National Conference of State Legislatures - The Forum for America's Ideas
Issues & Research » Banking, Insurance & Financial Services » NCSL Insurance Regulation Task Force Overview
Go 12531
Share Send a comment

Executive Committee Task Force to Streamline and Simplify Insurance Regulation

(Active from August 2001 to July 2003)

 


Scope

Historical Background

NCSL Task Force

Pre-Annual Meeting Conference Calls

Meeting Information and Documents

NCSL Staff Contact


To view PDF files, you must install Adobe Acrobat Reader.


The NCSL Executive Committee established the Task Force to Streamline and Simplify Insurance Regulation in August 2001 to examine the future of state insurance regulation. The Task Force -- chaired by Senator Kemp Hannon of New York and Representative Frank Mautino of Illiniois -- is directed to undertake four primary objectives:

  1. Explore the issues that confront state insurance regulation and the business of insurance in the changing financial marketplace, including integration, consolidation, electronic commerce and globalization;
  2. Coordinate with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) and the National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL);
  3. Formulate an NCSL statement of principles with regard to preserving the primacy of state insurance regulation against congressional and industry efforts to establish a federal insurance regulator and to preempt state insurance and consumer protection laws; and,
  4. Consider reforms that would allow insurance companies to compete more effectively in the financial marketplace and to respond with innovation and flexibility to market forces while maintaining and improving strong consumer protections.

The Task Force was reauthorized for one year on July 23, 2002, at the NCSL Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado.

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

For over 150 years, states have held the sole authority to regulate the business of insurance. The McCarran-Ferguson Act in 1945 established the states' exclusive role as regulators of insurance as a matter of federal law. States insurance regulation has been successful and effective. However, there have been a number of occasions within the last two decades when either some within the insurance industry or Congress have tried to repeal McCarran-Ferguson or to set up a dual system of insurance regulation, similar to the present system for state and federally chartered banks. States have successfully withstood massive preemption of state authority to regulate insurance, but there has been some leakage through such federal laws as the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) and the Financial Modernization Act of 1999.

In the early 1990s, states faced the last great push to preempt state regulatory authority for insurance. Running parallel to the federal savings and loans crash were a number of major insurer insolvencies, which were tied to some of the same people enmeshed in the S & L debacle. Unfortunately, the insolvencies occurred in states where insurance regulation was weak and at a time when there was little coordination among state departments of insurance. The Commerce Committee of the United States House of Representatives, then chaired by Representative John Dingell of Michigan, held numerous hearings on the problems of state insurance regulation and Rep. Dingell introduced legislation to establish a federal insurance administration.

At that same time, the NCSL Executive Committee established a special task force to review the status of state insurance regulation and to make recommendations. The task force working with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners drafted and recommended 11 model bills for state legislative consideration to strengthen state regulation, to reduce some of the filing burdens on multi-state insurers and to allow for greater coordination among state insurance departments. The NCSL Executive Committee unanimously accepted the recommendations. This was the first time in the history of NCSL that it endorsed state legislation, and it was successful. Within two years of the NCSL endorsement of the model bills, virtually all states had enacted model legislation. This swift action by NCSL, NAIC, and the state legislatures was successful in stemming the tide of insolvencies and averting congressional action to establish a federal insurance regulator.

States today do not face a catastrophe of major insolvencies as the primary threat to the future of state insurance regulation. Instead, the challenges come from financial modernization, electronic commerce, market consolidation and globalization. The Financial Modernization Act of 1999-also called Gramm-Leach-Bliley-ushered in the new financial marketplace by establishing a comprehensive framework that permits affiliations among banks, securities firms and insurance companies. These reforms instituted direct competition among insurers and the other financial services industries. Yet, state insurance laws and regulations present obstacles that can keep insurers from competing on a level playing field against banks and securities firms and that limit the ability of insurers to respond with innovation and flexibility to evermore demanding market forces. Of particular concern are inefficient and redundant regulations that prolong the time it takes for insurers to market their products nationally and increase the cost of capital for insurance ventures.

The Internet and electronic commerce also have changed the business of insurance. However, in many cases, insurance regulation remains bound by many state laws enacted in the paper age that stifle the application of e-commerce to insurance transactions. The insurance industry worked hard to preempt state law in this particular area during the deliberations on the federal electronic signatures and records legislation.

Finally, market consolidation and globalization increasingly define the modern economy, which requires companies to operate nationally and globally. As a result, state insurance regulation faces pressure from domestic companies who contend that the current system limits their access to capital and from multinational companies and overseas trading partners who believe it raises practical barriers to market entry.

These factors have moved some strong supporters of state regulation, including the American Council of Life Insurance and the American Insurance Association, to advocate federal insurance regulation.

