Surrenders in the Life Insurance Industry and their Impact on Liquidity

Core insurance business, due to its business model, is not as liquidity dependent as banking. Nevertheless, scenarios of liquidity problems in the insurance sector have been increasingly discussed among the regulatory and supervisory bodies. This analysis aims to further guide the discussion to help find the appropriate responses to potential liquidity risk.

Financial Support for Informal Care Provision in European Countries: A Short Overview

Long-term care (LTC) systems all over the world rely heavily on provision of care by unpaid carers, mostly family members without specific training in this field. In several developed countries, the share of informal care provided to the elderly is estimated to amount to about three quarters of all long-term care provided, thus forming one of the most important building blocks of national care systems. Several international developments, however, raise concerns if and how this most important type of care provision will be able to retain its role.

Screening for Dementia and the Impact on Mortality and Morbidity in Long-Term Care Insurance

Carriers providing long -term care (LTC) insurance have historically invested significant resources in risk management activities designed to ensure that policies are properly priced and that premiums can remain relatively stable for consumers. An important focus of such risk management activities has been the medical underwriting process and more specifically dementia screening. Dementia-related claims continue to present the single largest claim liability to LTC carriers.

Equitable Life U.K.: a Decade of Regulations and Restructuring

This report examines the Equitable Life crisis and subsequent run-off as part of a series of case studies undertaken by The Geneva Association to identify the best practices for ensuring smooth, non-disruptive resolutions, with a focus on policyholder protection and the overall stability of financial markets and economies.

Joint Statement of The Geneva Association, UNEP-FI, MCII and ClimateWise: "Global insurance industry statement on adapting to climate change in developing countries"

Four leading insurance climate change initiatives, whose combined membership includes more than a hundred of the world's leading insurers across Africa, Asia, Europe, North and South America, and Oceania, have combined their members' expertise to present this Statement.

GA and NTU Singapore Sign Cyber Research Collaboration

JOINT PRESS RELEASE The Geneva Association and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore collaborate in cyber risk insurance research (Zurich/Singapore, 26 September 2016) Leading international insurance think tank The Geneva Association and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) will jointly collaborate in cyber risk insurance research.

The Geneva Association Restates its Commitment on International Efforts to Address Climate Risk

On the eve of the COP21 in December 2015, 68 CEOs of (re)insurance companies signed The Geneva Assocation's Climate Statement, reaffirming their commitment to support the three international frameworks adopted by the member states in 2015, namely (i) the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015-2030), (ii) the 2030 Agenda for sustainable development and (iii) the Paris Agreement on Climate Change. 

Geneva Association Signs MoU with the Insurance Society of China

Leading international think tank The Geneva Association is pleased to announce that it has entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Insurance Society of China (ISC)

Under the terms of the agreement, The Geneva Association and the ISC have agreed to work together on certain insurance theoretical and practical research initiatives and share the research findings, which will promote the establishment of a platform of industry exchange, the production of studies and the integration of insurance cultures. 

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