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Showing posts with label insurers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insurers. Show all posts

Sep 23, 2011

Insurers should learn from Telecom companies to penetrate rural areas


Today, India stands at second position in population with 1.21 billion people. Still, sixty years after Independency, healthcare access in rural areas is still one of country's greatest challenges. 

The reasons being unevenly distributed healthcare facilities, unavailability of trained healthcare personnel, poor quality of drugs and lack of diagnostic tools. Every year more than one million Indians die, maximum of them being children and women. 

Overall, less than fifteen per cent Indians has health insurance. Rural health insurance is less than ten per cent. Insurance companies should learn from telecom companies in penetrating rural areas. 

In late 90s, when telecom companies started venturing into rural markets, they faced big obstacles due to lack of infrastructure. Unshaken, they first established mobile networks and then studied the needs of rural population and then customized their products for rural markets like cheap handsets and tariffs. 

The companies approached customers at their doorsteps with attractive tariffs and products. The result being, nowadays even poorest of the farmers have cell phones. Insurance companies could learn from telecom companies to penetrate rural regions. 

In the first place, insuring companies should understand the rural customer needs, streamline services, control cost, good customer service and cheap pricing. As the maximum of people in rural areas has limited buying capacity, insuring companies should bring in products at affordable rates just like the telecom companies did.

Aug 11, 2011

IRDA May Set a Time-Frame for Insurers to Go Public


India’s insurance regulator IRDA may set a time-frame for insurers to go for public listing. This was also the stand taken by Reserve Bank of India, calling for promoters of new private banks to cut their share within ten years of getting a licence.

According to law, there is no specific time limit, but the insurance regulator could do so. IRDA has finalized IPO norms for helping life companies go public. The regulator has mapped out different disclosure guidelines for insurance companies in advance of listing since there were great numbers of policyholders who have stake in the company.

Chairman of IRDA, J. Hari Narayan said, “The changes were required to restore customer confidence. Restrictions on pension ULIPS were placed because life insurers were selling mutual fund schemes under the garb of ULIP pensions. A lot of ULIP products which were sold as pensions were not really pension products, they were more like mutual funds."