Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment

With about RUB 988bn (USD 26bn) in gross premium written, in 2014, the Russian insurance industry ranked 27th in the world. Non-life insurance premium accounted for 89 percent of GPW while life insurance for only 11 percent. In 2015, the industry a...

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Main Authors: World Bank, International Monetary Fund
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/08/26739000/moldova-financial-sector-assessment-program-insurance-core-principles-detailed-assessment-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25064
id okr-10986-25064
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-250642021-05-25T08:51:27Z Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment World Bank International Monetary Fund insurance regulatory framework market structure supervision ROSC sector concentration compliance With about RUB 988bn (USD 26bn) in gross premium written, in 2014, the Russian insurance industry ranked 27th in the world. Non-life insurance premium accounted for 89 percent of GPW while life insurance for only 11 percent. In 2015, the industry also faced with the consequences of the Western economic sanctions which effectively closed access to the high quality Western reinsurance capacity for the Russian insurers that provide coverage for 1500 large Russian companies which were put on the sanctions list. In the past, the Western reinsurers provided over 80 percent of reinsurance capacity for such risks. In the case of Russia, the main objective of insurance supervision is to ensure that insurers fully comply with core regulatory norms fixed by the law in the following four areas of insurance operations: (a) solvency (capital adequacy); (b) insurance reserves; (c) assets covering own funds; and (d) assets covering reserves. The objective of off-site and onsite supervision is restricted to ensuring compliance of insurers with these four regulatory norms. In this context, the resources of the insurance supervisor are by and large dedicated towards meeting this objective. While the dispersion of insurance supervisory functions among numerous CBR departments with various reporting lines carries certain advantages (such as a reduced potential for the conflict of interest), it also has a potential for major drawbacks. These include the potential for (a) insufficient coordination among different departments, (b) shortage of necessary insurance expertise within departments universally dealing with a wide range of financial services, and (c) impaired ability of the regulator as a whole to systematically detect problems with compliance in such a technically complex industry as insurance at an early stage. 2016-09-13T19:59:32Z 2016-09-13T19:59:32Z 2016-07 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/08/26739000/moldova-financial-sector-assessment-program-insurance-core-principles-detailed-assessment-report http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25064 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Financial Sector Assessment Program Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic insurance
regulatory framework
market structure
supervision
ROSC
sector concentration
compliance
spellingShingle insurance
regulatory framework
market structure
supervision
ROSC
sector concentration
compliance
World Bank
International Monetary Fund
Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Russian Federation
description With about RUB 988bn (USD 26bn) in gross premium written, in 2014, the Russian insurance industry ranked 27th in the world. Non-life insurance premium accounted for 89 percent of GPW while life insurance for only 11 percent. In 2015, the industry also faced with the consequences of the Western economic sanctions which effectively closed access to the high quality Western reinsurance capacity for the Russian insurers that provide coverage for 1500 large Russian companies which were put on the sanctions list. In the past, the Western reinsurers provided over 80 percent of reinsurance capacity for such risks. In the case of Russia, the main objective of insurance supervision is to ensure that insurers fully comply with core regulatory norms fixed by the law in the following four areas of insurance operations: (a) solvency (capital adequacy); (b) insurance reserves; (c) assets covering own funds; and (d) assets covering reserves. The objective of off-site and onsite supervision is restricted to ensuring compliance of insurers with these four regulatory norms. In this context, the resources of the insurance supervisor are by and large dedicated towards meeting this objective. While the dispersion of insurance supervisory functions among numerous CBR departments with various reporting lines carries certain advantages (such as a reduced potential for the conflict of interest), it also has a potential for major drawbacks. These include the potential for (a) insufficient coordination among different departments, (b) shortage of necessary insurance expertise within departments universally dealing with a wide range of financial services, and (c) impaired ability of the regulator as a whole to systematically detect problems with compliance in such a technically complex industry as insurance at an early stage.
format Report
author World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_facet World Bank
International Monetary Fund
author_sort World Bank
title Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment
title_short Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment
title_full Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment
title_fullStr Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Russian Federation Financial Sector Assessment Program : Insurance Core Principles Assessment
title_sort russian federation financial sector assessment program : insurance core principles assessment
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/08/26739000/moldova-financial-sector-assessment-program-insurance-core-principles-detailed-assessment-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25064
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