Paper
Position Paper on the IRDA "Concept Paper on Need for Developing Micro-Insurance in India"
Discussing the regulation of micro-insurance in India
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16 pages
This paper discusses the regulation of micro-insurance in India. It lists three reasons for the regulation of insurance:
- To keep insurers solvent;
- To establish the rules of this business and the technical standards ensuring compliance;
- To protect the clients from the arbitrary behavior of the insurer.
The paper discusses:
- Micro-insurance units;
- Four distinct types of incorporation:
- The "partner-agent" model;
- The "friendly society" model;
- The "mutual/cooperative" model;
- Provider-driven micro-insurers.
- The market environment for micro-insurers;
- Issues for regulation;
- Specific issues in the draft IRDA that call for comments;
- Healthcare providers.
The paper concludes that:
- Regulation of micro-insurance needs to reconcile the needs of embryonic "insurers" with the tried-and-tested experience of regulating insurance activity;
- Clients must be protected against the risk of the insurer's inability to meet its obligations;
- Micro-insurers operate several models of incorporation;
- It is necessary to create different regulations for the four forms of micro-insurance activity;
- The most appropriate method to determine capital requirements should be risk-based;
- The regulator should retain its reputation as a neutral agent;
- Reinsurance should be considered in providing insurers with technical and financial support.
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