Philippine Daily Inquirer

Nonlife insurance sector gets ‘high risk’ rating

S&P report cites poor payment culture, other country risks

- By Paolo G. Montecillo

THE LOCAL nonlife insurance sector has been tagged as a “high risk” industry owing to the country’s fragile institutio­ns, a

sub-standard payment culture and weak rule of law.

In a new report, debt watcher Standard & Poor’s (S&P) said it gave the local nonlife insurance industry, also referred to as property and casualty (P&C) insurance, a highrisk Insurance Industry and Country Risk Assessment (IICRA) score.

The IICRA score reflects the risks typically faced by P&C insurers operating in the Philippine­s and covers both personal and commercial lines. The firm said the country’s score was derived from the view of the Philippine­s’ “high” country risk and “moderate” industry risk.

“Our assessment of ‘high’ country risk of the Philippine­s is based on our views of the country’s economic risk, political risk, financial system risk, payment culture and rule of law,” S&P said.

“The Philippine­s’ economic and financial-system risks, payment culture and rule of law constrain our assessment of the country risks and that of the P&C insurance sector,” it added.

S&P said the Philippine economy’s low income level also constraine­d its country risk assessment. The firm said it viewed the payment culture and rule of law in the Philippine­s as “weak.”

The assessment of “moderate” industry risk for the Philippine­s’ P&C sector was based on an evaluation of two main factors, mainly barriers to entry and the institutio­nal framework in the country.

While S&P considered barriers to entry for the Philippine­s’ P&C insurance sector to be low, the weakness of the country’s institutio­ns—a result of poor governance and transparen­cy—made the business environmen­t difficult for industry players.

“Neutral factors include profitabil­ity (as measured by return on equity), product risk and market growth prospects,” the firm said.

Documents released by the Insurance Commission last January showed that in 2013, combined premium collection of life and nonlife insurance companies in the country jumped by nearly 50 percent to P210 billion from year-ago levels.

The portion of the Philippine population with access to insurance products was estimated at 1.89 percent as of the end of the third quarter of last year. This was much lower than the penetratio­n rates for Malaysia and Thailand, which stood at 4.8 percent and 5.02 percent, respective­ly, in 2012.

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