Short-Term Insurance Premium Collection – Now and in Future
There appears to be some confusion regarding the collection of short-term insurance premiums. This is understandable, given the various amendments to the STIA, the implementation of the Financial Sector Regulation Act, the recent amendments to the regulations and comments made regarding certain proposals in the Retail Distribution Review Updates.
Little has changed
The collection of premiums on short-term insurance products is, despite all the new legislation and changes to existing legislation, still an intermediary service. The definition of “intermediary service” in the FAIS Act 2002 and “services as intermediary” in the Short-Term Insurance Act, 1998 and now in the amended regulations, includes the collection and accounting for premiums payable under a short-term insurance policy.
According to S 45 of the Short-Term Insurance Act, 1998, an independent intermediary may not receive, hold or in any other manner deal with premiums payable under a short-term policy entered or to be entered with a short-term insurer, unless authorised to do so, in writing, by the short-term insurer concerned, as prescribed by regulations.
S 45 of the Act has not been amended or repealed by the Financial Sector Regulation Act, nor is there any change introduced in the Insurance Bill 2016, which is expected to be signed into law later this year.
The Draft Proposed Amendment of the Regulations, published in December 2016, contain important amendments to the existing regulations. However, Part 4 (authorisation of and requirements for collection of premiums by intermediaries, section 45,) remains unamended.
Part 4 of the Regulations states that a short-term insurer may authorise an independent intermediary to receive, hold or in any other manner deal with premiums payable to it under short-term policies provided, inter alia, that the intermediary has the required security – usually an IGF policy. This remains the situation.
RDR impact
The confusion, it seems, may have arisen as a result of Proposal F, contained in the Retail Distribution Review of 2014, and the various comments that have been made regarding it in the subsequent status updates.
In terms of Proposal F, the collection of insurance premiums will not be permitted to be carried out by intermediaries in the case of any long-term insurance business, or in the case of personal lines short-term insurance business, unless the intermediary complies with prescribed conduct standards for this service. These “conduct standards” are legislative instruments as defined and regulated by the Financial Sector Regulation Act. The FSB intends to proceed with Proposal F regarding standards for premium collection, and consultation with the industry reference groups for both long-term risk and short-term insurance. This will indicate who should be a “qualifying intermediary” and the standards for such intermediaries.
When the proposal results in standards being set, it is a certainty that intermediaries will be required to meet a very high-level benchmark. Look to the top collection agencies in the country for some indication of the governance, risk management and IT systems that will be required.
Perhaps adding to the confusion, the December 2015 RDR Status Review mentioned that some commentators had proposed that premium collection should be excluded from the scope of “intermediary services” and instead be regarded as an outsourced service on behalf of the insurer for RDR purposes.
In the RDR Status Review of December 2016, the FSB noted its agreement with the suggestion that premium collections be removed from the definition of intermediary service and be treated as an outsourced function. The qualifying criteria for premium collection as an outsourced function will have a similar emphasis on governance, oversight, operational efficiency and fair customer outcomes as the broader outsourcing standards already have – together with specific operational requirements to safeguard the money collected.
Going forward
Once these qualifying criteria are set, necessary amendments to the current LTIA and STIA definitions of “service as intermediary” will be made to exclude premium collection from the ambit of the definition. At that stage, qualifying intermediaries may earn a separate outsource fee for premium collections (possibly subject to a cap).
These changes will only occur once the future Conduct of Financial Institutions Act (COFI Act) is in place. The COFI Act is expected to repeal some existing financial sector laws, and consolidate and strengthen the conduct of business-related provisions they contain into a single, overarching conduct of business law.
National Treasury is, in consultation with the FSB and the South African Reserve Bank, in the early stages of planning the COFI framework. Public consultation on a draft Bill is scheduled to take place during 2017, with promulgation expected in the course of 2018. Although this estimate is provided by the FSB, the timing is regarded as somewhat optimistic.
In a nutshell
There have been no changes made to the Short-Term Insurance Act, 1998 or to the regulations that may affect the current procedures and requirements for the collection of short-term insurance premiums by intermediaries. In the near future, qualifying intermediaries will be required to meet enhanced conduct standards that currently do not apply. If premium collection is to become an outsourced function, this will be done in terms of the CoFI Act, once promulgated – and that is not expected to happen until the end of 2018 at the earliest.
For more information about tailor-made insurance products or insurance regulations, don’t hesitate to contact your relationship manager.
Source: Insurance Gateway