People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 38 September 19, 2004 |
FDI
In The Insurance Sector
(Submitted
by the Left Parties to the UPA)
THE
Finance Minister, while presenting the first Budget of the UPA government, has
proposed to raise the FDI cap in three sectors. Elaborating upon the decision he said, “The NCMP declares
that FDI will continue to be encouraged and actively sought, particularly in
areas of infrastructure, high technology and exports. Three sectors of the
economy fully meet this description. They are telecommunications, civil aviation
and insurance.” The specific proposal for the insurance sector is to raise the
FDI cap from 26 to 49 per cent. We argue below that this move is unjustifiable
on several grounds.
The
Union government had opened up the insurance sector for private participation in
1999, also allowing the private companies to have foreign equity up to 26 per
cent. Following the opening up of the insurance sector, 12 private sector
companies have entered the life insurance business. Apart from the HDFC, which
has foreign equity of 18.6 per cent, all the other private companies have
foreign equity of 26 per cent. In general insurance 8 private companies have
entered, 6 of which have foreign equity of 26 per cent. Among the private
players in general insurance, Reliance and Cholamandalam does not have any
foreign equity. The following table gives an aggregate picture of the current
scenario of the insurance sector in India. (A full list of private companies in
life and non-life insurance is given in the Appendix).
Table
1
Type
of Business |
Nos
of Public Sector Companies |
Nos
of Private Sector Companies |
Total
Companies |
Life
Insurance |
01 |
12 |
13 |
General
Insurance |
06 |
08 |
14 |
Re
insurance |
01 |
0 |
01 |
Total |
08 |
20 |
28 |
Source:
Reserve Bank of India, Handbook of Statistics
According
to the Annual Report of the IRDA, 9 out of the 12 private companies in life
insurance suffered losses in 2002-03. The aggregate loss of the private life
insurers amounted to Rs 386.33 crore in contrast to the Rs 9620 crore surplus
(after tax) earned by the LIC. In general insurance, 4 out of the 8 private
insurers suffered losses in 2002-03, with the Reliance, a company with no
foreign equity, emerging as the most profitable player. In fact the 6 private
players with foreign equity made an aggregate loss of Rs 294 lakhs. On the other
hand the public sector insurers in general insurance made an after tax profits
of Rs 625.70 crore.
Not
only are the public sector insurance companies more profitable than the private
ones, the private insurer which is most profitable (Reliance) is one which has
no foreign equity. If profitability is taken to be an important indicator of
efficiency, it is clear that the case for further hike in the FDI cap in the
insurance sector cannot be made on efficiency grounds.
The
record of some of the foreign companies who have started operating in India is
being questioned abroad. A recent article published in The Economist (May
4, 2004) on ‘AIG’s Accounting Lessons’ (AIG is Tata’s partner in India)
came with the screaming headline which said it all: “The world’s largest
insurance company shows how to polish profits statement”. The Prudential
Financial Services (ICICI’s partner in India) is facing an enquiry by the
securities and insurance regulators in the US based upon allegations of having
falsified documents and forged signatures and asking their clients to sign blank
forms (New York Times, May 31, 2003 and Wall Street Journal, May
31, 2003). This follows a payment of 2.6 billion dollar made by Prudential to
settle a class-action lawsuit attacking abusive life insurance sales practices
in 1997 and a 65 million dollar fine from state insurance regulators in 1996. It
is evident that the questionable activities of these insurance companies are not
deterred by state imposed penalties and litigations.
The
financial health of many of the foreign insurance companies operating in India
is also a cause of serious concern. The Economist (April 1, 2004) reports
the sorry plight of Standard Life of UK (HDFC’s partner in India), which is
unable to remain afloat without the possibility of raising money in debt or
equity markets. AMP closed its life operations for new business in June 2003.
Royal Sun Alliance also shut down their profitable businesses in 2002. A recent
report by Mercer Oliver Wyman, a consultancy, found that European life insurance
companies are short of capital by a whopping 60 billion euros. The reason for
the short fall in capitalization, among other things, is due to European
Unions’ new regulation on solvency called ‘Solvency 2’ that will be
enforced across Europe from 2005 through 2007. According to the Mercer Oliver
Wyman Report the German, Swiss, French and British insurers suffer from severe
capital inadequacy, which is a result of undertaking risky investments in equity
and debt instruments in the past.
Several
issues of Sigma, a reputed Swiss journal on insurance, have reported that
the US and Europe based insurance companies are faced with gloomy growth
prospects in the advanced country markets, with several companies experiencing
negative growth in the recent past. Moreover,
tighter capital adequacy norms and other regulations that are currently being
imposed in the advanced countries are forcing these insurance companies to seek
less regulated markets in developing countries to undertake their high-risk
ventures. Raising the FDI cap in India at this juncture would expose our
financial markets to the dubious and speculative activities of the foreign
insurance companies at a time when the virtues of regulating such activities are
being rediscovered in the advanced countries.
