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IRDAI’s Reinsurance Advisory Committe reconstituted with A.V. Girija Kumar as chairman

by AIP Online Bureau | Jan 29, 2026 | Eco/Invest/Demography, Indian News, Non-Life, Regulation, Reinsurance | 2 comments

The other members of the committee are- T. L. Alamelu,former, member, IRDAI, Praveen Vashishta,former CEO & MD at Howden Insurance Brokers India, Roopam Asthana,former CEO at Liberty General Insurance

Hyderabad:The Indian insurance regulator IRDAI has reconstituted its Reinsurance Advisory Committee (RAC) under the chairmanship of A. V. Giri Kumar,Former CMD at the Oriental Insurance.

The other members of the committee are T. L. Alamelu,former, mmber, IRDAI, Praveen Vashishta,former CEO & MD at Howden Insurance Brokers India, Roopam Asthana,former CEO at Liberty General Insurance,

The committee has been constituted with immediate effect and the tenure of the committee will be for a period of three years.

The committee is constituted with immediate effect and its tenure shall be for a period of three years.

The committee advises the IRDAI) on developing regulations, policies, and frameworks for the reinsurance sector to ensure stability, growth, and proper risk management. It focuses on strengthening the reinsurance market structure, improving technical competence, and facilitating orderly development in India’s insurance industry.

The Indian reinsurance market reached a size of ₹1,12,305 crore ($13.3 billion) in the fiscal year 2024–25, exhibiting an 11% year-on-year growth. Driven by regulatory reforms, this market is projected to expand further, with Foreign Reinsurer Branches (FRBs) increasing their market share, while state-owned GIC Re remains the leading player. 

2 Comments

  1. Mohan L Lunawat
    Mohan L Lunawat on January 30, 2026 at 4:42 am

    Good development.
    Should be helpful in orderly market growth, compliance and consumer protection.

    Reply
  2. Basant Kumar Nayak
    Basant Kumar Nayak on February 2, 2026 at 9:13 am

    15% of the direct business of each insurance companies should be ceded among the direct insurers in India (criss cross – yours’ is ours and mine is yours) in specified proportions to increase retention of RI business in India itself with a great cushion effect of the insured losses.

    The Treaty RI companies should also have a say in controlling underwriting quality and boosting claims management efficiency in order to have uniform business practices across the country.

    Reply

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