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Brief History
Of Insurance
The story of insurance
is probably as old as the story of mankind. The same
instinct that prompts modern businessmen today to secure
themselves against loss and disaster existed in primitive
men also. They too sought to avert the evil consequences
of fire and flood and loss of life and were willing
to make some sort of sacrifice in order to achieve security.
Though the concept of insurance is largely a development
of the recent past, particularly after the industrial
era – past few centuries – yet its beginnings
date back almost 6000 years.
Life Insurance in its
modern form came to India from England in the year 1818.
Oriental Life Insurance Company started by Europeans
in Calcutta was the first life insurance company on
Indian Soil. All the insurance companies established
during that period were brought up with the purpose
of looking after the needs of European community and
Indian natives were not being insured by these companies.
However, later with the efforts of eminent people like
Babu Muttylal Seal, the foreign life insurance companies
started insuring Indian lives. But Indian lives were
being treated as sub-standard lives and heavy extra
premiums were being charged on them. Bombay Mutual Life
Assurance Society heralded the birth of first Indian
life insurance company in the year 1870, and covered
Indian lives at normal rates. Starting as Indian enterprise
with highly patriotic motives, insurance companies came
into existence to carry the message of insurance and
social security through insurance to various sectors
of society. Bharat Insurance Company (1896) was also
one of such companies inspired by nationalism. The Swadeshi
movement of 1905-1907 gave rise to more insurance companies.
The United India in Madras, National Indian and National
Insurance in Calcutta and the Co-operative Assurance
at Lahore were established in 1906. In 1907, Hindustan
Co-operative Insurance Company took its birth in one
of the rooms of the Jorasanko, house of the great poet
Rabindranath Tagore, in Calcutta. The Indian Mercantile,
General Assurance and Swadeshi Life (later Bombay Life)
were some of the companies established during the same
period. Prior to 1912 India had no legislation to regulate
insurance business. In the year 1912, the Life Insurance
Companies Act, and the Provident Fund Act were passed.
The Life Insurance Companies Act, 1912 made it necessary
that the premium rate tables and periodical valuations
of companies should be certified by an actuary. But
the Act discriminated between foreign and Indian companies
on many accounts, putting the Indian companies at a
disadvantage.
The first two decades
of the twentieth century saw lot of growth in insurance
business. From 44 companies with total business-in-force
as Rs.22.44 crore, it rose to 176 companies with total
business-in-force as Rs.298 crore in 1938. During the
mushrooming of insurance companies many financially
unsound concerns were also floated which failed miserably.
The Insurance Act 1938 was the first legislation governing
not only life insurance but also non-life insurance
to provide strict state control over insurance business.
The demand for nationalization of life insurance industry
was made repeatedly in the past but it gathered momentum
in 1944 when a bill to amend the Life Insurance Act
1938 was introduced in the Legislative Assembly. However,
it was much later on the 19th of January, 1956, that
life insurance in India was nationalized. About 154
Indian insurance companies, 16 non-Indian companies
and 75 provident were operating in India at the time
of nationalization. Nationalization was accomplished
in two stages; initially the management of the companies
was taken over by means of an Ordinance, and later,
the ownership too by means of a comprehensive bill.
The Parliament of India passed the Life Insurance Corporation
Act on the 19th of June 1956, and the Life Insurance
Corporation of India was created on 1st September, 1956,
with the objective of spreading life insurance much
more widely and in particular to the rural areas with
a view to reach all insurable persons in the country,
providing them adequate financial cover at a reasonable
cost.
LIC had 5 zonal offices,
33 divisional offices and 212 branch offices, apart
from its corporate office in the year 1956. Since life
insurance contracts are long term contracts and during
the currency of the policy it requires a variety of
services need was felt in the later years to expand
the operations and place a branch office at each district
headquarter. re-organization of LIC took place and large
numbers of new branch offices were opened. As a result
of re-organisation servicing functions were transferred
to the branches, and branches were made accounting units.
It worked wonders with the performance of the corporation.
It may be seen that from about 200.00 crores of New
Business in 1957 the corporation crossed 1000.00 crores
only in the year 1969-70, and it took another 10 years
for LIC to cross 2000.00 crore mark of new business.
But with re-organisation happening in the early eighties,
by 1985-86 LIC had already crossed 7000.00 crore Sum
Assured on new policies.
Today LIC functions with
2048 fully computerized branch offices, 100 divisional
offices, 7 zonal offices and the Corporate office. LIC’s
Wide Area Network covers 100 divisional offices and
connects all the branches through a Metro Area Network.
LIC has tied up with some Banks and Service providers
to offer on-line premium collection facility in selected
cities. LIC’s ECS and ATM premium payment facility
is an addition to customer convenience. Apart from on-line
Kiosks and IVRS, Info Centres have been commissioned
at Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad,
Kolkata, New Delhi, Pune and many other cities. With
a vision of providing easy access to its policyholders,
LIC has launched its SATELLITE SAMPARK offices. The
satellite offices are smaller, leaner and closer to
the customer. The digitalized records of the satellite
offices will facilitate anywhere servicing and many
other conveniences in the future.
LIC continues to be the
dominant life insurer even in the liberalized scenario
of Indian insurance and is moving fast on a new growth
trajectory surpassing its own past records. LIC has
issued over one crore policies during the current year.
It has crossed the milestone of issuing 1,01,32,955
new policies by 15th Oct, 2005, posting a healthy growth
rate of 16.67% over the corresponding period of the
previous year.
From then to now, LIC
has crossed many milestones and has set unprecedented
performance records in various aspects of life insurance
business. The same motives which inspired our forefathers
to bring insurance into existence in this country inspire
us at LIC to take this message of protection to light
the lamps of security in as many homes as possible and
to help the people in providing security to their families.
Some of the important milestones in the
life insurance business in India are:
1818: Oriental Life Insurance
Company, the first life insurance company on Indian
soil started functioning.
1870: Bombay Mutual Life
Assurance Society, the first Indian life insurance company
started its business.
1912: The Indian Life
Assurance Companies Act enacted as the first statute
to regulate the life insurance business.
1928: The Indian Insurance
Companies Act enacted to enable the government to collect
statistical information about both life and non-life
insurance businesses.
1938: Earlier legislation
consolidated and amended to by the Insurance Act with
the objective of protecting the interests of the insuring
public.
1956: 245 Indian and foreign
insurers and provident societies are taken over by the
central government and nationalised. LIC formed by an
Act of Parliament, viz. LIC Act, 1956, with a capital
contribution of Rs. 5 crore from the Government of India.
The General insurance
business in India, on the other hand, can trace its
roots to the Triton Insurance Company Ltd., the first
general insurance company established in the year 1850
in Calcutta by the British.
Some of the
important milestones in the general insurance business
in India are:
1907: The Indian Mercantile
Insurance Ltd. set up, the first company to transact
all classes of general insurance business.
1957: General Insurance
Council, a wing of the Insurance Association of India,
frames a code of conduct for ensuring fair conduct and
sound business practices.
1968: The Insurance Act
amended to regulate investments and set minimum solvency
margins and the Tariff Advisory Committee set up.
1972: The General Insurance
Business (Nationalisation) Act, 1972 nationalised the
general insurance business in India with effect from
1st January 1973.
107 insurers amalgamated
and grouped into four companies viz. the National Insurance
Company Ltd., the New India Assurance Company Ltd.,
the Oriental Insurance Company Ltd. and the United India
Insurance Company Ltd. GIC incorporated as a company.
For more details please contact info@lifeinsurancecorporation.net
| Source - Life Insurance Corporation of India, LIC India. |
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