings through financial intermediaries to be placed at the disposal of investors 3. The act of investment. Contribution of insurance in the process of capital formation appears at all these stages. Insurance services act as a tool to mobilize savings and function as financial intermediary. 31 2.11.3 INSURANCE AS A FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARY Financial intermediaries carry out the function of mobilization of savings and placing them at the disposal of investors. In a large economy, act of savings is performed by a very large number of entities/ individuals scattered across the country. Insurance as an intermediary helps in mobilizing such small savings and direct them to appropriate investment avenues. 2.11.4 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT In life insurance, since the time horizons for investments are long-term, the savings can be tied up for a long time and hence can be made available for capital expenditures. These savings can be made available to the private sector or to the government for the purposes of infrastructures, which are essentially long term in nature. The capital investment decisions by the private and the government, lead to increase in the level of employment and increase in the standard of living across the economy. Increase in the productive base of the economy results in rise of exports leading to improving the balance of payment. As the percentage of savings by household increases, then by definition they will be consuming less. This reduced consumption will help to lower the inflationary pressures that might exist within the economy. This inflation reducing benefit will clearly be greater within an economy where consumption is tending to squeeze out potential capital expenditure. With the increase in domestic savings, the dependency on foreign investment comes down. 32 The figure 2.4 gives a graphical representation of the role that life insurance companies play in the mobilization of savings, investment of the savings in the capital market and the resulting impact on the wider macro economy. Figure 2.4: Economic contribution of life insurance industry Life insurance policies bought by customers Capital investment by the owners of the life insurance company Capital Subscribed Claims payments Premium Dividends Life Insurance companies Encourages savings and life insurance in particular by household and insurance Investment in capital market Capital Market Finance available for Private Sector Government Increase in the number of companies listed in the market and increase in market prices GDP of the economy increases Higher employment More potential of increase in domestic consumption Increase in exports, balance of payment Source: Dickinson, 2000 33 2.12 GLOBAL INSURANCE TRENDS Global experience shows that life insurance markets tend to take time to develop, often developing later than banks and non-life insurance companies. According to Dickinson (2000), long term savings across the population as a whole increases as standards of living rise and as standards of living rise, longevity also increases. The pattern of the growth of national life insurance markets tends to follow an ‘S’ shaped curve pattern, depicted in the figure 2.5. As the GDP per head within an economy remains low, spending on life insurance remains low, often growing at a rate less than the growth of GDP. But when the GDP per head increases beyond a certain threshold, spending on life insurance begins to accelerate. At very high level of GDP per head, the rate of acceleration tends to slow, partly due to the fact that the wealthier economies tend to have older populations who begin to draw down their savings during retirement. There is a strong correlation among economic, political, cultural and commercial factors at work which vary from country to country, which affect the life insurance market and life insurance products (Dickenson, 2000). The products purchased by the customers in any life insurance market also keep changing with the economic and demographic development of the country. Life insurance markets start slowly, due to lower consumer awareness and individual income constraints. 34 Figure 2.5: Growth of life insurance markets Source: Dickinson, 2000 Figure 2.6: Life insurance product development & economic development Source: Dickinson, 2000 Firstly, as the economy grows, the life insurance products tend to move from having a primary emphasis on insurance protection towards a greater savings role, especially saving for retirement purposes. Secondly, there is a move away from simple products sold either on an individual and group basis to a more complex products sold 35 mainly on individual basis. This relation between emergence of different products and the level of economic development is presented in figure 2.6. 2.13 INDICATORS OF INSURANCE DEVELOPMENT Two indicators, which help to distinguish the current and potential states of an insurance market, are insurance density and insurance penetration (percentage of insurance premiums in GDP. Insurance density is measured as the ratio between total premium income and population. Insurance density indicates the current state of the market, which is highest in industrialized nations. For example, both the United States (US) and Japan, the world’s most industrialized countries, have the highest premium density ranking, with over $800 per capita. China and India, in contrast, are represented by single-digit figures. The high insurance density implies that the insurance market is fully actualized and therefore has less room to grow. (Beck et al 2002) Insurance penetration, on the other hand, can be used as a rough indicator of growth potential. Insurance penetration can be computed as The numerator of the right hand side of the equation, insurance premiums/capita, can be described as the insurance expenditure per household. The denominator of the right hand side of the equation, GDP/capita, can be described as the production per household. When combining the two parts, insurance penetration can be viewed as the relationship between insurance expenditures and economic production per household. In contrast to the relatively flat rate of growth exhibited