History of Insurance in India: Be Bank King For Banking by Bank King
History of Insurance in India: Be Bank King For Banking by Bank King
History of Insurance in India: Be Bank King For Banking by Bank King
LIFE INSURANCE
Life Insurance is the fastest growing sector in India since 2000 as Government allowed Private players and FDI up to
26% and recently Cabinet approved a proposal to increase it to 49%. Life Insurance in India was nationalized by
incorporating Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) in 1956. All private life insurance companies at that time were taken
over by LIC.
In 1993, the Government of India appointed RN Malhotra Committee to lay down a road map for privatization of the
life insurance sector.
List of Life Insurers (as of June 2014)Presently In India 24 Life Insurance Company in India
Apart from Life Insurance Corporation, the public sector life insurer, there are 23 other private sector life insurers, most
of them joint ventures between Indian groups and global insurance giants.
Life Insurer in Public Sector
1. Life Insurance Corporation of India
Life Insurers in Private Sector
1. SBI Life Insurance
2. PNB MetLife India Life Insurance
3. ICICI Prudential Life Insurance
4. Bajaj Allianz Life
5. Max Life Insurance
6. Sahara Life Insurance
7. Tata AIA Life
8. HDFC Life
9. Birla Sun Life Insurance
10. Kotak Life Insurance
11. India First Life Insurance
12. Aviva Life Insurance
13. Reliance Life Insurance Company Limited - Formerly known as AMP Sanmar LIC
14. Exide Life Insurance - Formerly known as ING Vysya Life Insurance
15. Shriram Life Insurance
16. Bharti AXA Life Insurance Co Ltd.
17. Future Generali Life Insurance Co Ltd
18. IDBI Federal Life Insurance
19. AEGON Religare Life Insurance
20. DHFL Pramerica Life Insurance - Formerly known as DLF Pramerica Life Insurance
21. CANARA HSBC Oriental Bank of Commerce
22. Star Union Dia-ichi Life Insurance Co. Ltd
23. Edelweiss Tokio Life Insurance Company Ltd.
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Insurance Terms(PART 1)
1. Active Participant - Person whose absence from a planned event would trigger a benefit if the event needs to be
canceled or postponed.
2. Actual Cash Value - Cost of replacing damaged or destroyed property with comparable new property, minus
depreciation and obsolescence. For example, a 10-year-old sofa will not be replaced at current full value because
of a decade of depreciation.
3. Actuary - A specialist in the mathematics of insurance who calculates rates, reserves, dividends and other statistics.
(Americanism: In most other countries the individual is known as "mathematician.")
4. Adjuster - A representative of the insurer who seeks to determine the extent of the insurer's liability for loss when
a claim is submitted.
5. Admitted Assets - Assets permitted by state law to be included in an insurance company's annual statement. These
assets are an important factor when regulators measure insurance company solvency. They include mortgages,
stocks, bonds and real estate.
6. Aggregate Limit - Usually refers to liability insurance and indicates the amount of coverage that the insured has
under the contract for a specific period of time, usually the contract period, no matter how many separate
accidents might occur.
7. Annual Administrative Fee - Charge for expenses associated with administering a group employee benefit plan.
8. Annual Crediting Cap - The maximum rate that the equity-indexed annuity can be credited in a year. If a contract
has an upper limit, or cap, of 7 percent and the index linked to the annuity gained 7.2 percent, only 7 percent
would be credited to the annuity.
9. Annuity - An agreement by an insurer to make periodic payments that continue during the survival of the
annuitant(s) or for a specified period.
10. Approved for Reinsurance - Indicates the company is approved (or authorized) to write reinsurance on risks in
this state. A license to write reinsurance might not be required in these states.
11. Approved or Not Disapproved for Surplus Lines - Indicates the company is approved (or not disapproved) to
write excess or surplus lines in this state.
12. Broker - Insurance salesperson that searches the marketplace in the interest of clients, not insurance companies.
13. Broker-Agent - Independent insurance salesperson who represents particular insurers but also might function as a
broker by searching the entire insurance market to place an applicant's coverage to maximize protection and
minimize cost. This person is licensed as an agent and a broker.
PART 2
6. Quick Liquidity Ratio - Quick assets divided by net liabilities plus ceded reinsurance balances payable.
Quick assets are defined as the sum of cash, unaffiliated short-term investments, unaffiliated bonds
maturing within one year, government bonds maturing within five years, and 80% of unaffiliated
common stocks. These assets can be quickly converted into cash in the case of an emergency.
2. Reciprocal Insurance Exchange - An unincorporated groups of individuals, firms or corporations, commonly
termed subscribers, who mutually insure one another, each separately assuming his or her share of each risk. Its
chief administrator is an attorney-in-fact.
3. Re-Entry - Re-entry, which is the allowance for level-premium term policyowners to qualify for another levelpremium period, generally with new evidence of insurability.
4. Reinsurance - In effect, insurance that an insurance company buys for its own protection. The risk of loss is
spread so a disproportionately large loss under a single policy doesn't fall on one company. Reinsurance enables
an insurance company to expand its capacity; stabilize its underwriting results; finance its expanding volume;
secure catastrophe protection against shock losses; withdraw from a line of business or a geographical area
within a specified time period.
5. Reinsurance Ceded - The unit of insurance transferred to a reinsurer by a ceding company.
6. Reinsurance Recoverables to Policyholder Surplus - Measures a company's dependence upon its reinsurers
and the potential exposure to adjustments on such reinsurance. Its determined from the total ceded reinsurance
recoverable due from non-U.S. affiliates for paid losses, unpaid losses, losses incurred but not reported (IBNR),
unearned premiums and commissions less funds held from reinsurers expressed as a percent of policyholder
surplus.
7. Renewal - The automatic re-establishment of in-force status effected by the payment of another premium.
8. Replacement Cost - The dollar amount needed to replace damaged personal property or dwelling property
without deducting for depreciation but limited by the maximum dollar amount shown on the declarations page
of the policy.
9. Reserve - An amount representing actual or potential liabilities kept by an insurer to cover debts to
policyholders. A reserve is usually treated as a liability.
10. Residual Benefit - In disability insurance, a benefit paid when you suffer a loss of income due to a covered
disability or if loss of income persists. This benefit is based on a formula specified in your policy and it is
generally a percentage of the full benefit. It may be paid up to the maximum benefit period.
is an autonomous
apex statutory body which regulates and develops the insurance industry in India. It was constituted by a Parliament of
India act called Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority Act, 1999 and duly passed by the Government of
India
The agency operates from its headquarters at Hyderabad, Telangana where it shifted from Delhi in 2001.
Chairman: T. S Vijayan
Organizational structure or Composition of Authority As per the section 4 of IRDA Act' 1999, Insurance
Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA, which was constituted by an act of parliament) specify the composition
of Authority.IRDA is a ten member body consisting of
Chairman,-(T.S. Vijayan)
Five whole-time members,-(R.K. Nair,M. Ram Prasad,S. Roy Chowdhary,D.D. Singh)
Four part-time members,-(Anup Wadhawan,S.B. Mathur,Prof. V.K.Gupta,CA. Subodh Kr. Agarwal)