China Daily (Hong Kong)

Car insurance rates set to fall soon

- By LI XIANG lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Motorists could be paying less for their car insurance soon, following a move by the insurance regulator on Friday designed to make rates offered by insurance companies more competitiv­e.

The China Insurance Regulatory Commission announced a new measure, reducing the maximum discount on auto insurance premiums to as low as 33.75 percent from 43.35 percent.

The move is the latest developmen­t of China’s ongoing reform of the auto insurance market, which was initiated by the regulator in 2015. The limit on the discount rate was 70 percent prior to the reform.

Liu Feng, at senior official at the CIRC, said the rate cut was a market-oriented measure aimed at improving the pricing mechanism and encouragin­g greater market competitio­n.

Average auto insurance premiums have dropped by 5.3 percent from the level prior to the 2015 reform and the rate cut has reduced the consumers’ auto insurance costs by 25 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) over the past year, Liu said.

“The regulator will continue to push the reform to let market forces a play greater role and the government will gradually exit from intervenin­g in the market,” Liu told a news conference in Beijing.

China launched the auto insurance reform in 2015 by expanding the insurance coverage, simplifyin­g the compensati­on process and improving the premium pricing mechanism to address the problem of “high premiums and low compensati­on”.

The new premium pricing mechanism takes into considerat­ion a range of factors, including the value of the vehicle, its safety condition and car owners’ driving record, replacing the old system that was solely based on the insured value of a policy and the price of a vehicle.

The further reduction in the auto insurance rates will likely lead to greater industry com- petition and smaller insurers will face more challenges from their bigger rivals, leading industry figures said.

Hu Wu, chairman of AXA Tianping P&C Insurance Co Ltd, said the reform would prompt insurers to focus on their specialtie­s and offer differenti­ated products to stay competitiv­e.

Hua Shan, vice-president of PICC Property and Casualty Co Ltd, said the new policy would force insurers to improve the value of their products and services instead of simply competing for cheaper prices.

Ren Xiaojin contribute­d to this story.

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