he International Association of Insurance Supervisors’ (IAIS) executive committee has revealed its four overarching priorities for the coming years, together with leadership reappointments and the addition of five new members to the IAIS
Its
first priority is risk assessment and the maintenance of financial stability,
including ongoing assessment of potential vulnerabilities arising from the
impact of Covid-19. Secondly, delivering on key post-crisis reforms, including
further refinement of the insurance capital standard during the current
five-year monitoring period and the consistent implementation of the holistic
framework.
The
third priority is addressing the risks and opportunities of key trends,
especially those accelerated by the Covid-19 crisis, like technological
innovation, cyber risk, climate risk and financial inclusion to address the
protection gap, said IAIS. It added that diversity and inclusion and helping
emerging market and developing economies shift to risk-based supervision will
also factor heavily in its work. And finally, “implementation support and
assessment, specifically reinforcing our extensive programme of member support
to help insurance supervisors understand and implement our standards”.
The
IAIS said these priorities will be codified in the IAIS Roadmap 2021-2022,
which will be published in early 2021.
“Despite the impact of Covid-19, the IAIS met
its key milestones in 2020 and is well positioned to deliver on its future work
plan,” said Vicky Saporta, chair of the IAIS executive committee. “Our future
work is focused on the ongoing assessment of potential vulnerabilities arising
from Covid-19, the finalisation and implementation of key reforms, and
supporting our members in responding to accelerating trends like climate change
and digital transformation.”
At
the association’s recent annual general meeting, five new members joined the
IAIS: Agência Angolana de Regulação e Supervisão de Seguros (Angola); Financial
Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario (Canada); International Financial
Services Centres Authority (India); National Bank of Ukraine (Ukraine); and the
Insurance and Pensions Commission (Zimbabwe).
The
meeting also saw the IAIS elect new executive committee members. Ms Saporta,
executive director, prudential policy at the Bank of England, was re-elected as
chair of the IAIS executive committee for a third term for a period of two
years, and Jonathan Dixon was reappointed as IAIS secretary general for a
further three years.
The
IAIS also became the first global standard-setting body to adopt an
environmental policy aimed at guiding its own performance on environmental
issues. The policy sets out clear objectives and metrics by which to measure
progress in the reduction of the IAIS’s carbon footprint.
Mr
Dixon said: “As with all our members and stakeholders, this has been an
incredibly demanding year, but we have demonstrated continued delivery,
supported by a rapid adjustment to the new normal of remote work and virtual
engagements. Covid-19 has underscored the importance of being able to find
global solutions to global challenges, and the importance of international
cooperation, collaboration and being able to speak a common supervisory
language. Our global efforts are more important than ever.”
IAIS
© IAIS - International Association of Insurance Supervisors
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