Understanding Takaful byTarmidzi Bin Ahmad

From HodHood
Jump to: navigation, search

Understanding Takaful

& the Challenges Ahead

       General & Takaful Agents Convention 2007
        Berjaya Times Square Hotel & Convention Centre Kuala Lumpur
                               11th July 2007
                    by Mohd Tarmidzi bin Ahmad Nordin
                      [email protected]
                                                                    1


Contents

Part 1: Understanding takaful:

• One Scholar’s view on conventional insurance

• Modifying insurance to be Shariah compliant

• Definition of takaful

• Takaful as a concept

• Takaful in practice

• Operating Models

Part 2: The challenges ahead:

• Growing the takaful Contribution & Asset

• Financial Sector Master Plan (FSMP)

• ”Malaysia as the Islamic Financial Centre” (MIFC)

• Emergence of bancatakaful

• Meeting different customer needs

• Co-existence with conventional insurers

                                                    2


         One Scholar’s view on
         conventional insurance

According to Dr. Yusof Qaradawi:

• “Our observation that the modern form of

 insurance companies and their current practices
 are objectionable Islamically does not mean that
 Islam is against insurance; not in the least - it
 only opposes the means and methods”
                 The Lawful and The Prohibited in Islam
                            (English translation) pg.276
                                                         3


        Modifying insurance to be
           Shariah compliant (1)

According to Dr. Yusof Qaradawi:

• “In my view insurance against hazards can be
  modified in a manner which would bring it closer to
  the Islamic principle by means of a contract of
  donation with a condition of compensation”;
• “A further requirement is that the company must
  be free from usurious business”.
         – The Lawful and The Prohibited in Islam pg.276 (English
                                                      translation)
                                                                   4


        Modifying insurance to be
           Shariah compliant (2)

According to “Badan Petugas Khas”:

• “Under the Islamic insurance system, part of the

 contribution from every participant must be made
 with the intention of tabarru’ not for buying and
 selling, the existence of tabarru’, makes the
 transaction permissible and valid according to the
 Shariah.”
               Translated from the “Badan Petugas Khas” Report pg. 19

• Badan Petugas Khas’ was the special taskforce

 commissioned by the Government in 1982 to study
 the feasibility of setting up Islamic insurance in
 the Malaysia.
                                                                      5


            Takaful Act 1984

Definition of “takaful”:

• “a scheme based on brotherhood, solidarity and

 mutual assistance which provides for mutual
 financial aid and assistance to the participants in
 case of need whereby the participants mutually
 agree to contribute for that purpose.”

Definition of “takaful business” :

• “business of takaful whose aims and operations do

 not involve any element which is not approved by
 the Shariah”.
                                                     6


      Takaful as a Concept (1)
             as envisaged by some Scholars

• Concept is based on solidarity, shared responsibility

 & brotherhood among participants;

• Participants all agree to cooperate and be mutually

 responsible to help one another financially should a
 member suffer a loss defined in the policy;

• This is achieved through making contribution

 (tabarru’) to a common fund from which financial
 compensation can be paid to eligible participants;
                                                       7


      Takaful as a Concept (2)
              as envisaged by some Scholars

• Participants mutually bear the risks themselves in

 the spirit of tabarru’;

• Participants are both the insurer as well as the

 insured at the same time.

• Takaful operator does not bear the risk;

• The problem with such mutual aid concept is that

 Participants can be called upon to make additional
 contributions, if the common fund is not sufficient
 to pay the compensation / benefits guaranteed by
 the scheme.
                                                     8


        Takaful in practice
               (modified mutuality concept)

• Participants would not be asked to pay additional

 contributions even if the takaful fund is in a deficit.

• Instead, Takaful Operator will provide interest free loan

 (Qard Hassan) to make up the deficit.

• Participants are not involved in the day to day operation

 or in the management of the takaful funds;

• The management of the takaful fund is delegated the

 Takaful Operator (Takaful Nasional or Mayban Takaful).
                                                           9


Remuneration for the

 Takaful Operator
       • Fixed fee;
       • Actual cost incurred;
       • Percentage of:
          – Contribution paid;
          – Underwriting surplus;
          – Investment income;
       • Combination of the above;
       • Mode must be pre-agreed and
         transparent.
       • To facilitate the remuneration,
         one or more contracts can be
         put in place between the
         takaful operator and the
         participants.                   10


Transparency of contract
        Contract between the           Contract between
       Participants themselves         Participants & TO.

