Budget 2025: FDI limit for insurance sector raised to 100%

ANI February 1, 2025 321 views

The latest budget has a game-changing announcement for India's insurance sector, with FDI limits set to jump from 74% to 100%. This move is expected to attract more foreign investments and help expand insurance coverage across the country. The government plans to simplify existing investment regulations to make the sector more attractive. By 2047, the goal is to achieve "Insurance for All" and reduce financial risks for citizens.

"The FDI limit for the insurance sector will be raised from 74 to 100 per cent" - Nirmala Sitharaman, Finance Minister
New Delhi, February 1: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her Budget speech today, announced raising FDI limits for insurance for insurance sector from 74 per cent to 100 per cent, though with certain restrictions.

Key Points

1

Increased foreign investment to support nationwide insurance coverage

2

Regulatory guardrails to be simplified and reviewed

3

Targets comprehensive insurance protection by 2047

4

Aims to reduce out-of-pocket healthcare expenses

"The FDI limit for the insurance sector will be raised from 74 to 100 per cent. This enhanced limit will be available for those companies which invest the entire premium in India. The current guardrails and conditionalities associated with foreign investment will be reviewed and simplified," she said.

The central government had in November floated a few proposals for the insurance sector, including raising the FDI limit in Indian insurance companies from 74 per cent to 100 per cent, and enabling an insurer to carry on one or more classes of insurance business and activities.

The government had invited comments on the proposed amendments to the Insurance Act, 1938, the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956, and Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority Act, 1999.

Insurance sector regulator Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDAI) has committed to achieving "Insurance for All" by 2047.

A significant portion of India's citizens and insurable assets remain uninsured, increasing the risks of high out-of-pocket expenses, placing a considerable burden on public finances. This raise in FDI is expected to support the cause.

The budget session of parliament that began on January 31 and, according to schedule, will end on April 4. The budget speech outlined the government's fiscal policies, revenue and expenditure proposals, taxation reforms, and other significant announcements.

With this Budget Presentation, Sitharaman has presented her eighth budget.

India's economy is projected to grow between 6.3 per cent and 6.8 per cent in the next financial year 2025-26, said Economic Survey 2024-25, tabled in Parliament on Friday.

In another key guidance, the Economic Survey suggested that India needs to grow around 8 per cent for a decade or two to achieve its Viksit Bharat dreams, at a time when the country's growth showed weak progress in the first two quarters of the current financial year.

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