India's new Insurance Laws (Amendment) Bill 2025 drops the earlier proposal for composite licenses, allowing insurers to offer life and non-life products under one license. The Cabinet prioritized 100% FDI hike instead, streamlining reforms while deferring complex licensing changes amid regulatory consultations.
India's Insurance Laws (Amendment) Bill 2025, approved by the Union Cabinet on December 12, excludes the much-discussed composite licensing framework from earlier drafts. This shift prioritizes raising FDI to 100% from 74%, aiming to attract global capital and boost sector penetration without overhauling product silos immediately.
Key Reforms Snapshot
Retains rigid separation of life, general, and health insurers, postponing unified licenses due to RBI guidelines and industry resistance on competition.
Advances 100% FDI for foreign reinsurers and insurers, slashing entry barriers like net-owned funds from ₹5,000 crore to ₹1,000 crore.
Includes perpetual intermediary registrations and multi-insurer agent flexibility to ease distribution and cut compliance costs.
The streamlined Bill targets 'Insurance for All by 2047,' fostering innovation via foreign tech while navigating domestic pushback on composites.
Sources: Moneycontrol, Economic Times, National Herald India