Although Gramm-Leach-Bliley explicitly reaffirmed McCarran-Ferguson, it also curtailed state authority and signaled intensified federal interest in insurance regulation. Congress since has held numerous public hearings on the states' effectiveness in regulating insurance in the modern financial marketplace. Legislation to establish a federal insurance regulator and to preempt state insurance and consumer protection laws has been introduced in both chambers of Congress. The U.S. House Financial Services Committee-chaired by Rep. Michael Oxley of Ohio has indicated its intention in the 108th Congress to move beyond the information gathering stage to the policy formulation process. It is anticipated that the prospect of a federal insurance regulator will increase substantially in the months ahead unless states begin to enact major reforms to streamline, simplify and modernize state regulation of the business of insurance.

NCSL TASK FORCE

At the NCSL Annual Meeting in San Antonio, Texas in August 2001, the NCSL Executive Committee voted unanimously to establish a special task force to streamline and simplify insurance regulation for the modern economy. Then-NCSL President Senator Stephen Saland of New York formally appointed the Executive Committee Task Force to Streamline and Simplify Insurance Regulation. The Task Force is charged with four primary objectives:

  1. Review the correlation between state regulation of the business of insurance and financial services modernization and competition, electronic commerce and globalization;
  2. Coordinate efforts to streamline and simplify state insurance regulation with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners and the National Conference of Insurance Legislators;
  3. Formulate an NCSL statement of principles with regard to streamlining and simplifying state insurance regulation and on state-federal relations with regard to the future on insurance regulation; and
  4. If necessary, develop and review draft legislation for state legislative consideration.
The First Year

The Task Force held its first meeting in October 2001 and, in all, met five times during the 2001-2002 year. It includes a diverse roster of state legislators from across the country. The Task Force during its first year has focused on broad policy issues and worked with the NAIC on its proposal for an interstate insurance compact.

In July 2002, the NCSL Executive Committee reauthorized the Task Force for a second year at the NCSL Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado. During its second year, the Task Force began to consider possible legislative reforms to recommend to the Executive Committee to simplify and streamline insurance regulation between the states. The Task Force agreed that these reforms should achieve the following criteria:

  • To preserve the primacy of state insurance regulation,

  • To allow insurance companies to compete more effectively in the integrated financial marketplace and to respond with innovation and flexibility to evermore demanding market forces, and

  • To maintain and improve strong consumer protections, which are the hallmarks of the state regulatory system.

The Sixth Meeting

In its sixth meeting on Wednesday, December 11, 2002, in Washington, D.C., the Task Force heard a testimony from Robert Gordon, senior counsel to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee. Mr. Gordon said that the committee in the 107th Congress concluded its information gathering on insurance regulation and will be moving in the 108th Congress to formulate policy. He outlined five options for federal action: 1) optional federal chartering; 2) optional federal chartering for certain lines, like life insurance; 3) targeted preemption; 4) NARAB-style action where states must act within a period of time or face preemption; and 5) continued pressure.

Next, the Task Force heard a presentation by Iowa Insurance Commissioner Terri Vaughan, the immediate past president of the NAIC, on the Interstate Insurance Product Regulation Compact. The compact was adopted by insurance commissioners on Dec. 8 at the NAIC Winter Meeting in San Diego, California. The compact would set uniform national standards for asset-based insurance products-including annuities, life insurance, disability income, and long-term care insurance-and would receive, review and approve product filings that meet the standards. Commissioner Vaughan said that the NAIC believes that the interstate compact is the best approach to streamline state product regulation systems for these long-term, investment-oriented insurance products while preserving state authority and strengthening consumer protections.

Finally, the Task Force considered property and casualty reform. The Task Force heard a presentation by Cheye Calvo with NCSL on P/C product regulation. Mr. Calvo discussed history and scope of P/C product regulation, reviewed of current state laws, and discussed NAIC "Speed-to-Market" efforts and existing models for legislative reform, specifically the NAIC commercial lines model act, the NCOIL model act and the state models of Illinois, South Carolina and California. Tim Tucker with NCOIL discussed the NCOIL model. Then, following a general discussion, Neil Alldredge with NAMIC and JoAnne Kron with Allstate presented to the Task Force a model bill prepared by the four P/C industry trade groups and State Farm and Allstate insurance companies.

 

Related Documents

Banking & Insurance

Issues & Resources

Find the NCSLstaff member who handles the issue in which you are interested.

NCSLprovides access to current state and federal legislation and a comprehensive list of state documents, including state statutes, constitutions, legislative audits and research reports.

Members

As legislators and legislative staff, you are part of the nation's largest, most influential and only bipartisan organization of state legislators and staff.Learn about the resources NCSL has for you.

NCSL offers an array of services for legislative staff. Find out what's available.

Denver Office
Tel: 303-364-7700 | Fax: 303-364-7800 | 7700 East First Place | Denver, CO 80230

 

Washington Office
Tel: 202-624-5400 | Fax: 202-737-1069 | 444 North Capitol Street, N.W., Suite 515 | Washington, D.C. 20001

©2012 National Conference of State Legislatures.  All Rights Reserved.