Life Insurance Corporation's Future Prospects|Finance|Case Study|Case Studies

Life Insurance Corporation's Future Prospects

            
 
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Case Details:

Case Code : FINC002
Case Length : 5 Pages
Period : 1999 - 2001
Pub. Date : 2002
Teaching Note : Available
Organization : LIC (Life Insurance Corporation)
Industry : Financial Services
Countries : India

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This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.



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Excerpts

Background Note

In 1956, there were 154 Indian insurers, 16 foreign insurers and 75 provident societies in the life insurance sector in the country. The life insurance business was concentrated in urban areas and served only the wealthy sections. In January 1956, the management of the 245 Indian and foreign insurers and provident societies was taken over by the Central Government. Life Insurance Corporation was formed as a government regulated monopoly in September 1956 by an Act of Parliament, (LIC Act 1956) with a capital contribution of Rs 50 million...

LIC - After IRDA

In November 1999, even as the IRDA Act was being debated in Parliament, LIC begun preparations for meeting the threat posed by private players. The company appointed consultants Booz, Allen and Hamilton to do a scenario-building exercise, suggest areas for process re-engineering, and recommend ways to sharpen customer focus. LIC gave top priority to introducing over-the-counter (OTC) facilities that would help it serve its customers better. By 2000 it had computerized and locally networked all its 2,048 branches. The speed of service delivery, particularly in the case of claims-settlement, had also improved. The total outstanding claims were brought down to 2.74% in 2000 from 3.47% in 1995...

Finance | Case Study in Management, Operations, Strategies, Finance, Case Studies

The Future

Soon after the IRDA announcements, there were a number of breakups in the private sector joint ventures.

This was largely due to IRDA rules and regulations, which stipulated that the partners to a joint venture could not disinvest from the venture for a period of seven years after the license was granted.

This meant that no there was no exit route for companies that wanted to opt out.

Also, foreign insurers were allowed only 26% equity participation. With the majority stake being with the domestic partner, foreign insurers would have little say in the management of the company and important decisions could be easily considered without them...


 

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