at the low and high ends of the GDP 36 spectrum, the demand for insurance grows significantly faster than wealth in transitional markets (South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong). When income rises above the minimal level, people begin to accumulate personal assets and an awareness of the value of insurance develops. Insurance consumption then rises rapidly to fill gaps of need. Transitional markets thus demonstrate highest growth potential. The adjoining figure 2.7 compares the penetration of life insurance with the economic development. It can be observed that in general the emerging markets or the developing economies figure in the growth phase of the trend line and as the economy matures to become a developed or industrialized country the growth tapers off. Developing economies like India, China, Brazil and Russia are in the nascent lower end of the trend line and developed economies like Japan, US, Switzerland are in the upper end of the trend line. United Kingdom has the maximum life penetration percentage amongst the developed economies. It can also be observed from figure 2.7 that there is a positive relationship between wealth (measured as gross national income per capita in purchasing power parities) and a country’s insurance penetration. Higher wealth tends to result in a rising penetration in Life as well as in Non-Life (i.e. the insurance market is growing faster than the overall economy). In general, the increase is stronger in emerging markets than in industrialized countries. Existing deviations of individual countries from the “Global trend line” shown in the graph are due to differences in Life insurance market environments across countries (e.g. degree of old-age pension systems being based on social security), and wealth alone does not explain the state of a country’s Life insurance market. 37 Figure 2.7: Relation between wealth and life insurance penetration in global economies in 2002 Source: Reiche, 2004. Figure 2.8: Share of each continent in the worldwide life premium income Africa 2% Oceania 1% Asia 29% America 28% Europe 40% Source: CEA report 2005 38 2.14 GLOBAL LIFE INSURANCE MARKET According to the Swiss Re analysis (Sigma No.5/2006), in 2005 the worldwide life business generated a total premium income of US$1999bn, an increase of 5.1% compared to 2004. With more than 40% of this amount and a growth rate above 10%, the European market is the world’s leading market in terms of premium income and growth (Figure 2.8). Just behind Europe, the American market represents 28% of the world life business and experienced a negative growth of 3.3% in real terms. This slowdown, essentially due to the US market, is related to lower sales in individual life and annuity products, which suffered from “low return rates and increased competition from bank savings products” (Swiss Re – Sigma No 5/2006). North America has the highest insurance density in the world and it stood at US $1686.3 during 2005 (Table 2.4) The Asian market represents 29% of world business and has shown a positive growth of 5.1 percent, which actually conceals different developments across the continent. On the one hand, with almost US$380bn, Japan is the largest Asian life insurance market but recorded a moderate growth of 2.3 percent, essentially due to the success of annuity products. On the other side, the South and East Asian life insurance market has grown by 11.6 percent in 2005 (9.1 percent in 2004), reflecting the economic boom in the region. This success is driven by participating universal life products and also by annuity products, which are supported by governments in order to supplement state pension schemes. Behind these three leading continents, Africa and Oceania each represent less than 1.5% of the world business and recorded growth rates of 6.5% and 4.9% respectively and these economies also have low insurance density. (Table 2.4) 39 Table 2.4: Continentwise insurance density and insurance penetration Insurance Density (US $) Insurance Penetration (% ) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2002 2003 2004 2005 1563.8 1565.7 1617.2 1686.3 4.48 4.25 4.12 4.05 29.1 30.0 37.2 42.0 0.92 0.94 1.01 0.93 Europe 620.4 726.9 848.1 911.8 4.83 4.64 4.68 4.69 Asia 128.1 140.1 147.2 149.6 5.81 5.74 5.58 5.16 21.5 26.1 30.3 30.7 3.28 2.93 3.41 3.33 Oceania 668.7 750.7 851 885 4.48 3.99 3.75 3.16 World 247.3 267.1 291.5 299.5 4.76 4.59 4.55 4.34 North America Latin American & Caribbean Africa Source: IRDA reports 2.15 LIFE INSURANCE IN ASIA The premium distribution and maturity of Asian insurance markets vary considerably by country. According to Chu, (2001), broadly, Asian insurance markets can be stratified into three levels: fully mature, transitional, and incipient. Japan is the only fully mature market, accounting for over 75% of the insurance premiums in Asia. Transitional markets include countries like South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong and the two major incipient markets are China and India, which are the world’s two most populated countries. Fully mature. (Japan) - The life insurance industry is characterized by the sophisticated liability insurance for protection of personal wealth and advanced risk management structure for large commercial firms. Japan’s well-developed economy can sustain the full range of modern insurance products. Japan has an insurance density of US $ 2956.3 during 2005 and is the highest among all Asian economies (Table 2.5) 40 Transitional. (South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore) - Customers in these developing economies are becoming aware of the importance of protecting personal wealth, but may not have the full appreciation to warrant an ultra-sophisticated approach. Incidentally Taiwan with 11.17% has the highest insurance penetration among its Asian neighbours. Incipient. (China, India, Vietnam) - Customers in countries like India and China are mainly concerned with preserving what they have acquired through hard work. Insurance policies with a savings mechanism will attract people by offering an accumulation of wealth rather than expenditure. Table 2.5: Comparison of Asian economies on insurance density and insurance penetration