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Chapter 3.3: Insurance companies’ accounts to national accounts (1/2)

Chapter 3.3: Insurance companies’ accounts to national accounts (1/2). EN/ADM/2014/Pres/11. Ramesh KOLLI Senior Advisor on National Accounts, African Centre for Statistics At Expert Group Meeting on Use of Administrative Data in National Accounts

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Chapter 3.3: Insurance companies’ accounts to national accounts (1/2)

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  1. Chapter 3.3: Insurance companies’ accounts to national accounts (1/2) EN/ADM/2014/Pres/11 Ramesh KOLLI Senior Advisor on National Accounts, African Centre for Statistics At Expert Group Meeting on Use of Administrative Data in National Accounts 23-27 June 2014, Umubano Hotel, Kigali, Rwanda

  2. Outline of the presentation • Introduction • Concepts and definitions • Terms peculiar to insurance • Sources of data • Structure of insurance company accounts • Few conceptual issues specific to insurance • Bridge tables

  3. Introduction (1/2) • Insurance schemes provide individual institutional units with financial protection against the consequences of the occurrence of specified events. • This financial protection is through an insurance policy, which is an agreement between an insurance corporation and another institutional unit, called policyholder. • Under the agreement, policyholder makes a payment (a premium) to insurance corporation and, if or when the specified event occurs, insurance corporation makes a payment (claim/benefit) to policyholder. • In this way, policyholder protects itself against certain forms of risk. On the other hand, by pooling the risks of the policy holders, the insurance corporation aims to receive more from the receipt of premiums than it has to pay out as claims. • In addition, insurers often act as financial intermediaries who invest funds collected from policyholders in financial or other assets to meet future claims.

  4. Introduction (2/2) • There are two types of insurance, namely, direct insurance and reinsurance. • Direct insurance is the most common form of insurance, in which a policy is issued by an insurance corporation to another institutional unit. Life and non-life insurance fall under this. • The other type of insurance called reinsurance in which insurance is provided by one insurance corporation to another insurance corporation.   • The institutional units involved in direct insurance and reinsurance are pre-eminently insurance corporations. Though it is possible for other enterprises to carry out insurance as a non-principal activity, but the legal regulations on insurance stipulate keeping a separate set of accounts for insurance. This leads to identifying a separate institutional unit in the SNA, classified to the insurance corporations. • In Africa, about two-thirds of countries have the necessary information for life insurance and three-quarters for non-life insurance. On the other hand, eight countries have no data available for life insurance and four countries have no data available for non-life insurance.

  5. Concepts and definitions (1/5) • Insurance corporations consist of incorporated, mutual and other entities whose principal function is to provide life, accident, sickness, fire or other forms of insurance to individual institutional units or groups of units or reinsurance services to other insurance corporations. Captive insurance is included, that is, an insurance company that serves only its owners. Deposit insurers, issuers of deposit guarantees and other issuers of standardized guarantees that are separate entities and act like insurers by charging premiums and have reserves, are classified as insurance corporations.

  6. Concepts and definitions (2/5) Life insurance • Life insurance is an activity whereby a policyholder makes regular payments to an insurer in return for which the insurer guarantees to provide the policyholder (or in some cases another nominated person) with an agreed sum, or an annuity, at a given date or earlier if the policyholder dies beforehand. • There is little conditionality involved in life insurance. Although the date and sum may be variable, a claim is always paid in respect of a life policy.. • The sum payable under the policy (known as benefit) may be fixed or may vary to reflect the income earned from the investment of premiums during the period for which the policy operates. • For policies with varying returns, the terms “with-profits” life insurance or endowment policy are generally used. • Essentially, life insurance premiums and benefits are financial transactions and not current transactions, as it mainly redistributes premiums paid over a period of time as benefits paid later to the same policyholder.

