BOE’s Bailey Says UK’s Insurance Reforms Increase Failure Risk by 20%

The governor of the Bank of England has told lawmakers that the UK government’s plans to reform insurance capital rules increases the annual risk of a failure in the life insurance sector by around 20%.

(Bloomberg) — The governor of the Bank of England has told lawmakers that the UK government’s plans to reform insurance capital rules increases the annual risk of a failure in the life insurance sector by around 20%.

The likelihood of a failure will rise to 0.6% from 0.5% if the government’s plans to overhaul Solvency II rules are implemented, according to a letter sent by Andrew Bailey to the Treasury Committee published Monday. 

The letter noted that had the central bank’s preferred set of “reforms been taken forward, we estimate that less than half of this increase would have occurred.”

The BOE’s Prudential Regulation Authority had long opposed wide scale deregulation of Solvency II and even argued that it should be tightened up in some areas. The government’s proposed reforms — disclosed in November — went against the advice of the PRA by not tightening up certain risk measures. 

“The key decisions will now be for Parliament and we will implement those decisions faithfully,” the PRA said at the time.

Read More: City of London Gets Long-Awaited Insurer Reform, Surcharge Cut

The changes are part of plans by the government to bolster the UK’s flagship finance industry. Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt outlined in December around 30 reforms to “turbocharge growth” for the country’s banks, insurers and asset managers.

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