Insurance Density (US $) Insurance Penetration (% ) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2002 2003 2004 2783.9 3002.9 3044.0 2956.3 8.64 8.61 8.26 8.32 821.9 873.6 1006.8 1210.6 8.23 6.77 6.75 7.27 India 11.7 12.9 15.7 18.3 2.59 2.26 2.53 2.53 China 19.5 25.1 27.3 30.5 2.03 2.30 2.21 1.78 118.7 139.8 167.3 188.0 2.94 3.29 3.52 3.60 5.2 6.4 7.5 10.5 0.66 0.66 0.63 0.82 925.1 1050.1 1494.6 1699.1 7.35 8.28 11.06 11.17 Pakistan 1.0 1.1 1.5 1.9 0.24 0.24 0.28 0.27 Sri Lanka 4.5 5.3 6.2 6.9 0.55 0.55 0.60 0.62 128.1 140.1 147.2 149.6 5.81 5.74 5.58 5.16 Japan South Korea Malaysia Indonesia Taiwan Asia 2005 Source: IRDA Annual Reports 41 2.16 JAPAN – LIFE INSURANCE MARKET Japan continues to suffer from sluggish economic growth and as a result Japanese life insurance companies are being forced to take various initiatives (Ryotaro 2004). As of the end of March 2001, statistics measuring the scale of the life insurance market in Japan, including postal life and Japanese Agricultural Mutual Society’s business, are as follow: 1. Life insurance in force is around 378 million policies and amounts to ¥2,298 trillion (roughly US$17.7 trillion) 2. Annual premium income amounts to ¥47.6 trillion (more than US$366 billion) 3. Total assets exceed ¥350 trillion (which is around US$2.7 trillion) According to Ryotaro (2004), Japan accounts for about 26% of the world’s total life insurance premium income and as such ranks among the top tier of countries with major life insurance markets. Annual life insurance premium income per capita is No.1 in the world. As measured by the above, the diffusion of life insurance in Japan is pretty high as measured on a global basis, although the life insurance industry currently operates in a very severe economic and business environment. The first challenge facing the life insurance industry is demographic change. According to the estimates by the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, Japan, the Japanese population should have reached a peak by 2006 before it begins to decline. In 2015, 26 % of Japanese will be 65 years old or over. The aging of society and the drop in the birth rate are progressing rapidly. Demographic change such as this will of course affect the population’s ultimate demand for life insurance, but it is important to also understand that this trend will change the kind of products needed as well. In the past, protection products featuring large amounts of coverage accounted for a large percentage of total products sold. However, the rapidly changing demographics have recently been encouraging demand for medical and nursing care products as well 42 as retirement related products. A sustained high growth rate in annuity related products can be observed as against negative or single digit growth in life premiums. (Table 2.6). Table 2.6: Life insurance business in Japan Fiscal year 2002 2003 2004 Life companies' premium (JPY bn) 25,434 25,911 26,957 Life premium growth (%) -2.5 1.9 4 Life companies' individual annuity 3,021 4,638 6,293 premium (JPY bn) Annuity Premium growth (%) 41.5 53.5 35.7 Individual annuity market share within 11.9 17.9 23.3 life companies (%) Life companies' share of the insurance 73.9 74.6 75.4 market (%) Source: www.limra.com 2005 28,284 4.9 7,585 20.5 26.8 77.4 The second challenge facing the industry is the severe economic environment. The Japanese economy is still struggling to fully recover from the recession that began following the bursting of what is called as the “bubble economy”. The recession is keeping household budgets under pressure, and as a result, private life insurance companies’ new business and business in force in the individual sector declined for 5 consecutive years from 1997 to 2001. Additionally, years of historically low interest rates have generated a negative yield gap between the assumed interest rate on older policies and actual investment return. Because of this, life insurance companies, particularly those that are longer established, are suffering from this spread. Due to the adverse nature of the economic environment, 7 Japanese life insurers have unfortunately failed since 1997 and not only many of those failed, but also now a few other Japanese life offices were bought by the foreign companies. The involvement of Kampo (the Postal Life insurance system) and the co-operative movement (especially the many small unregistered and unregulated co-operatives - Kyosai) in life and annuity business has significantly reduced the market that has been available to the traditional insurance 43 companies. The life premium income of Kampo and the regulated co-operatives combined is approximately 90% of the individual business of the traditional private life companies. 2.16.1 DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS IN JAPAN In Japan, since the end of the World War II, life insurers have used female sales agents as their main sales channel as a part of the revitalization process of life insurance business and these female sales agents showed vigorous power under the debit system which was extensively introduced in late 1940’s according to (Ryotaro, 2004). Currently some Japanese life insurance companies, including many of the foreign-based life companies are heavily relying on male sales agents. The position of the sales agents as the main channel is expected to remain. However, sales through independent agencies and banks, as well as mass marketing such as direct mailing and sales through Internet will play a more important role than ever. Furthermore, the cross selling of life and nonlife insurance products and cross selling of life and banking or securities products should gradually increase in the market. Meanwhile, due to the increase in the variety and flexibility of insurance products, career sales agents, the main channel of life insurance sales, are currently being required to learn more advanced techniques so as to improve their sales abilities as consultants. As a result, to improve sales and after service, sales agents’ usage of notebook computers with advanced software is increasing. 