2022 International Microinsurance Conference (Zambia)

Page 30

Report 14th International Microinsurance Conference 2018

28

Opening ceremony

Some 450 delegates from 57 countries attended the 14th International Microinsurance Conference 2018. When a microinsurance country diagnostic was conducted in Zambia in 2009, only 3.8 % of the adult population reported having insurance besides the mandatory pension and vehicle insurance , 64.4 % of the population was living with or under the equivalent of US$ 1.90 per day5, and financial inclusion of the adult population was at 23 %.6 “We have travelled a long way since then,” said Geoffrey Chirwa, chairman of the Microinsurance Technical Advisory Group (TAG), one of the local hosts of the conference. For one thing, he added, Zambia now has two million microinsurance policyholders, some 25 % of the adult population. “Various sessions of the conference will update other numbers and indicators to show our notable microinsurance development journey.”

The importance of inclusive insurance regulation in achieving this growth cannot be overestimated – a factor also reflected in the steady increase in the participation of insurance authorities in the conference over the years. Martin Libinga, registrar of Zambia’s Pensions and Insurance Authority (PIA), highlighted the importance of insurance in economic development and in managing risks by small and medium entrepreneurs. Enactment of the new insurance law, to take place in early 2019, he added, will be the base for immediate issuance of microinsurance regulations. “These are two ways in which the PIA is facilitating further market development.” The government, in addition, is implementing the National Financial Inclusion Strategy (NFIS), in which microinsurance is a fundamental pillar, said Dr. Emmanuel Pamu, permanent secretary Budget and Economic Affairs of the Ministry of Finance, addressing delegates on behalf of the Minister of Finance. “There are also other plans and platforms that the government is implementing and supporting, like the Farmer Input Support Programme (FISP), a publicprivate partnership covering over one million farmers with weather index insurance.”

Dr. Pamu added that the Ministry of Finance recognises the importance and leadership of the TAG, now registered as an insurance association that coordinates the microinsurance agenda in the country, and of the PIA as well as development agencies like Financial Sector Deepening (FSD) Zambia. These institutions have supported the government and “have seen market players becoming more willing to step out of their boardroom and interact with different market segments to design customer-centric insurance products.” Thomas Loster, chairman of Munich Re Foundation, said that the conference was a global gathering but with a distinctive African flavour. Indeed, out of the 450 delegates from 57 countries, 200 are from 20 African countries. “This is the second largest conference held in Africa. But, indicative of the conference’s value, it has attracted a number of delegates from very far away, such as Fiji and Brazil.”

24 — Geoffrey Chirwa, Chairman, TAG, Zambia 25 — Thomas Loster, Chairman, Munich Re Foundation, Germany 26 — Martin Libinga, Registrar, Pensions and Insurance Authority (PIA), Zambia 27 — Dr. Emmanuel Pamu, Permanent Secretary for Budget and Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, Zambia

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5 “Towards a strategy for microinsurance development in Zambia: a market strategy and regulatory analysis”. Cenfri and ILO, December 2009 6 World Bank Statistics


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Field trip Just click before going on a day trip – travel and burial insurance in Zambia

5min
pages 94-95

Plenary 5 Conference closing and outlook

7min
pages 91-93

Plenary 4 InsurTech: Rising to the regulatory challenge

5min
pages 88-90

Parallel session 16 Scaling agri-insurance: Insights from research

6min
pages 85-87

Parallel session 15 Creating access to trusted inclusive insurance

4min
pages 83-84

Parallel session 13 When donor money runs out: Making MI commercially viable

5min
pages 77-79

Parallel session 12 Consumer-oriented education in Ethiopia: What people want

5min
pages 75-76

Parallel session 11 Reaching smallholder farmers through contract farming

5min
pages 72-74

Parallel session 10 Insurance to support MSME development

4min
pages 70-71

Parallel session 9 Alternative client data for inclusive insurance

6min
pages 67-69

Opening ceremony

5min
pages 30-31

Parallel session 7 The business case for customer- centricity

3min
pages 56-57

Agenda 7 November 2018 Afternoon sessions

1min
page 51

Parallel session 2 Distribution

5min
pages 43-44

Plenary 2 Role of digital platforms in inclusive insurance markets

5min
pages 38-39

Plenary 1 Why does insurance matter for development?

7min
pages 34-36

Keynote Inclusive insurance should focus on important and destabilising risks

4min
pages 32-33

Pre-conference workshop Promoting cross-country knowledge exchange and regulatory dialogue

6min
pages 18-20

Academic pre-conference workshop How financial diaries can comple- ment survey data effectively

7min
pages 15-17

Pre-conference workshop Innovate for climate risk insurance

8min
pages 8-11

IPA and CGIAR Research Develop ment Workshop Aiming for products with business potential and social impact

5min
pages 26-28

Agenda 5 November 2018

2min
page 7

Foreword

2min
page 4

Agenda 6 November 2018 Morning sessions

1min
page 21

Acknowledgements

4min
pages 5-6
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