Difference between revisions of "Microinsurance and Takaful"

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combinations
 
1st Asian Conference on
 
Microinsurance
 
July 25-26 2007
 
  
Overview of presentation
 
 About ICMIF
 
 Overview of the cooperative and mutual
 
  sector
 
 Microinsurance through cooperatives
 
 Opportunities and need for microtakaful
 
 
Cooperative definition
 
“A cooperative is an autonomous
 
  association of persons united
 
  voluntarily to meet their common
 
  economic, social, and cultural
 
  needs and aspirations through a
 
  jointly-owned and democratically
 
  controlled enterprise”
 
 
Cooperative/mutual values
 
 Self-help, self-responsibility
 
 Democracy, equality, equity
 
 Solidarity
 
 Honesty, openness
 
 Social responsibility, caring for others
 
 
Cooperative vs. Mutuals
 
Cooperative principles    Mutual principles
 
Open and voluntary        Free association
 
membership
 
One member, one vote      User must be
 
                            member
 
Limited interest on shares "Not for profit”
 
For the benefit of user-  Quality products
 
members
 
Cooperative education      Personal
 
                            development
 
 
Why a cooperative/mutual?
 
Cooperatives and Mutuals: the
 
hidden giants of the world
 
economy
 
  The largest 300 cooperatives
 
  and mutuals have a turnover
 
                  of
 
          1 trillion USD
 
 
Worldwide importance of mutual insurers, 2001
 
                                                                  ESTIMATES
 
Percent of total premiums
 
                100% = 2416 bio USD
 
                                                    USA
 
                                                              32
 
                                                    EUR
 
                                                            21
 
                                                    CAN
 
                                                25        19
 
                                                    JAP
 
                                                        16
 
                                                    KOR
 
                                                        14
 
Source: Swiss Re for worldwide total premium; ICMIF
 
 
Providing microinsurance
 
The challenges
 
 Coverage
 
 Regulation
 
 Moral hazard and Fraud
 
 Adverse selection
 
 Education and trust
 
 Technical expertise
 
 Affordability
 
 Retention
 
 Sustainability
 
 Penetration
 
 
Potential for cooperatives to
 
provide microinsurance
 
 History of organising the poor
 
 Operate for the interest of members by
 
  members
 
 Trust
 
 Ownership and loyalty
 
 Peer pressure
 
 Surplus reinvested or redistributed
 
 
Cooperatives providing
 
microinsurance
 
 CARD MBA – The Philippines
 
 Sanasa Insurance Company – Sri Lanka
 
 Centre D’Innovation Financiere – West
 
  Africa
 
 Columna - Guatemala
 
 Torreon - Mexico
 
 
Challenges
 
for microinsurance cooperatives
 
 Regulatory requirements
 
 Accessing reinsurance
 
 Technical and financial investment
 
 
The way forward?
 
 Maintain informal operations
 
 Merge with other providers
 
 Enter into a partner-agent agreement
 
 Lobbying regulators
 
 
Microtakaful:
 
Opportunities and need
 
 
Principles of Takaful
 
 Solidarity and joint guarantee
 
 Self reliance and self sustaining for
 
  community well being
 
 Assist those that need assistance
 
 Community pooling system
 
 Shari’ah approved investments and products
 
        “Bear ye one another’s burden”
 
 
The Global Takaful sector
 
 1979 First Takaful Company established
 
 1996 – 30 Institutions transacting Takaful
 
 2002 – 50 Takaful operators and four Retakaful
 
  providers
 
 2004 – 80 Takaful operators, 200 Takaful
 
  windows and 12 Retakaful providers
 
Source: IBB Solicitors, UK – (2005)
 
 
The need for microtakaful
 
 Social services inadequate or unavailable
 
 Large sectors of poverty in many Muslim
 
  countries
 
 Over half of world’s lowest developed
 
  countries have a majority Muslim population
 
 Increasing inequality in Middle East and Gulf
 
  countries
 
 Religious considerations are important in
 
  villages and small communities
 
 Established Takaful sector neglecting low
 
 
“A noticeable lack of microinsurance
 
  in North Africa and the Middle East.
 
  In no other region is the absence
 
  of microinsurance so evident”
 
          Source: The Landscape of
 
  Microinsurance
 
                      (The Microinsurance Centre)
 
 
second most
 
important social
 
institution to
 
counter poverty
 
and deprivation”
 
          Omar Fischer
 
1999
 
 
“A cooperative and mutual scheme
 
  providing Shari’ah approved
 
  products and investments is
 
  permissible under Islamic Law”
 
 
Possibilities for
 
microtakaful
 
 Establish community based microtakaful
 
  schemes
 
 Involvement of NGOs, zakat funds,
 
  donor agencies
 
 Support from Takaful sector
 
   Technical expertise
 
   Financial assistance
 
   Partner-agent model
 
 
Microtakaful in practice
 
 Agricultural Mutual Fund - Lebanon
 
 Amana Takaful – Sri Lanka
 
 Takaful Ikhlas
 
 Takmin - Indonesia
 
 
The case of a microtakaful
 
policyholder
 
 Ibu Iwit, 50 years, farmworker, earning
 
  one dollar a day.
 
 Took out a 6 month loan of 55 USD
 
  from local Baitul mal Wat Tamwil
 
 Insurance premium was taken out with
 
  Takmin at 0.16 USD
 
 Ibu Iwit passed away a couple months
 
  later
 
 Her husband, Amad, age 60 years, no
 
  income
 
 
Summary
 
 Cooperatives have for many years being
 
  providing insurance to the underserved
 
  population.
 
 There is a need to find avenues to facilitate
 
  the sustainable growth of the informal sector
 
  operators.
 
 The philosophy and principles of Takaful are
 
  similar to cooperatives.
 
 Takaful requires the needy to be given
 
  protection.
 
 There is a need for microtakaful in many
 
 
A Global reach for
 
local strength
 
        Thank you
 
      www.takaful.coop
 

Revision as of 00:39, 21 September 2016