44 2.17 KOREA LIFE INSURANCE MARKET The Asian economic crisis, which reached Korea in late 1997, provided the landscape for restructuring that allowed some Korean companies to excel while forcing others to close down (Hong, 2004). Strong growth in exports, due in part to the depreciation of the Korean currency, resulted in a remarkable recovery in the Korean economy. The government has accumulated significant foreign currency reserves and paid off International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout loans in advance according to Milliman Global Insurance report of September 2001. As stated earlier, the Asian economic crisis gave the impetus for restructuring the Korean life insurance industry. In 1995, there were 33 Korean life insurance companies and there were 23 in 1999, with the prospect of fewer companies by the end of 2001. The following table 2.7 gives the details of the life insurance premium income of the Korean market. From the table it can also be observed that female agents dominate the distribution of life insurance products. Table 2.7: Life insurance premium and number of agents in Korea Fiscal year Life company premium Number of solicitors (KRW bn ) (Agents) % of female solicitors 2005 61,472.20 123,702 83.7 2004 53,750.60 136,947 84.7 2003 50,392.50 143,498 86.7 2002 49,066.70 151,064 88.2 2001 47,364.30 171,505 91 2000 51,791.40 214,793 - 1999 46,757.60 241,429 - Source.www.limra.com Milliman Global Report of March 2004 states that about one-third of Korean domestic life insurers declared bankruptcy due to the financial crisis, which swept major part of Asia, in 1997. While some were successfully merged into or acquired by other 45 insurers, some were eventually merged into a life insurer under the custody of the government. Any joint venture partnerships between failed local companies and foreign insurers were dissolved. They are now under a single ownership or management. Korea also saw the entry of multinational insurance companies entering the country by either buying out the troubled local life insurance company or setting up their own subsidiaries. There are currently 23 life insurance companies, of which 10 are multinational life insurance companies with a recorded business (Face Amount) as of September 2003 amounting to 139,905 billions of Won (Korean currency). It is worth noticing the strengthened position of the foreign insurers in the market. They will play an important role in future market development, becoming market makers rather than market followers, by introducing advanced and innovative products to the market. 2.17.1 MARKET TRENDS Most Korean life insurers have shifted their leading life products from savings type to protection-type products, as demonstrated in Table 2.8. Table 2.8: Shifts in new business products in Korea Face Amount (in %) New Business Premium Income (in %) Existing Business New Business Year Savings Protection Savings Protection Savings Protection 1999 30 70 35 65 73 27 2000 34 66 32 68 29 71 2001 14 86 25 75 55 45 2002 15 85 22 78 49 51 2003(2Q) 12 88 20 80 46 54 Source: Hong, 2004 Among the protection-type products, a significant increase in sales is due to whole life policies. The proven success of whole life policies by foreign insurers has 46 motivated domestic insurers to sell the policies through their female tied-agency forces and newly established professional sales forces. 2.17.2 ALTERNATIVE DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS Table 2.9: Life insurance companies and alternate channels of distribution in Korea DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL LEADING INSURANCE COMPANIES Independent Brokerage Kyobo, PCA Independent financial adviser Samsung Direct marketing AIG Telemarketing LINA, AIG, Shinhan, MetLife Cyber marketing All companies for lead Worksite/affinity marketing Samsung, Kyobo Bancassurance AIG, ING, Tongyang, Shinhan, Samsung, PCA Source: Hong, 2004 While the tied agency system, from female solicitors to professional sales force, is well established in the market, insurance companies have made a limited commitment to developing alternative distribution channels. Currently, available distribution channels and channels in development along with the names of the insurance companies focusing on the channels are listed in table 2.9. According to market observers of Korean life insurance industry, only a few companies are actively developing new channels. Most small to medium sized domestic companies are currently focusing on developing professional sales forces rather than developing alternative distribution channels. 47 2.18 TAIWAN The Taiwan life insurance market has experienced tremendous growth since the market was opened in 1987 (Sun, et al 2004). As would be expected, the foreign companies and other new entrants have grown at a more rapid pace than the general market. Foreign companies reported large statutory losses in 1999 mainly due to their high growth, the conservative accounting on certain items in Taiwan and the low interest rate environment, although each particular company’s situation may be different. Current issues facing the industry are lower interest rates (and therefore lower spreads), expansion to Mainland China, appointed actuary regulations and risk based capital rules. 2.18.1 Growth Potential Since the Taiwan government opened the market in 1987, the Taiwan life insurance industry has seen significant growth, whether measured in terms of total assets, total premiums or new business premiums. Historically, for cultural reasons, life insurance had been a taboo subject with the Taiwanese. However, Table 2.10 shows the growing acceptance of the life insurance concept over the period 1986 – 1999. This table (2.10) shows the ratio of the number of life insurance policies in force to the total population. The Taiwanese population is now very receptive to the idea of buying life insurance as a result of the life insurance industry’s relentless education and promotion. Total premium in Taiwan stands at US $ 41.26 billion during 2006. (Table 2.11) Table 2.10: Ratio of number of in-force policies to total population in Taiwan Year 1986 1991 1995 1999 % ratio of number of policies to population 16 36 62 99 Source: Sun and Affleck (2004) 48 Table 2.11: Life insurance premium in Taiwan Year Premium Income (US $ billions) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 