12th November 2012
Israel Kamuzora
Tanzania is currently working on the best approach to increase the micro insurance coverage so that low-income earners can easily access it.
The Commissioner of Insurance at the
Tanzania Insurance Regulatory Authority (TIRA), Israel Kamuzora, made
the remarks over the weekend in Dar es Salaam at the just concluded
International Microinsurance Conference, which attracted more than 500
participants and experts from across the world to address the challenges
of micro insurance.
“Microinsurance in Tanzania is still at an
infant stage, but we’re grappling to make it effective to impact low
income earners in the country…” Kamuzora said.
“We have drafted regulations which are
specifically for microinsurance set to start by January next year…”
explained the commissioner.
“The idea is to have better strategy that
will make low income earners in urban and rural areas have access to
micro insurance coverage…” The commissioner also pointed out that the
country’s insurance’s legal framework was good and in his opinion it is a
win-win situation between the service providers and people at the
grassroots levels.
Recent EU statistics show that Tanzanians
are poor and one third of them are below the poverty line, using less
than one US dollar a day (about 1,000 Tanzanian shillings). But apart
from that, less than 10 per cent of Tanzanians have insurance packages
but a growing number is accessing the risk prevention service via their
mobile phones.
Nonetheless, the contended commissioner
mentioned that the country’s insurance sector is performing above
average and growing at the rate of 20 per cent.
There is growing intereset in the industry
with mobile companies issuing special insurance packages to the poor
such as Faraja insurance services from Tigo and Vodacom but awareness
and participation is still significantly low.
Yet according to Kamuzola, a recent country’s diagnostic study showed that, Tanzania has great potential for microinsurance.
“…hence it is vital that we come up with a
special approach that will make insurance companies get to otherwise
marginalized poor…” asserted the commissioner who also pledged to carry
out more awareness campaigns and plans are well underway for a five-year
financial programme to educate Tanzanians on the entire financial
system.
The chairman of the Micro Insurance
Network, Craig Churchill, pointed out the importance of microinsurance
sector in East African countries, taking into account that the region is
vulnerable to climate change and its related factors.
He urged African countries to create a
friendly legal framework for the micro insurance sector to flourish and
benefit the poor, who cannot be easily covered by the traditional
insurance schemes.
A new study of African microinsurance
markets, published by Making Finance Work For Africa (MFW4A) and Munich
Re Foundation, has revealed that the number of low-income households
benefiting from insurance services has grown by over 200 percent in
three years to the excess of 44 million people.
From a global perspective, the
microinsurance sector is moving forward at considerable speed. In Latin
America and the Caribbean, another recent study identified over 40
million low-income people covered by microinsurance and the publication
of the second edition of the Microinsurance Compendium should continue
to fuel additional interest in the sector.
There are nearly 220 organisations
providing microinsurance in Africa and there is growing interest to tap
into the low-income market. But over 38 million of the insured people in
Africa, are concentrated in Southern and Eastern Africa with South
Africa alone representing 27 million of these.
In Tanzania, the microinsurance sector is
developing at a steady pace and there are now some 3.3 million people
covered by microinsurance which represents a growth of around 7 percent
in just three years. Still, in a country of over 45 million, the
Tanzanian regulatory authority has its work cut out particularly in
raising awareness as well as stimulating the market through new
regulations.
SOURCE:
THE GUARDIAN
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