Participant

                                            Takaful Operator

Participant

Participant •Wakalah or (agency)

                          Takaful Fund     contract for managing

Participant the fund

                          •General

Participant

                                           •Other contracts may

Participant •Family also be used such as

                                           Mudharabah, Wadi’ah

Participant or Waqaf for example

Participant

                                          •or other contracts not
                                          forbidden by the
    Tabarru’ Contract
                                          Shariah                 11


Two Operating Models Allowed

Takaful Operators in Malaysia are free to choose

different operating structures.

                    9 Takaful Operators
                     2 Operating Models
      MUDHARABAH                              WAKALAH
     Profit Sharing Contract                Fee Based Contract
                        Additional Difference
             •Payment of operating fees
             •Surplus sharing structures                       12


         Definition of Mudharabah

• Mudharabah is a profit sharing

 contract whereby one party
 provides the capital (Ras ‘ul maal)
 and the other party provides the
 expertise (Mudharib).

• Any profit from the venture is

 shared between the parties on a
 pre-agreed ratio e.g. 50:50, 60:40
 etc. Losses, however are borne
 solely by the capital provider.

• In the context of takaful,

 participants are the capital
 provider    while    the    Takaful
 Operator provides the expertise
 to manage the Takaful Fund.
                                     13


               Mudharabah Model (STMB)
                              General Takaful Operation
                       Investment Income                                Participants
                     Takaful Fund (TF)                                              40 % of Profit
              Less

Payment of Underwriting cost & reserves

Contribution •Retakaful

by Participant •Claims (paid & outstanding + IBNR) Gross Profit

(based on •Reserves (UPR) (if any)

tabarru’ and

Mudharabah Provisions

contract) •doubtful debt

              •diminution in investment value     Qard Hassan
                                                  to cover deficit
                                                                                  60 % of Profit
                                                                   Shareholder Fund (SF)
                                                        + Share of profits (if any)
                                                        + Investment income of SF
                                                        - Actual Management Expenses
                                                                                                   14


    Mudharabah Model Declaration (STMB)

• I/We hereby agree that on the basis of Al-Mudharabah and other related

 principles of the Syarak the Takaful Contribution which I/we hereby
 undertake to pay to STMB (Company) be credited into the Takaful Fund of
 the Company for the Company to manage the various schemes of takaful
 under its General Takaful Business including the investment of the said fund
 in the manner deemed fit by the Company, and in the consideration thereof
 I/We be entitled to share the net profit of the fund if any, in a proportion
 40% to Me/Us and 60% to the Company provided always that I/We            not
 incurred any claims and/or received any benefits under the Takaful contract
 whilst the same is in force, and in relation therefrom I/We also agree that
 any part of the said Takaful Contribution including its profit be made as
 tabarru’ for the Company to pay Takaful benefits to any Takaful Participant
 who shall be entitled to such benefits in accordance with the Takaful
                                                                              15
 contract.


         Definition of Wakalah

• Wakalah is a contract

 whereby one party
 acts on behalf of
 another for a fee.

• In the context of

 takaful, the takaful
 operator manages the
 Takaful Fund on behalf
 of the participant for
 a fixed fee called a
 ‘wakalah fee’.
                               16


             Transparent & Clear
             Contributions             • The participant as a
                                         party to the wakalah
                                         contract agrees that the
                                         takaful operator may
                                         take a portion of the
                                         contribution          as
                                         remuneration         for

Wakalah Fee: services provided:

•Mgmt Exp – Wakalah Fee;

•Comm (OCC)

                                          – Performance Fee    (if
                                            any);
                       Takaful Fund:
                       •tabarru’ to    • The fee scale must be
                       Family or         transparent and agreed

Performance General Takaful to at the time of

Fee: Fund participation.