  7. Concepts and definitions (3/5) Non-life insurance • Non-life insurance is an activity similar to life insurance except that the it covers all other risks, accidents, sickness, fire, etc. • Non-life insurance provides cover to the policyholder against loss or damage suffered as a result of an accident. • A premium is paid to the insurance corporation and a claim is paid to the policyholder only if the event insured against occurs. • There is no uncertainty regarding the payments, as the maximum amount to be paid is specified in the policy. • Term insurance, which provides a benefit in the case of death within a given period but in no other circumstances, is regarded as non-life insurance because a claim is payable only if a specified contingency occurs and not otherwise. In practice, because of the way in which insurance corporations keep their accounts, it may not always be possible to separate term insurance from other life insurance. Therefore, term insurance may have to be treated in the same way as life insurance for purely practical reasons.

  8. Concepts and definitions (4/5) Commonalities and differences between life and non-life insurance • Both forms of insurance involve spreading risk. Insurers receive small regular payments of premiums from policyholders and pay much larger sums to claimants when contingencies covered by the policy occur. • In both life and non-life insurance, during the interval between the receipt of premiums and the payment of claims/benefits, the insurance corporation earns income from investing the premiums received. This income also affects the levels of premiums. • For non-life insurance, the risks are spread over the whole population that takes out the insurance policies. For an individual non-life policyholder, there is no relationship between the premiums paid and the claims received, even in the long run, but the insurance corporation establishes such a relationship for every class of non-life insurance on an yearly basis. • For life insurance, a relationship between premiums and claims over time is important both to the policyholders and to the insurance corporation. For someone taking out a life policy, the benefits to be received are expected to be at least as great as the premiums paid up until the benefit is due; and can be seen as a form of saving. The insurance corporation must combine this aspect of a single policy with the actuarial calculations about the insured population concerning life expectancy when determining the relationship between the levels of premiums and benefits.

  9. Concepts and definitions (5/5) • Non-life insurance policy holders may belong to all sectors of the economy whereas life insurance policy holders are individuals. Even when enterprises take life insurance cover, these always relate to their employees, who fall under the category of individuals. • Life insurance includes a large saving component, whereas the objective of non-life insurance is largely to pool risk. • The significant differences between life and non-life insurance lead to different types of entries in the accounts of the SNA. • Non-life insurance consists of redistribution in the current period between all policyholders and a few claimants. Life insurance mainly redistributes premiums paid over a period of time as benefits paid later to the same policyholder. • Net premiums and claims/benefits are treated as current transfers in non-life insurance and as financial transactions recorded under insurance technical reserves in life insurance.

  10. Terms peculiar to insurance industry (1/6)

  11. Terms peculiar to insurance industry (2/6)

  12. Terms peculiar to insurance industry (3/6)

  13. Terms peculiar to insurance industry (4/6)

  14. Terms peculiar to insurance industry (5/6)

  15. Terms peculiar to insurance industry (6/6)

  16. Sources of data • The financial statements of insurance companies provide the basic information for compiling national accounts for the financial corporations in respect of insurance companies. • In most countries, it is mandatory for the insurance companies to submit annual financial statements to the insurance regulatory agencies. • These regulatory agencies maintain individual insurance companies’ accounts as also the consolidated financial statements of all insurance companies in the country. • The national accountants should access these individual or consolidated financial accounts of both life and non-life insurance companies and those of reinsurers, for use in the compilation of national accounts. If such information is not available, the compiling agency may need to conduct surveys to collect the necessary information

  17. Structure of accounts • The structure of financial statements of insurance companies are regulated by international standards, such as IAS 1. These statements contain information on assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses (including gains and losses), contributions by and distributions to owners and cash flows. • The financial statements of insurance companies provide details on gross and net premium contributions, premiums earned, commissions received and paid, gross and net claims/benefits paid, movement in reserves, increase in insurance fund, investment income, other income, commission paid, interest expenses, establishment and other expenses, provisions and allowances, taxes and profits. • These details available in the financial statements of insurance companies provide required information to compile national accounts.

  18. Continued in next PPT Ramesh KOLLI Senior Advisor on National Accounts, African Centre for Statistics At Expert Group Meeting on Use of Administrative Data in National Accounts 23-27 June 2014, Umubano Hotel, Kigali, Rwanda

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