Ebere Nwoji
Nigeria, Ghana and other regional
insurance markets annually lose a whooping N2.89 trillion($8billion) to
offshore insurance markets mainly in Europe and America, due to
fragmented nature of African insurance markets.
This, had resulted to the inability of firms in the continent to handle big ticket businesses within the region.
This was disclosed by the President of
the Republic of Ghana, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo at the 45th African
Insurance Organisation conference and Annual General Assembly holding in
Accra, Ghana.
Akufo-Addo, who was represented by the
senior Finance Minister,Yaw Osafo-Marfo, noted that whereas in developed
world markets, insurance firms operate on large scale basis, in Africa,
there are numerous small size insurance firms with low capacity and
inability to underwrite huge and profitable businesses which are most
times flown abroad to America and European markets.
“If you go behind all banks in Europe,
find out who owns them. If you do the analysis, most of them are owned
by insurance companies.
“The insurance sector in Africa must
play and continue to play a major role in national development. The
creation of jobs, contribution to the economic growth of your respective
countries , funds you mobilise are contributing to the development of
your countries,” he advised.
According to him, Africa growth and development is not possible without the transformation of the various sectors of the economy
Particularly the insurance sector.
“The sector must therefore undergo some
changes as its contribution to Africa economic transformation is of
paramount importance.”
He regretted that despite the critical
role played by the insurance sector in the growth and development of
economy of other continents, in Africa, only three countries have
double-digits in the sector’s contribution to their GDP.
“The insurance industry penetration rate
as a measure of GDP in most of our countries remains a single digit.
Only three countries are in double digits.
“The percentage rate of insurance as a
percentage of GDP is about 3.2 percent in Kenya, 7.5 percent in Namibia,
14.5 percent in South Africa , in Ghana it is less than two percent and
Nigeria less than one percent,”
He challenged countries in the region
whose contribution was still within single digit margin to rise to the
challenge of contributing meaningfully to their national GDP adding that
this will be possible if the operators will cooperate in risk sharing
and technological transfer as well as in customer service improvement.
He also charged operators of various
sectors of the regional economy to ensure that local insurance markets
are satisfied before their excess businesses are taken abroad.
“The potential of Africa insurance
market is worth more than the 2017 figure of $64 billion. Our vision and
commitment must be to build an industry that is worth more than this
figure.
“The sector has to graduate to a level
where its contribution to GDP is in double digits. That is when our
catalystic role as a source of medium to long term will be felt.
The low penetration rate points to opportunity.
“We must not only think of what we can
do for our individual companies, we must think of what we can do
together as a continent. I see opportunity to create prosperity of our
people through the insurance industry”, Kufor-Addo stated.
He said to harness this opportunity,
there was need to increase inter-African corporation in insurance,
noting that regional operators must come together,work together insure
together finance together and share the risks together.
According to him, it is only when the
operators go that way that their business activities will have the
necessary effect on the continent.
Still kicking against existence of small
size insurance firms in the continent, Akuffo-Addo maintained,
“Individual companies are too small to shoulder the risk obtainable in
the region, therefore at the end of the day, you have array of most of
the business taken to overseas .
“Ghana insurance industry for instance can only absorb three percent of oil and gas risk the rest is taken overseas”, he noted.

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