Non-resident Indians and Insurance..!
By Mr. CL Baradhwaj, Bharti AXA Life Insurance
A non-resident Indian (NRI) is defined as a
citizen of India who resides outside India, usually for employment or /
business purposes.
As per the income tax act, a person is not a
resident of India if he/she is not in India for a period of 182 days during the
preceding year.
NRIs primarily live outside the country for the
purpose of earning income and repatriate their earnings to India, with the
primary intention of returning to India at some point later in their lives
either after retirement or before.
Normally they visit the country once a year and
invest their money primarily in India.
These NRIs have a strong affinity towards the
brands in India and are very much associated with Indian products and services,
including insurance.
The current regulatory provisions of IRDAI
provide for the following forms of offices abroad:
* Representative offices or / liaison offices
abroad:
* These
offices normally undertake only promotional activities to educate customers
about insurance products and act as an extended arm of the Indian insurance
companies.
* Foreign branch offices..!
Indian
insurance companies are allowed to set up foreign branch offices which can
source business from NRIs and issue insurance policies to them.
Further, the branch offices act as one window of
policy servicing for all the policyholders serviced by that location.
* Foreign insurance companies..!
CL Baradhwaj, Bharti AXA Life Insurance |
These are
promoted by Indian insurance companies which are registered in foreign
countries, licensed / registered under the local laws of the country to sell
insurance policies to local residents as well as NRIs.
NRI population..!
As per the statistics published by the ministry
of overseas Indian affairs as of January 2015, the number of NRIs is estimated
to be about 1.13 crore spread across 206 countries.
Nearly 28 lakh NRIs live in Saudi Arabia alone
while another 20 lakh stay in UAE and 12.72 lakh in the US.
Some insurance companies, which have banks as
their distributors, have opened representative offices primarily to service
their overseas bank branch customers buying insurance products.
Of late, some insurance companies have started
applying for the foreign branch office model.
LIC has promoted foreign subsidiaries in places
like Bahrain and Nepal.
In order to provide a better customer choice,
there is scope for many other insurance companies tapping the NRI segment.
Online purchase..!
With the advent of tablets and smartphones,
products comparisons online have become a lot easier and less time consuming.
Intermediaries like web aggregators enable
product comparisons online and enable informed decision by customers. For
customers requiring assistance for buying online, tele assistance is available.
Further, the need for physically signed
applications can be eliminated for online cases, eliminating paperwork.
Premium payments are made online through online
payment gateways. If the NRI is able to access, review insurance products
online and make purchase from the country where they reside, it would be an
effective alternative option.
The above online process would not only be
convenient and smarter from an NRI customer perspective, it would also promote
competition, thereby expanding the customers’ choice.
An appropriate regulatory framework would go a
long way in promoting the online channel for NRIs.
About the author..
The writer is senior vice-president, compliance,
& chief risk officer, Bharti AXA Life Insurance
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