PAKISTAN TAKAFUL RULES TO ATTRACT NEW PLAYERS

(Zain Nawaz, lahore)

Pakistan’s regulator has introduced new Takaful rules planned to boost competition and raise the sector’s market share by allowing the entry of conventional players, prompt a legal challenge from Takaful providers. The rules, launched in July 2012, make the Pakistan the second country after Indonesia to officially allow Takaful windows, which enable firms to offer sharia-compliant and conventional products alongside.

Takaful had operated without conventional competitors in Pakistan since 2005 when the first rules was introduced but these rules also said to be that windows could be allowed after five year period. Though the conventional insurance could serve a broader share of the Takaful market “with their larger sales force and vast branch network”, the securities commission said in a statement in July 2012.

Takaful is seen as a bellwether of consumer big eyes for Islamic finance products. It is based on the concept of mutuality’ the Takaful company in Pakistan oversees a pool of funds contributed by all policy holders, but does not necessarily bear risk itself. Takaful firms must follow the religious guidelines, including bans on interest and pure monetary speculation. The Global Takaful contribution is forecast to reach $12 billion in 2012, according to consultants Ernst & Young. Although Pakistan is a world populous Muslim nation, Takaful share of the total insurance market there is only 2 to 3 percent it is said by the Karachi based partner at Ernst & Young.

If we look in contrast, the average Takaful share in Muslim countries stood at 5 percent in 2010 and is expected to reach 7 percent by 2015, according to a report by Swiss Re. The overall share of Takaful in Pakistan could reach 25 to 28 percent for general coverage and 15 to 20 percent in family or life coverage within face to eight years.

So, after the rules was introduced conventional players appear to enter into the market by increasing their business volumes, at that time approximately 4 to 5 conventional firms prepared their paper work for it, and if they want to do so then they have to raised their capital or might need to look for mergers and acquisitions. The new entrants into the Takaful market could also increase overall insurance coverage in the country by reaching out to unexploited market segments.

In Pakistan the insurance penetration, measured as total premiums to gross domestic products, which was third lowest in Asia in 2011 0.7 percent, against 4.1 percent for India. So, opportunity lies in Pakistan’s rural areas where there are high growth prospects and now it depends on conventional insurers having windows devise their marketing strategy.
For restrict the conventional firms the petition submitted by five Takaful operators in Sindh province, the country’s second-largest Islamic banking market, to challenge the new rules. “Criticism is against the window concept,” wrote Tariq Rashid, Karachi-based insurance consultant and associate fellow of the Institute of Islamic Banking & Insurance, a British-based body which offers education in Islamic finance.

However, the new rules include requirements for external auditors and internal compliance officers, and the regulator said further requirements might be included. If authorities decide to introduce a minimum capital requirement for Takaful windows that could create a level playing field for pure Takaful and conventional insurance companies. The Takaful industry’s lobby may not be powerful enough to convince the authorities to cancel the reforms entirely. I do not think there is a real forceful Takaful representation” that could make the regulator reverse its decision. Any change to opposite direction might be hard to because Pakistan’s conventional banks operate Islamic windows under the same methodology. The petition may delay the opening of Takaful windows or prompt the regulator to make some amendments to the rules, but the decision to open windows is “guaranteed” to go ahead.

I do not think this would not be a good idea to grant permission to conventional companies to operate Takaful Operations as well. The real problem is that people are not aware about the ground realities. If Conventional Insurance Companies will get the right to sell both the Islamic and conventional products they will definitely exploit the market and the true essence of Takaful will destroy.
 

zain
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