20.71 27.46 33.2 38.79 41.26 Source: www.limra.com Table 2.12: Growth in life insurance industry assets and premiums in Taiwan Annualised Growth Rates (in Values in NT$ billions Percentage) 1986 1991 1995 1999 1986-96 1991-93 1995-99 Assets 141 520 1127 2171 30 21 18 Total Premiums 62 168 310 558 22 16 16 New Premiums 21 47 77 128 17 13 14 Source: Sun and Affleck (2004) In spite of this rapid recent growth (Table 2.12), steady premium growth of 10 percent to 15 percent per annum is expected to continue. Three factors, which will fuel future growth of life insurance market in Taiwan, are economic growth, life insurance products and insurance density. First, the overall Taiwan economy has been growing at 6-8% in recent years. Second, the products in the Taiwan life market are heavily concentrated on savings type products. As the economy grows, the Taiwanese population will have more disposable income to be invested in life insurance products. Thirdly, the ratio of life insurance premium to total GDP was about 6.7% in Taiwan in 1999. Compared with the 9 to11% in Korea and Japan, it is believed that there is still room for further penetration because both the general culture and life insurance practice in Taiwan are very similar to those in Korea and Japan. 49 2.19 CHINA The Chinese government has agreed to open up the insurance market gradually upon accession to the WTO, which was formally approved on 11 December 2001. There will be no fixed quota on insurance licenses. Foreign life insurers are currently technically permitted to provide services in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Dalian, Shenzhen and Foshan. Within 2 years, foreign life insurance companies were permitted to expand to Beijing, Chengdu, Chongqing, Fuzhou, Fuzhou, Xiamen, Ningbo, Shenyang, Wuhan and Tianjin. All geographical restrictions require to be lifted on foreign-invested life insurers over a period of time. In fact, in 2002 Sun Life Everbright and AIA commenced business in Tianjin and Beijing respectively, which demonstrates some flexibility to negotiate on a case-by-case basis. 2.19.1 MARKET POTENTIAL Table 2.13: Life insurance premium income in China Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 Premium Income (US $ billions) Growth Rate (%) 15.67 2005 25.14 32.76 34.37 39.6 60 30 5 15 Source: www.limra.com The China life insurance industry achieved tremendous growth over the past decade, with a cumulative annual growth rate (CAGR) over 23% since 1997 (Paul et al 2002). Total insurance premiums are projected to grow at 12% per annum for the next five years, and life insurance premium growth is expected to be in the range 15% - 20% per annum in this period. In 2005, the total life insurance premium income was over US$ 39.6 billion (Table 2.13) and despite the impressive growth rates, by international standards, the Chinese insurance market remains relatively under-developed and hence still represents a great potential opportunity. In terms of insurance density, measured by 50 insurance premiums as a percentage of GDP, the ratio for China is only 1.8% compared to around 6% in Taiwan, 9% in Japan and 10% in South Korea. Besides the low penetration rate, there are other drivers for this significant growth. The savings rate in China is very high, over 40%, compared to approximately 30% in Japan and less than 20% in the United States. One reason for this phenomenon is the lack of investment vehicles in China. Most people in China keep their money in bank deposits. Even a small portion of the country’s total savings could generate a considerable volume of funds flowing into the life insurance market and with bank deposit rates so low, competition for bank savings is intense. Furthermore, increasing affluence, financial education and awareness of insurance contribute to the continuing growth in life insurance premiums. While life insurance is still a minor part of household assets, bank deposits continue to be the largest component of household savings amounting to almost 64% of household savings according to BCG report of 2004 on China. The percentage of life insurance in the household savings has increased from 2% in the year 1996 to 4% in the year 2002 (Figure 2.9) Figure 2.9: Composition of household savings in China 100% 4 80% 12 28 2 4 4 60% 40% 82 64 20% 0% 1996 Bank deposits Life insurance 2002 Bonds Stocks and Other holdings Source: Boston consulting Group Report 2004 51 China has started the process of licensing life insurance companies for every province. It means that if a life insurance company is licensed for a province, it is permitted to do business only in the territory for which license has been accorded. Life insurance companies looked at provinces providing opportunities for growth. Shanghai and Guangzhou are currently the two most competitive cities for foreign-invested companies. As and when other cities open, foreign insurers entering China need to select the location of their new ventures carefully based on economic and industry specific factors as well as company specific business strategies. It is clear from Table 2.14 that Shanghai is still the first choice city for foreign entrants, although Manulife, ING, and AXA will soon open their 2nd branches in Guangzhou, which will reinforce it as the number two city for foreign life insurers. . Table 2.14: Foreign joint venture life insurance companies in China Foreign Insurer Year of set up Chinese Partner Industry Sector Location Manulife 1996 Sino-chem Import/Export trade Shanghai Allianz 1998 Dazhong Non-Life Insurance Shanghai ING Aetna 1998 China Pacific AXA 1999 Minmetal CMG 2000 China Life Life Insurance Shanghai Prudential UK 2000 CITIC Financial Guangzhou John Hancock 2001 Tian an Sun Life 2002 Everbright Financial Tianjin Generali 2002 China National Petroleum Energy Guangzhou CGNU N/A COFCO New York Life N/A Haier Manufacturer Shanghai ING N/A Beijing Capital Group Financial Dalian N/A CNOOC Energy Shanghai Aegon Life Insurance Shanghai Import/Export Trade Shanghai Non-Life Insurance Shanghai Import/Export Trade Guangzhou Source: Paul, 2002, Note: N/A –Not available 52 It can be observed in Table 2.15 that even for the more developed cities in