Bank of England to ease burden of EU insurance rules
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[January 11, 2018]
By Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England has
proposed easing the burden of European Union capital rules for insurers,
but the industry urged the regulator to go further and meet calls from
British lawmakers for more radical change.
The BoE's Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), which supervises banks
and insurers, published a consultation paper to lighten some reporting
requirements under the bloc's Solvency II rules.
The PRA said the proposed changes take into account recommendations for
reform made by the Association of British Insurers (ABI), and by
parliament's Treasury Select Committee.
"The PRA believes that these proposals would, in particular, reduce the
reporting burden for smaller firms," the watchdog said in its
consultation paper.
Solvency II came into force in January 2016 and was the PRA's single
biggest regulatory task at the time. The ABI has called for several
changes and has found backing from UK lawmakers.
The TSC said in a report last October that the BoE and insurers must
find common ground over proposed tweaks to keep the 1.9 trillion pound
sector in Britain competitive after the UK leaves the EU in 2019.
The PRA is too focused on capital levels and not enough on allowing
insurers to compete, the TSC said.
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A sign is displayed
outside the Bank of England in London, Britain August 4, 2016.
REUTERS/Neil Hall/File Photo/File Photo
Lawmakers want the PRA to urgently ease the "risk margin", an add-on capital
requirement to cover what a third party would need to safeguard policies if an
insurer goes bust.
But PRA Chief Executive Sam Woods has so far resisted making unilateral changes
to the risk margin, and hopes that the EU would step in before Brexit to change
the risk margin have faded.
Woods is expected to respond to the TSC report when he addresses the ABI's
annual conference on Feb. 27.
The ABI said the PRA's proposals were a "step in the right direction" after
Solvency II increased reporting requirements by four to eight times compared
with previous rules.
"There still remains plenty of opportunity for the PRA to go further to ensure
our insurance industry is able to fulfill a vital role in helping Britain thrive
post-Brexit," said Steven Findlay, the ABI's head of prudential regulation.
(Reporting by Huw Jones; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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