The Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) plans to require foreign insurance
companies to set up subsidiaries, rather than just branches, for the sale of
individual insurance policies in Taiwan. Foreign firms need only
operating fund of NT$50 million for the establishment of a Taiwanese branch,
compared with NT$2 billion for a subsidiary. The high capital requirement will
make foreign firms more cautious in entering or exiting the Taiwanese market.
Meanwhile, subsidiary possesses an independent legal status, while branch is
subject to foreign parent company.
Since the outbreak of the global
financial tsunami in 2008, five foreign life insurance firms have withdrawn from
the Taiwanese market, including ING of Holland, Aegon of Holland, Mass Mutual of
the U.S., AIG of the U.S., and Metlife of the U.S. Meanwhile, New York Life of
the U.S., Manulife of Canada, and Aviva of the U.K. also reportedly plan to
leave Taiwan. In the past three years, eight life insurance firms have exited
the Taiwanese market or plan to do so.
An FSC official noted that since
Taiwan opened up its life insurance market to foreign firms 20 years ago, the
government has been adopting a “super national treatment” to foreign firms,
allowing them to set up either subsidiary or branch, both of which can undertake
all businesses.
This, however, is not the case in many foreign
countries. Mainland China, for instance, requires that foreign life insurance
companies can enter the Chinese market only in the form of joint-venture
subsidiary, while Malaysia has also asked foreign life insurance branches to
transform into subsidiaries in recent years.
The FSC official pointed
out that life insurance firms are mainly for the sale of individual insurance
products, such as life insurance policies, and thus must have commitment for
long-term management. A branch company has limited capital and is subject to
more lax regulation by the regulator. In addition, life insurance firms must
establish multiple outlets to serve clients, for which NT$50 million of capital
is relatively insufficient.
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