Even
after the liberalisation of the insurance sector, the public sector insurance
companies have continued to dominate the insurance market, enjoying over 90 per
cent of the market share. In fact, the LIC, which is the only public sector life
insurer, enjoys over 98 per cent of the market share in Life insurance.
Table
2
Market
Share of Life and non-Life Insurance Sectors
(As
per cent of total premium underwritten by insurers)
Insurance
Sector |
2001-02 |
2002-03 |
Life
Insurance, Private Sector |
0.54 |
1.99 |
Life
Insurance, Public sector |
99.46 |
98.01 |
General
Insurance, Private Sector |
3.68 |
8.64 |
General
Insurance, Public Sector |
96.32 |
91.36 |
Source:
IRDA Annual Report, 2002-03.
Given
the huge market share enjoyed by the public sector companies, the argument,
which is often made by advocates of greater liberalisation, that the entry of
private players would bring down the cost of insurance due to enhanced
competition, does not seem to be convincing. The price making capacity of the
market leaders in the public sector is likely to remain intact for the time
being. The foreign insurance companies do have the reputation of charging less
premium compared to the risks involved and promising abnormally high returns, in
order to grab greater market share. Such competition, however, although capable
of bringing down the ‘cost’ of insurance for a while, has often led to
gigantic frauds and bankruptcies.
Moreover,
as is the case in other markets, the initial flurry of entries into the Indian
insurance market would invariably be followed by a phase of mergers and
acquisitions that would lead to cartelisation, precluding the possibility of
competition driving down the costs in the medium run. In the long run, other forms of non-price competition like
aggressive advertisement wars are likely to lead to increasing costs, eventually
harming the interests of the consumers. These phenomena in the insurance market
have been observed in several advanced countries. If the public sector companies
start imitating the strategies of the foreign insurance companies in order to
defend their market shares, it would be at the cost of undermining their
important social objectives, which they have been fulfilling so impeccably till
date.
A
major role played by the insurance sector is to mobilise national savings and
channelise them into investments in different sectors of the economy. However,
no significant change seems to have occurred as far as mobilising savings by the
insurance sector is concerned, following the liberalisation of the insurance
sector in 1999. Data from the RBI show that the trend of the savings in life
insurance by the households to GDP ratio, while showing a clear upward trend
through the 1990s signifying increasing business for the insurance sector, does
not show any structural break after 1999. It can be inferred therefore that the
foreign capital which flowed in after the opening up of the insurance sector has
not been accompanied by any technological innovation in the insurance business,
which would have created greater dynamism in savings mobilisation.
Source: Handbook of Statistics, Reserve Bank of
India
Far
from expanding the market for the insurance sector, the business activities of
the private companies are limited in urban areas, where a fairly good market
network of the public sector insurance companies already exists. The glaring
evidence for this is the composition of agents operating in the insurance
sector. According to the IRDA Annual Report the number of insurance
agents in urban and rural India was in 100:76 ratio in the public sector
companies, in 2001-02. For the private insurance companies this ratio was
100:1.4. Due to their urban-biased operational activity, the private insurance
companies can neither increase the insurance base of the economy significantly,
nor lead to substantial employment generation. Given this scenario, further
increase in foreign participation is only going to lead to intensified
competition for the urban insurance markets, rather than leading to a growth in
overall savings.
While
the proposals for hike in FDI were placed, the arguments advanced were that FDI
will continue to be encouraged and actively sought, particularly in areas of
infrastructure, high technology and exports.
No
new technology or product is brought into the country: The issue of foreign
equity is often linked with induction of new technology and products. The
private insurance companies have nothing to offer in this respect. In the
insurance sector, there is no technology needed to be brought in from other
countries, leave alone high technology. The mortality rates and other principles
of insurance are based on the Indian conditions, because the policyholders are
from this country. The products of LIC are being renamed by the private
insurance companies and are sold as their own products. Hence, foreign expertise
is also not involved in this sector.
So
there is no justification even on this count. It was also argued that
competition will expand market and the foreign insurers will bring better
products. This has simply not happened. The size of the market has remained by
and large the same and from this market the private companies are picking up the
creamy sections in the metros seriously eroding the ability of public sector to
cross subsidise its products in the rural areas.
Flow
of funds for infrastructure is a myth. Life insurance is all about mobilising
the savings for long term investment in social and infrastructure sectors. It
was also argued that opening up of insurance market would enable huge flow of
funds into infrastructure. The record of private companies on this is dismal.