China, there is a significant variation in economic activity and the level of insurance competition. Most companies are expected to adopt a geographic roll-out strategy starting in the more developed cities with higher wealth levels before expanding into less developed areas. However, Table 2.15 shows that despite the lack of foreign participation in life insurance industry, Beijing stands at second place in terms of premium income during 2001. Table 2.15: Number of registration of life insurance companies in major Chinese cities -2001 Number of Life City/Province GDP Premium Income Insurers Shanghai 60 12 1.7 Beijing 34 5 1.2 Guangzhou 32 7 0.7 Shenzhen 24 4 0.3 Tianjin 22 5 0.3 Source: Paul, 2002 2.19.2 DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS Tied agency remains the dominant distribution channel for individual life insurance business in China (Paul et al 2002). Several new entrants in Shanghai have experienced problems in developing a successful agency force due to high turnover and poaching of agents and the lack of well-trained, quality agents in the marketplace. Since 2000 bancassurance channel has emerged involving exclusive distribution agreements between insurers and individual bank branches. Each branch of a particular bank is free to tie up with a different insurance company. Nevertheless, this resulted in significant sales growth in 2001, and for some companies bancassurance business comprises more than 10% of their total premiums. This channel is likely to grow further, particularly 53 as new entrants such as Taiping Life aggressively expand and the market share of agency business can be expected to decline in time as other channels including broker/ independent financial advisors (IFA) emerge. 2.20 EUROPEAN MARKET Europe is the leading market in the world for life insurance, with market share accounting for 40% of global business. With a total premium income of € 616bn and a growth rate of 9.5% in 2005, life insurance remains by far the most important insurance line of business in terms of turnover in Europe. More importantly the distribution of these new premiums continues to show a predominance of financial institutions (Bancassurance, saving banks, post offices) as major distribution channels in many European countries (CEA Report 2007). This growth rate of 9.5% in 2005 is the highest level recorded within the last five years but is still below the exceptional rate observed for the year 2000 at 16.9%. This new increase in premium income after the negative market shock experienced in 2001, confirms the recovery of the insurance sector from this financial crisis, demonstrates the popularity of life insurance products in the opinion of consumers and proves the ability of insurers to develop products conforming to the needs of policyholders. The recent evolution of the life insurance market is characterised by an increase in the share of unitlink products from 22.2% to 24.2%, which is largely explained by the strong growth of the stock market observed during the three last years. 54 2.20.1 Life insurance in Europe The European life insurance market is dominated by the four main countries (United Kingdom, France, Germany and Italy) which taken together represent 72% of the European market. (Figure 2.10) The United Kingdom is the leading country with a market share of 27.4% in 2005 and this market share level has shown a decrease of 10 points compared to the highest level observed in 2000. This leading position is closely linked to the UK’s market size and to the pension scheme, which relies much more on the private insurance sector than in most other countries (CEA Report, 2007) Just behind the UK, France has consolidated its second place with a rise of 0.5 points to reach 19.8%. The growing share of the French market since 2000 reflects the strong growth rate recorded in recent years. Stable at 12.1%, Italy takes third position ahead of Germany (11.9%) where the growth and the penetration are below the European average. All other markets have a market share below 5% individually. In terms of Insurance density, UK continues to be the leader with 8.9% as against EUs average of 4.69. Insurance density of other EU countries, other than the top 4 countries, is lower than 4. (Table 2.16) Table 2.16: Insurance density and insurance penetration in European market Insurance Density (US $) Insurance Penetration 2002 2003 2004 2005 2002 2003 2004 2005 Europe 620.4 726.9 848.1 911.8 4.83 4.64 4.68 4.69 United Kingdom 2679.4 2617.1 3190.4 3287.1 10.19 8.62 8.92 8.9 France 1349.5 1767.9 2150.2 2474.6 5.61 6.81 6.89 7.33 German 736.7 930.4 1021.3 1042.1 3.06 3.17 5.15 5.19 Italy 904.9 1238.3 1417.2 1449.8 4.39 4.82 4.86 4.86 Source: IRDA reports 55 Figure 2.10: European markets – Share of total life premium Source: CEA Report 2007 2.20.2 DISTRIBUTION Figure 2.11: Channelwise distribution of life insurance in Europe Source: CEA Report 2007 56 According to a sample of 10 countries, financial institutions (including banks, post offices and savings banks) form the leading channel in the distribution of new individual premiums (CEA Report 2007). The market share of this channel is above 50% in more than half of the countries and even exceeds 80% in Portugal and Italy. On the supply side, this dominance of the financial institutions is related to the willingness of banks to offer a larger range of saving products, to increase their assets under management and to diversify their income sources. This trend over the last decade has given birth to large financial conglomerates offering insurance as well as bank products. On the consumer side, the reflex leading them to consult the bank in relation to investing or saving money is very strong. The difference between insurance and bank products is therefore not always obvious to the consumer. Moreover, the wide variety of saving products offered by financial institutions and the central location of all financial services can be seen as an advantage and partly explains the success of this channel. On the other markets, brokers or agents dominate the distribution of new individual contracts with market shares amounting to up to 70% for brokers in United Kingdom or up to 75% for agents in Slovakia. Employees do not constitute the main selling channel on any market but continue to be an important channel in countries like Estonia (39%) or Belgium (22%). Direct selling which has long been seen as a potential threat to traditional channels has not greatly changed consumer habits except slightly in the Netherlands where this channel grew to 14%. 