3 minute read
Increase in profitability still too slow for Taiwan’s insurance industry
For a developed country, insurance penetration remains low at 1%
TAIWAN
On the surface, Taiwan’s insurance industry may appear to be winning in terms of its financial report. But GlobalData is reporting otherwise, describing the industry’s growth to be moving at a snail’s pace.
The insurance industry recorded a 2021 pre-tax profit of $14.15b, according to the Financial Supervisory Commission. Out of the total, the life insurance industry’s profits reached $13.37b for the year, an 88.5% increase compared to 2020. Meanwhile, nonlife insurers logged $780m in profit for 2021, a 32.9% increase from the previous year.
With the demand for foreign-currencydenominated investment products and the ageing population, the growth in life insurance is even expected to pick up in 2022. GlobalData, however, estimates that Taiwan’s life segment will only grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 0.4%, from $107b in 2020 to $121.2b in 2025 in terms of direct written premiums (DWP).
According to GlobalData’s Senior Insurance Analyst Deblina Mitra, after contracting in 2019 following years of slowdown, the industry had further contracted in 2020. Mitra said this was mainly due to persistently low interest rates and capital market fluctuations that reduced yields from insurance investment products, lowering their demand. The trend continued in 2021 with a decline of 5.9%.
The report identified that the decline was most prominent in whole life, term life, and endowment business lines which collectively accounted for 75% of the life insurance DWP in 2020, registering a decline of 11.1%.
Amidst the snail-paced growth, the government has not been idle. In June last year, the regulator increased the limit for life insurers who are operating in foreigncurrency-denominated insurance businesses, which offer better returns compared to the Taiwanese dollar, from 35% to 40%.
“Taiwan’s life insurance industry’s growth momentum is expected to remain subdued over the next five years as challenges related to adverse market conditions, declining workingage population, and an existing mature market will continue to oppress the demand. The demographic shift towards the super-ageing population is expected to be a focus area for insurers with more products being launched targeting this age group,” Mitra said.
Meanwhile, the general insurance industry may have logged a greater CAGR than the life segment, but it remains to be inconsequential on the grounds that general insurance penetration in the country is very low.
The industry is currently growing at a CAGR of 6.7% to $10.4b in 2025 in terms of gross written premiums (GWP). However, Mitra pointed out that despite Taiwan being a developed economy, the penetration rate, as a percentage of the gross domestic product (GDP), is at 1%, which is way below the developed markets’ average of 4%.
Mitra blames this on the low uptake of insurance lines such as property and liability.
What most affected the industry is the decline in motor insurance which accounts for 53.7% of the general insurance industry’s GWP. Despite getting a boost from an increase in premium prices and strong growth in vehicle sales, the outlook for motor insurance, in the short term, remains negative due to the global shortage of semiconductors used for motor vehicle production.
However, Mitra observed that Taiwan’s low insurance penetration and strong exportoriented manufacturing sector provide ample room for the growth of the insurance industry in the country.
“Stable economic factors coupled with the government’s initiatives to expand the general insurance industry through new product development are expected to support its growth over the next five years,” Mitra said.
The Taiwanese government, for its part, has been introducing several resolutions to bridge the insurance gap. One example is the Farmers’ Insurance Act in 2021, which prompted insurers to develop solutions such as covering risks faced by farmers. This has positively raised the CAGR of the property insurance lines by 5.3%.
National health insurance
One of Taiwan’s edges in the insurance industry is the government’s National Health Insurance (NHI) under the National Health Insurance Administration (NHIA). The NHI was first introduced back in 1995 and has undergone many changes.
In the “An overview of the healthcare system in Taiwan” paper by Tai-Yin Wu, Taiwan’s healthcare was said to be characterised by good accessibility, comprehensive population coverage, short waiting times, low cost, and the use of national data collection systems for planning and research.
However, it is still plagued by problems, namely the quality of outpatient visits, a weak referral system, and its financial capabilities.