More than fifty per cent of the policies they sell are unit-linked insurance
where the decision on investment of savings element in insurance is taken by the
policyholders. In fact as per a press report, ninety five per cent of policies
sold by Birla Sun Life and over 80 per cent of policies sold by ICICI Prudential
were unit-linked policies during 2003-04. Under these schemes, nearly 50 per
cent of the funds are invested in equities thus limiting the fund availability
for infrastructural investments. As against this, the LIC has invested Rs 40,
000 crore as at 31.3.2003 in power generation, road transport, water supply,
housing and other social sector activities.
The
Law Commission of India released a consultation paper on June 16, 2003 on the
revision of the Insurance Act, 1938. The consultation paper proposes a suitable
amendment to Section of 27C of Insurance Act allowing insurers especially
carrying on general insurance business to invest funds outside India. So, once
the law is amended to allow insurers to invest funds abroad, the exports that
these private companies would generate, would be the export of savings of the
people.
Raising
the FDI cap also does not seem justifiable as far as channelising savings into
investments are concerned. The life insurance sector invested a total of Rs
31335.89 crore in the infrastructure sector in 2002-03. Out of this the
contribution of the LIC was Rs 30998.16 crore, which was 98.92 per cent of the
total investment in infrastructure by the entire life insurance sector. The
figures provided by the IRDA Reports further suggest that the share of the
public sector life and non-life insurance companies in investment in
infrastructure is greater than their market share. Despite the FDI cap being set
at 26 per cent, the investment from the insurance sector to the infrastructure
sector was predominantly from the public sector companies. Therefore, the
argument that raising the FDI cap in the insurance sector would help in
mobilising resources for infrastructure does not hold. On the other hand,
greater foreign control is more likely to lead to a decline in the share of
investment of the private insurance companies into the infrastructure sector,
given the record of the foreign insurance companies in siphoning resources for
speculative financial ventures.
It
is also worth mentioning that the only insurance company involved in insuring
Indian exports is the Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India (ECGC), which
provides insurance cover to export credit. The ECGC has been in existence since
1957. It is functioning under the United India Insurance Co. No private player
with foreign partnership has ventured into this area. Moreover, the LIC and
other public sector units are the only ones to undertake overseas operations, as
reported by the Annual Reports of the IRDA. Foreign participation has also not
helped in marketing Indian insurance products abroad.
Governments
of the advanced countries like the US continue to apply pressure on developing
countries to open up their insurance sectors. China, for instance was
pressurised to open up its insurance sector, in return of its entry into the
WTO. However, the existing regulations on foreign capital in the insurance
sector in China has been a source of continuing debate in the US-China Economic
and Security Review Commission, where the Chinese side has resisted attempts to
force further deregulation.
The unilateral move to further liberalise the insurance sector in India is unjustifiable. Events over the decade of the 1990s have borne out the fact that financial liberalisation does not contribute positively to investment and economic growth. Countries which enthusiastically opened up their financial sectors in order to attract capital inflows often experienced enhanced volatility in their financial markets and speculative attacks on their currency. Further opening up of the insurance sector to foreign capital, which serves as a vital financial intermediary of the national economy, is therefore not warranted.
Name
of the Private Life Insurance Company |
Per
cent of Foreign Equity |
Name
of the Foreign partner |
Allianz
Bajaj Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
Allianz |
Birla
Sun Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
Sunlife |
HDFC
Standard Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
18.60 |
Standard
Life |
ICICI
Prudential Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
Prudential |
ING
Vysya Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
ING |
Max
New York Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
New
York Life |
MetLife
India Insurance Co. Ltd. |
25.99 |
Metlife |
Om
Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
Old
Mutual |
SBI
Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
Cardiff |
Tata-AIG
Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
AIG |
AMP
Sanmar Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
Sanmar
Life Insurance Co. |
Dabur-CGU
Life Insurance Co. Ltd. |
26 |
CGU
Life Assurance Company |
Name
of the Private General Insurance Company |
Per
cent of Foreign Equity |
Name
of the Foreign partner |
Royal
Sundaram Alliance Insurance Co. Ltd |
26 |
Royal
Sun Alliance |
Reliance
General Insurance Co. Ltd |
Nil |
|
IFFCO-Tokio
General Insurance Co. Ltd |
26 |
Tokio
Marine |
Tata-AIG
General Insurance Co. Ltd |
26 |
AIG |
Bajaj
Allianz General Insurance Co. Ltd |
26 |
Allianz |
ICICI
Lombard General Insurance Co. Ltd |
26 |
Lombard |
Cholamandalam
General Insurance Co. Ltd |
Nil |
|
HDFC-CHUBB
General Insurance Co. Ltd |
26 |
CHUBB |