57 2.21 LIFE INSURANCE IN AMERICA Most of the American families depend on life insurance to provide economic protection for self and their dependents. According to the Federal Reserve’s analysis of its Survey of Consumer Finances, sixty-nine percent owned some type of life insurance in 2001. Americans purchased $3.0 trillion of new life insurance coverage in 2005, 4 percent more than in 2004. By the end of 2005, total life insurance coverage in the United States reached $18.4 trillion, an increase of 5 percent from 2004. Three types of life insurance policies are predominant in the market. Individual insurance is underwritten separately for each individual who seeks insurance protection. Group insurance is underwritten on a group as a whole, such as the employees of a company or the members of an organization. Credit insurance guarantees payment of some debt, such as a mortgage or other loan, in the event the insured person dies, and can be bought on either an individual or a group basis. (ACLI, 2005) Table 2.17: Insurance density and insurance penetration in American market Insurance Density (US $) North America United States Canada Insurance Penetration (%) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2002 2003 2004 2005 1563.8 1565.7 1617.2 1686.3 4.48 4.25 4.12 4.05 1662.6 1657.5 1692.5 1753.2 4.60 4.38 4.22 4.14 657.3 722.9 926.1 1071.9 2.81 2.63 2.97 3.05 Source: Facts & Statistics of life insurance, Insurance Information Institute USA, 2006 2.21.1 INDIVIDUAL LIFE INSURANCE Individual life policies offered in the American market are of two basic types, which are in the nature of protection cover for a specified term and permanent cover on one’s whole life. Insurance density for USA stands at US $ 1753.2 and insurance penetration is at 4.14% in the year 2005. (Table 2.17) Individual life is the most widely used form of life insurance protection and accounts for about 54 percent of all life 58 insurance in force in the United States at year-end 2005. Total individual life insurance protection in the United States totaled $10 trillion at the end of 2005 and has grown at an average annual rate of 6 percent since 1995, when $6.4 trillion was in force. (Table 2.18) The size of newly purchased individual life policies also grew in 2005. During the same period the average, new individual life policy increased 14 percent to $158,000 while the number of individual policies purchased fell 1 percent. Table 2.18: Individual life insurance business in United States of America New Business 1995 Face amount ($ Millions) No of policies (in thousands) Total Inforce Face amount ($ Millions) No of policies (in thousands) 2005 1057233 1796384 13835 11407 1995 2005 6448758 9969899 169000 166118 Source: Facts & Statistics of life insurance, Insurance Information Institute USA, 2006 Most life insurers are organized as either stock or mutual companies. Stock life insurance companies issue stock and are owned by their stockholders (ACLI, 2005). Mutual companies are legally owned by their policyholders and consequently do not issue stock. At the end of 2005, 1,119 life insurance companies were in business in the United States. (Table 2.19) The number of active companies has fallen steadily since peaking in 1988, mostly due to mergers and consolidations. This streamlining helped to reduce operating costs and general overhead significantly. Since 1990 the number of agents and brokers in the life insurance industry in United States has got stabilized (Table 2.20) Besides consolidation, another recent trend in the life insurance industry is demutualization and the formation of mutual holding companies—a structure that allows easier and less expensive access to capital. 59 Table 2.19: Nature and number of life insurance companies in USA Nature of life insurance 2004 2005 companies Stock 903 864 Mutual 139 135 Fraternal* 108 102 Other 29 18 Total 1179 1119 *Fraternal refers to companies owned by fraternal benefit societies Source: Facts & Statistics of life insurance, Insurance Information Institute USA, 2006 2.21.2 DISTRIBUTION CHANNELS Table 2.20: Number of agents, brokers in United States of America Year 1980 1990 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Agents & Brokers ( in ‘000s) 1687.9 2125.5 2220.5 2233.7 2233.2 2266 2258.7 2255.4 Source: Facts & Statistics of life insurance, Insurance Information Institute USA, 2006 Life insurance was once sold primarily by career life agents, captive agents who represent a single insurance company and by independent agents who represent several insurers (III.org, 2006). Table 2.20 gives the details of Agents & Brokers employed by the life Insurance Industry in the United States. Currently life insurance company products are also sold by direct mail, telephone, and the Internet, directly to the public. In addition, in the 1980s, insurers began to market annuities and term life insurance through banks and financial advisors, professional organizations and workplaces. Large portions of variable annuities, which are based on stock market performance, and a small portion of fixed annuities, are sold by stockbrokers. Figure 2.12 gives the details of the percentage contribution of each of the channels of distribution in the US market. It can be observed individual agents (Career agents, 60 Independent agents) dominate the distribution and bancassurance is yet to develop into a significant channel for distribution of life insurance products. Figure 2.12: Channelwise distribution of life insurance in United States of America (2001) 32% 43% 22% 1% 2% Career agents Direct response Independent Agent Financial Institutions Personal Producing General Agents Source: Facts & Statistics of life insurance, Insurance Information Institute USA, 2006 2.22 LIFE INSURANCE IN BRAZIL Table 2.21: New premium income in Brazil Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 New Premium (US $ millions) 2385 3921 5580 7557 10565 Source: www.limra.com, Life insurance represents a relatively small proportion of total insurance activity in Brazil (18%) compared to developed countries such as the USA (30%) and Japan (40%) (Interfund Research, 2004). This proportion has grown from 12% in 1993. Premiums per capita were $12 in Brazil in 1999, compared to $450 in the USA and this comparison of life insurance premiums per capita shows the underdevelopment of the life insurance 61 sector in Brazil. Similarly, as a percentage of the country’s economy, life insurance in Brazil represented only 0.4% of GDP in 1999, compared to 1.5% in the US. (Interfund Research, 2001). New life insurance premium during 2006 was at US $ 10,565 millions (Table2.21) and it has been growing consistently. Distribution of life insurance tends to be predominantly through brokers, although the sale of life insurance through banks is also increasing. The top ten players in the sector are responsible for 58% of total life insurance sales. The main catalysts for growth have been the fall in inflation since 1994, and the deregulation of the industry. With the fall in inflation, financial products have become much more attractive, as the preoccupation with inflation has also declined. Added to this, a wider distribution of income and a previously low insurance penetration among the Brazilian population has led to growth. The Brazilian life sector is dominated by term (temporarily) life insurance, the majority of which is sold through group life policies, usually to cover employees of businesses. However, in 1998 long-term life insurance policies, including endowment policies and some whole life policies began to appear in the market. Life insurance industry shows potential for continued growth, mainly because of its very low penetration within the Brazilian market place, and the very high latent demand for savings products. 2.22.1 DISTRIBUTION IN BRAZIL Brokers remain the main distribution channels for insurance in Brazil, accounting for some 70% of sales. The remaining 30% of sales are accounted for by the sale of insurance through bank branches (25%), and through direct marketing methods (5%). The involvement of brokers in a direct or indirect form is mandatory in Brazil. The figure 62 of an 'agent' (a salesman working purely on behalf of the insurance company) does not formally exist, although brokers often have an ambiguous role - officially earning their income independently from customers, but concentrating on (and supported by) just one or two insurance companies. . There is also scope for a more effective use of customer profiling and targeting, to make direct marketing a more effective means of distributing personal insurance. Insurers are experimenting with new methods of distribution, particularly in their attempts to reach a wider market place (for example, among middle and lower income customers who have not bought insurance in the past). Firms are keenly exploring both broker and non-broker distribution channels. Insurers are selling products through banks, supermarkets, gas stations, motor accessory shops and subway stations. They are also looking at the use of affinity groups, direct marketing, and alliances with firms such as credit card operators, and are beginning to explore the use of the Internet as an interface for both the client and suppliers such as brokers. Globally countries, which are in different stages of economic development, have varying insurance density and insurance penetration levels. Each country has evolved their principal distribution channel for life products. A summary of insurance climate for select economies has been captured in Table 2.22. 63 Source: www.limra.com 64 247.9 Developed Economy United Kingdom Korea 416.5 60 Developing Economy India Developed Economy 18.8 Emerging Economy France Unite d States of America 176.2 Developed Economy China 256.6 39.6 Emerging Economy Brazil Developed Economy 12.5 Emerging Economy Country Japan Market size (US $ Billion) Status of economic development 3931.73 1817.23 2614.56 1255.22 18.3 3164 34 56.56 Insurance Density ($) 9.97 4.35 7.35 7.62 2.53 8.63 1.95 0.99 Insurance Penetration (%) Table 2.22: Life insurance market - Global perspective IFAs / Brokers Career Life Agents Agency Tied AgencyWomen Tied Agency Financial Institutions (Bancassurance) Agency Broker Dominant distribution Channel REFERENCES: 1 ACLI, American council of Life Insurers, 2 Annual Reports of IRDA 3 BCG, “Building Professionalism -The next step for life insurance in China”, Boston Consulting Group, 2003. 4 Beck, Thorsten and Webb, Iann 2002, “Economic, Demographic and institutional determinants of Life Insurance Consumption across countries”, World bank and International Insurance foundation, 2002 5 Bodla, B.S, Garg and Singh, “Insurance Fundamentals, environment and procedures”, Deep and Deep publication, 2003. 6 CEA, “The European Life Insurance Market in 2005”, European insurance and reinsurance federation, 2007. www.cea.assur.org. 7 Chu, Julia F, “The Makings of Imminent Insurance Markets in Asia”, Milliman USA, April 2001. 8 Dickinson, Gerry, “Encouraging a dynamic life insurance industry: Economic benefits and policy issues”, Center for insurance & investment studies, London, 2000. www.oecd.org. 9 Headey, Paul, Law, John and Zhang Caro, “China life insurance market: opportunities for foreign entrants”’ Milliman Global, 2002. 10 Hong An, Chi, “Opportunities and challenges in the Korean insurance market” Milliman Global, March 2004. 11 ICFAI, “Life Insurance Volume I & II”, The ICFAI University Press, 2002. 12 ICRA, “The Indian insurance industry- A report” May 2003 13 III, “Facts & Statistics of life insurance”, Insurance Information Institute USA, www.III.org. 14 III, “Risk Management”, Insurance Institute of India, 1997. 15 Inter fund- research, www. 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Mary J, “Risk Management - Life Insurance”, 2000. 25 Sun, Hua (Peter) and Affleck Allan, “Report on the Taiwan Life Insurance Market” Woodrow Milliman Asia, 2004. 26 Swiss Re – Sigma No 5/2006 27 Vaughan, Emmett J & Vaughan Therese, “Fundamentals of Risk and Insurance”, 9th edition, Wiley publication, 2003. 66