•From surplus

share if any. 17


            Wakalah Model - General
                       Investment Income                          Participants
                         Takaful Fund (TF)                                    50 % of Surplus
                            (100 - Y) %
              Underwriting cost & reserves

Payment of •retakaful

Contribution •claims

by Participant •reserves Surplus

(based on (if any)

tabarru’ and Provisions

Wakalah •doubtful debt

contract) •diminution in investment value

                                              Qard Hassan
              Less : Surplus Equalisation
                                              to cover deficit
                     Reserve
                                                                             50 % of Surplus
                        Wakalah Fee (Y%)                     Shareholder Fund (SF)
                                                    + Wakalah fee
                                                    + Share of surplus (if any)
                                                    + Investment income of SF
                                                    - Commission
                                                    - Actual mgmt. expenses
                                                                                              18


             Declaration by the Participant
                   in Proposal Form (TNSB)

• I agree to participate in this general takaful scheme based on the principle of

 takaful and to pay the contribution on the basis of tabarru’ (donation) for the
 purpose of helping other participants who have suffered tragedy and with this
 contribution, I am entitled to the takaful cover as expressed in the terms and
 conditions of this takaful contract.

• I further agree that my contribution be credited into the General Takaful Fund

 (Fund) and to elect Takaful Nasional Sdn. Bhd. (TNSB) to invest and manage the
 Fund according to the principles of the Shariah. I also permit TNSB to make
 payment of claims/takaful benefits, provisions and reserves based on the
 guidelines and policies laid down by the authorities and TNSB to be paid a
 wakalah fee based on the rate of Y% of the contribution.

• If at the end of each financial year, there is a surplus of income over liabilities

 in the Fund, I agree that TNSB receive 50% of it as incentive while the balance
 50% will be reserved for distribution amongst participants subject to the terms
 of this contract and fixed by the authorities.                                      19


               Sharing of Surplus
             & Qard Hassan clause
   in the Takaful Certificate (TNSB)

• If at the end of each financial year, there is a surplus of

 income over liabilities in the Fund as set out in condition 10 of
 this Certificate, We will receive 50% of the surplus as
 incentive for operating and being responsible for the
 management of the Fund. The balance of 50% will be reserved
 for distribution amongst participants. But if the Fund is not
 sufficient to meet its takaful obligations, We will provide an
 interest free loan from Our standby capital as required by the
 authorities. This loan will be repaid by the Fund from future
 surpluses.
                                                                   20


                     Challenge of growing the Contribution
                          Net Contribution                                              › Average annual rate of
              2000                                                                      contribution growth of 24.5%
              1800                                                                      (2001-2006)
                                                                                        › Market penetration rose to
              1600
 RM million
              1400
              1200                                                                      5.6% from 5.1% (2004)
              1000                                                                      › Combined contribution
               800                                                                      increase by 21.4% to RM1.7
                                                                                        billion
               600
               400
               200                                                                      › The increase in the market
                 0                                                                      penetration is a
                     98   99   00    01   02   03     04     05     06
                                                                          Year          manifestation of growing
                           General                   Family                             awareness of the public on
                                                                                        the benefit of the takaful
                                                                                        scheme
                                                                           Market
Market 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006                                                 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
                                                                         Penetration

Share (%) 4.8 5.6 5.4 5.1 5.4 6.1 2.5 3.2 3.8 4.5 5.1 5.6

                                                                            (%)
                                                                                                               21
                                                    Note: 2006 figures are based on forecast only


                      Challenge of growing the Assets
                              Assets
            8000
            7000
                                                                          › Total Takaful assets
            6000

RM million

            5000                                                          continued to increase at
            4000                                                          growth rate of 17.9% in
            3000                                                          2006.
            2000
                                                                          › Total Takaful Assets has
                                                                          grown to RM7.04 billion to
                                                                          account for 6.1% of total
            1000
               0                                                          assets of insurance
                                                                          sector.
                   96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06            Year
                       General            Family
 Market 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Share (%) 5.0 5.3 5.6 5.6 5.7 6.1
                                                                                                   22
                                      Note: 2006 figures are based on forecast only


                  Market Structure
             Reinsurance           Composite                   General
                  9                       9                         27
 Takaful
Operators                                                                           Life
   5+4                                                                                  7
                         The industry                                                Loss
 Brokers                                                                         Adjusters
    35                                                                                 40
          International Offshore Financial Centre (I.O.F.C.)

Reinsurance

                                                                                        Other*
   24
                                  General / Life /                                          1
                Captive                                             Brokers
                   4         Underwriting Managers                     14
                                           9
                                                                                                23
                         * Recoveries Management (L) Ltd.
                         Information Source: MNRB - The Malaysian Insurance Directory 2004-2005


  Challenge: Financial Sector Master Plan (FSMP)

“To create an efficient, progressive and comprehensive Islamic financial system

that contributes significantly to the effectiveness and efficiency of the Malaysian

financial sector while meeting the economic needs of the nation.”

