More than half of Kenyan insurance companies are ill-prepared for new accounting rules, experts have said. The rules, dubbed (International Financial Reporting Standards) IFRS 17, come with strict reporting requirements of the firms’ financial results and tight requirements to increase their capital bases.
ALSO READ: Challenges facing insurance brokers in Kenya
Adoption of IFRS 17 is compulsory globally, with a deadline of January 1, 2021. The rules also require the insurers to invest more in data collection and analysis as well as transparency while drafting policies with their clients. IFRS 17 also requires that the assets the insurers report be of a certain quality as well as investing more in operational efficiency, which will require the hiring of more staff.
Operational efficiency Avoid fake news! Subscribe to the Standard SMS service and receive factual, verified breaking news as it happens. Text the word 'NEWS' to 22840 Global audit firm KPMG yesterday said that of the about 50 firms in the country, half of them had not made meaningful headway in adopting the new rules despite a requirement for them to have started doing so in 2014.
“They have not started to invest in data collection and analysis that will ensure strictness in how they report their financials. On top of that, they are likely not to have enough money to offset the costs that come with implementing these rules,” said Alex Mbai, a partner at KPMG at a forum to review the preparedness of local insurers in adopting the new rules organised by the audit firm in partnership with financial services firm Zamara in Nairobi.
The firms have to first adopt IFRS9 rules before graduating to IFRS17. But according to Zamara Executive Director James Olubayi, insurers are still stuck with the outdated IFRS4 rules, which came into force six years ago and are not in tandem with global accounting standards.
“At the beginning, each insurance company would report its financials the way it wished and keep its capital base at levels it pleased with no strict regulatory control. ALSO READ: Insurance brokers warn of extinction of business
The Insurance Regulatory Authority then began to implement the IFRS4 rules, which are not that strict but have a modicum of regulatory supervision and all insurers could report their financials uniformly,” said Mr Olubayi. The actuaries from Zamara and KPMG warned that it was inevitable for Kenyan insurers to merge for capital requirement reasons once the new rules come into force.
“A country with 50 insurers but with an insurance penetration of a mere three per cent shows that all these insurance companies are not strong enough to cater for the entire population,” said David Mbatha, associate director consulting at KPMG.
Insurers not ready for
new industry rules
By Lee Mwiti | Published Thu, March 22nd 2018 at 00:00, Updated March
21st 2018 at 20:59 GMT +3
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The new reporting standards require more transparency on the part of
firms while drafting policies with their clients. [Courtesy]
More than half of Kenyan insurance companies are ill-prepared for new
accounting rules, experts have said.
The rules, dubbed (International Financial Reporting Standards) IFRS 17,
come with strict reporting requirements of the firms’ financial results
and tight requirements to increase their capital bases.
ALSO READ: Challenges facing insurance brokers in Kenya
Adoption of IFRS 17 is compulsory globally, with a deadline of January
1, 2021.
The rules also require the insurers to invest more in data collection
and analysis as well as transparency while drafting policies with their
clients.
IFRS 17 also requires that the assets the insurers report be of a
certain quality as well as investing more in operational efficiency,
which will require the hiring of more staff.
Operational efficiency
Avoid fake news! Subscribe to the Standard SMS service and receive
factual, verified breaking news as it happens. Text the word 'NEWS' to
22840
Global audit firm KPMG yesterday said that of the about 50 firms in the
country, half of them had not made meaningful headway in adopting the
new rules despite a requirement for them to have started doing so in
2014.
“They have not started to invest in data collection and analysis that
will ensure strictness in how they report their financials. On top of
that, they are likely not to have enough money to offset the costs that
come with implementing these rules,” said Alex Mbai, a partner at KPMG
at a forum to review the preparedness of local insurers in adopting the
new rules organised by the audit firm in partnership with financial
services firm Zamara in Nairobi. The firms have to first adopt IFRS9
rules before graduating to IFRS17.
But according to Zamara Executive Director James Olubayi, insurers are
still stuck with the outdated IFRS4 rules, which came into force six
years ago and are not in tandem with global accounting standards.
“At the beginning, each insurance company would report its financials
the way it wished and keep its capital base at levels it pleased with no
strict regulatory control.
ALSO READ: Insurance brokers warn of extinction of business
The Insurance Regulatory Authority then began to implement the IFRS4
rules, which are not that strict but have a modicum of regulatory
supervision and all insurers could report their financials uniformly,”
said Mr Olubayi.
The actuaries from Zamara and KPMG warned that it was inevitable for
Kenyan insurers to merge for capital requirement reasons once the new
rules come into force.
“A country with 50 insurers but with an insurance penetration of a mere
three per cent shows that all these insurance companies are not strong
enough to cater for the entire population,” said David Mbatha, associate
director consulting at KPMG.
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001274027/insurers-not-ready-for-industry-rules
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2001274027/insurers-not-ready-for-industry-rules
The new reporting standards require more transparency on the part of firms while drafting policies with their clients. [Courtesy]By Lee Mwiti \
More than half of Kenyan insurance companies are ill-prepared for new accounting rules, experts have said. The rules, dubbed (International Financial Reporting Standards) IFRS 17, come with strict reporting requirements of the firms’ financial results and tight requirements to increase their capital bases.
ALSO READ: Challenges facing insurance brokers in Kenya
Adoption of IFRS 17 is compulsory globally, with a deadline of January 1, 2021. The rules also require the insurers to invest more in data collection and analysis as well as transparency while drafting policies with their clients. IFRS 17 also requires that the assets the insurers report be of a certain quality as well as investing more in operational efficiency, which will require the hiring of more staff.
Operational efficiency Avoid fake news! Subscribe to the Standard SMS service and receive factual, verified breaking news as it happens. Text the word 'NEWS' to 22840 Global audit firm KPMG yesterday said that of the about 50 firms in the country, half of them had not made meaningful headway in adopting the new rules despite a requirement for them to have started doing so in 2014.
“They have not started to invest in data collection and analysis that will ensure strictness in how they report their financials. On top of that, they are likely not to have enough money to offset the costs that come with implementing these rules,” said Alex Mbai, a partner at KPMG at a forum to review the preparedness of local insurers in adopting the new rules organised by the audit firm in partnership with financial services firm Zamara in Nairobi.
The firms have to first adopt IFRS9 rules before graduating to IFRS17. But according to Zamara Executive Director James Olubayi, insurers are still stuck with the outdated IFRS4 rules, which came into force six years ago and are not in tandem with global accounting standards.
“At the beginning, each insurance company would report its financials the way it wished and keep its capital base at levels it pleased with no strict regulatory control. ALSO READ: Insurance brokers warn of extinction of business
The Insurance Regulatory Authority then began to implement the IFRS4 rules, which are not that strict but have a modicum of regulatory supervision and all insurers could report their financials uniformly,” said Mr Olubayi. The actuaries from Zamara and KPMG warned that it was inevitable for Kenyan insurers to merge for capital requirement reasons once the new rules come into force.
“A country with 50 insurers but with an insurance penetration of a mere three per cent shows that all these insurance companies are not strong enough to cater for the entire population,” said David Mbatha, associate director consulting at KPMG.
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