Following a FIO conference on the nature of insurance regulation, and news of legislation aiming to strip federal offices of their power to regulate insurers, the American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI) said on December 14 that progress has been slow in making the state regulatory system uniform across all jurisdictions. Also, the areas of state regulation that were problematic when the trade association did a benchmark study about 12 years ago remain today, despite global economic forces that should have spurred regulatory change.
The ACLI also presented a follow-up survey of state insurance regulation in its remarks Dec. 13 to the Federal Insurance Office (FIO) of the U.S. Treasury as part of a process FIO is undertaking to get input on improving and modernizing insurance regulation under the Dodd-Frank Act.
In the ACLI's most recent assessment of member CEOs in January 2011, over 63% rated the current system of state regulation as needing improvement.
However, of 19 emerging issues, companies express the greatest concern over expanding federal regulation of insurance. Specifically, "two issues rated as important and in need of improvement in 2000 were similarly rated in 2011: policy/contract form approval and market conduct examinations," according to the study, noting that expertise/capacity is the primary reason securities valuation is rated poorly. Many areas were found seriously wanting since the 1999 study, but statutory accounting still found its way into the hearts of more than half the CEOs.