Paper
Making Public-Private Partnerships Work in Insurance
Designing efficient public-private partnerships in the insurance sector
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35 pages
This paper aims to help governments and private participants establish successful public-private partnerships (PPPs) in the insurance sector. An insurance PPP is a contractual agreement between the public sector, represented by a ministry or local authority through a government program, and the private sector, which includes the insurance industry and its service providers and distribution partners. These agreements seek to combine business objectives with public policy goals in a cost-efficient and effective way. Based on four case studies from Colombia, India, Mexico, and Peru, the paper provides ten recommendations for establishing successful PPPs in the insurance sector. Recommendations include:
- Combine a strategic approach with flexibility;
- Define your target beneficiaries clearly;
- There is need for a solid regulatory and legal framework;
- Use insurers as an ally to achieve public policy objectives;
- Allocate roles clearly between the public and private sectors;
- Take account of the capacity-building needs of the different levels of the public sector;
- Build private sector's capacity around best practices, product innovations, pricing, reinsurance, distribution, and technology;
- Endeavour to improve the value of products to be offered through PPPs;
- Include monitoring and evaluation systems with clear indicators;
- Take a knowledge-management approach by documenting lessons, and measuring and sharing results.
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