                                           2010
    Increase takaful market share to 20%
    Strong and highly capitalised operators offering broad range of
    products
    Comprehensive & conducive Shariah & regulatory framework
    Pool of high-calibre management teams with required expertise
    Malaysia as regional Islamic financial centre
              PHASE I                        PHASE II                     PHASE III
  Enhance domestic                Instill greater
                                                                 Liberalisation     24
 capacity & capability             competition
                              Slide courtesy of Tuan Syed Moheeb


   Challenge of making “Malaysia as the
  International Islamic Financial Centre”

• Bank Negara Malaysia launched the “Malaysia as the

 International Islamic Financial Centre (MIFC) initiative in
 August 2006.

• This initiative provides Islamic banks and insurers, with tax

 incentives to set up an International Currency Business Unit
 (ICBU) to venture into offshore Islamic banking and Takaful
 business.

• ICBU allows takaful companies to operate internationally

 using international currencies. This gives takaful operators
 the advantage of quickly spreading and disseminating
 business offerings to the international public and customers,
 anywhere in the world, without having to go through the
 setting up of a local representative.
                                                               25


                    Challenge: Emergence of bancatakaful
                    Year 2004                                  Year 2005
                                                                 Others
                       Others
                                                                  1.8%
            Brokers     0.6%                        Brokers
            14.6%                                    14.2%
                                                                          Direct
                                                                         Business
  Agents                                                                  44.3%
  17.3%                                     Agents
                                            19.3%
                                 Direct

Bancatakaful Business

  6.5%                           61.0%
                                                  Bancatakaful
                                                     20.4%
    Strong growth in 2005 was supported by three main distribution channel:
    • Emergence of Bancatakaful;
    • Strong performance by Agents & Brokers;
    • Direct Business continue to be a dominant distribution channel.            26


  Challenge of meeting different
               customer needs
                                    Shariah compliance
  Competitive pricing                  Surplus sharing
Well trained personnel                   Good Deeds

Attractive product features

    Prompt delivery
     Trusted Brand
      Easy Access
     Extra Benefits
               Different strokes for different folks
                                                       27


   Value proposition                         (additional)

1. Shariah Compliance

• Takaful was introduced to meet the demands of Muslims to

  conduct their economic activities in line with Shariah. They
  would value an alternative solution that:
   – is just as attractive, if not better than that offered by
     conventional insurance yet at the same time;
   – does not contravene the Shariah especially in respect of
     investments.

• Such solution will be especially valued by those who have

  some doubts about the permissibility of insurance.
                                                               28


   Value proposition                    (additional)

2. Sharing of Surplus

• Takaful operators in Malaysia offer to share the net

 surplus of income over liabilities in the takaful fund
 at the end of each year according to a pre-agreed
 ratio such as 50:50, 40:60 etc.

• Customers irrespective of faith can be delighted with

 the prospect of receiving some experience refund at
 the end of the day.
                                                        29


    Value proposition                                        (additional)

3. Doing Good Deeds

• People are generally happy (to know) that their contribution would go into a

  pool to help others in need.

• Muslims believe that helping others is an act of piety to be rewarded by the

  All-Mighty.

• Takaful benefits not just the living but also for the deceased.

• For example the deceased can also derive eternal benefits if the policy

  proceeds used as follows:
   –  Settlement of outstanding debts.
   –  Payment of outstanding zakat (tithes);
   –  Performance of the Haaj;
   –  Purchase of useful property for purpose of waqaf;
   –  Do other good deeds such as helping orphans, poor etc.

• Products from “cradle to the hereafter”.

                                                                               30


           Differentiation Strategy

• To remain competitive takaful must strive to offer value that

 conventional insurance cannot;

• Customers, staff and sales force must be made aware of the

 connection between the worldly act of ‘buying / selling’ takaful and
 the spiritual benefits by having the right intention (niat).

• Crucial to have well trained employees and sales force who are

 motivated not by just salaries or commissions alone but by a sense
 of mission.

• The staff and sales force must believe that providing a Shariah

 compliant alternative to insurance is more than just a job but a
 religious obligation (fard kifayah).
                                                                      31


Challenge of co-existence
       e.g. Maybank Insurance & Takaful Sector
                     Mayban
                       Fortis

MNI TN

   MGA                 MLA                MTB
    Insurance                                  Takaful
                                                          32


33