Key Points

The GST Council is considering multiple proposals to reduce the current 18% tax on health and term insurance premiums. A full exemption could lower premiums by around 15%, making insurance more affordable for consumers. However, insurers may face short-term profitability pressure due to slower repricing of existing policies. Despite near-term challenges, lower premiums are expected to boost insurance adoption and support financial inclusion goals in the long run.

Key Points: GST Cut on Insurance Premiums May Lower Health Term Costs

  • GST Council may reduce 18% insurance premium tax rate
  • Full exemption could cut health premiums by 15%
  • Insurers face 3-6% impact on combined ratios
  • Government may lose $1.2-1.4 billion in annual revenue
  • Lower premiums expected to boost insurance demand long-term
  • Standalone health insurers to see higher impact than multiline
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GST cut on Insurance premiums may lower costs, insurers brace for near-term impact: Report

GST Council considers cutting insurance premium tax from 18%, potentially lowering health and term insurance costs for consumers while insurers face short-term margin pressure.

"We think a large part of the impact would be transitionary due to slower back book repricing - HSBC Report"

New Delhi September 3

Health and term insurance premiums may become cheaper if the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council approves rate cuts at its meeting, which began here on Wednesday.

However, according to a report by HSBC Securities and Capital Markets (India), insurance companies are likely to face short-term pressure on profitability due to slower repricing of existing policies.

The two-day meeting of the GST Council began here on Wednesday and it is expected to consider multiple scenarios for GST reductions. Currently, health and term insurance products attract a GST rate of 18 per cent.

Various proposals which have been referred to the council include complete exemption without input tax credit (ITC), a 5 per cent slab with or without ITC, or a 12 per cent rate with ITC.

HSBC's analysis suggests that a full exemption could reduce health insurance premiums by around 15 per cent. Even a moderate 6 per cent rate cut under the 12 per cent GST with ITC scenario could ease costs for policyholders. However, the government may face a revenue shortfall of USD 1.2-1.4 billion annually from GST on premiums if exemptions are granted, noted the report.

While lower premiums are expected to boost demand, insurance companies could see a 3-6 per cent impact on combined ratios (CR) in the retail health segment, primarily due to slower repricing of renewals which may take 12-18 months.

The expense ratios of insurers will also play an important role in determining transmission depending if ITC is available or not.

"Standalone health insurers would see a relatively higher impact than multi-line insurers, largely on high exposure to retail health," noted the report, though growth prospects improve in the long run.

"We think a large part of the impact would be transitionary due to slower back book repricing," the report added.

The report concludes that GST cuts, if implemented, could bring long-term gains for both insurers and consumers, despite short-term margin pressures. Improved affordability may encourage more households to purchase health cover, supporting broader financial inclusion goals.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Finally some relief for common people! Insurance premiums have been rising every year while salaries haven't kept pace. This move will help more Indians get insured 💪
A
Arjun K
While lower premiums are welcome, I hope insurance companies don't find other ways to recover their margins. The IRDAI should ensure that the full benefit is passed to consumers.
N
Nisha Z
Good move for financial inclusion! Many small business owners and self-employed people avoid insurance due to high costs. This could change that mindset 👍
M
Michael C
The short-term impact on insurers is understandable, but long-term growth prospects look positive. More insured population means better risk distribution and sustainable business model.
S
Sneha F
Hope they implement this quickly! My health insurance renewal is due next month and even a 5-6% reduction would help in these inflationary times 🏥

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