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This paper describes the path to the single European insurance market and discusses the consequences of the EU framework for insurance regulation, which was established on July 1,1994. Furthermore, it investigates the upcoming impact of the European Economic and Monetary Union on the insurance industry, focusing on insurers' financing and investment policy.
Provides information on insurance regulation in the European Community, especially France, Germany, Italy & the U.K. Describes the framework of insurance regulation developed by the European Community to create a single insurance market, & (2) identifies regulatory issues concerning the development & implementation of this framework. Charts & tables.
First published in 1998, this volume was formally completed in July 1994, but completing the structure of the market is not all the same thing as having a genuine Single Market. This book explores the difficulties inherent in the concept of the Single Market in Insurance, as well as the practical difficulties of implementation. It looks to the future of the Single Market as well as at the present. It should be of interest to lawyers studying law or EC law, as well as to economists and political scientists interested in the development of Project Europe.
Estudio de la industria del seguro en la CE ante el mercado unico. Tras comentar la normativa comunitaria, describe y analiza las caracteristicas y situacion del sector, antes de la adopcion de las Directivas 92/49/CEE -seguro directo distinto del de vida- y 92/96/CEE -seguro directo de vida-, y las estrategias de las compañias para conseguir una posicion ventajosa en este mercado. En la ultima parte, propone dos direcciones en las que podria desarrollarse el mercado europeo del seguro a partir de 1992 y durante la transicion a la union monetaria: el oligopolio paneuropeo, o la subcontratacion de funciones. Contiene datos estadisticos, graficos y bibliografia. (pgp).
Insurance Market Integration in the European Union offers an in-depth analysis of the mechanisms of insurance market integration and measures the degrees of this integration. It examines the operation of the EU single financial market and, against this backdrop, the regulation relating to the insurance market. In addition, the book focuses on the specificity and determinants of international insurance market development and the issues with assimilation set against other financial market segments such as money market, credit-deposit and bond and equity. It discusses the advantages and disadvantages of insurance market integration on an international scale. The authors propose a unique approach to the subject in the context of the EU and particularly in relation to the European area. They also apply new measures of insurance market integration in the EU in practice through the use of statistical data and implementation of econometric modeling. Further, they investigate how the financial and fiscal crisis has affected the insurance market in EU countries and the impact of European Central Bank monetary policy on the degrees of integration in the European area during and after the financial crisis. This book will find an audience among academics and researchers in the fields of international economics and finance and applied, financial and growth economics.
GGD-93-87 European Community: Regulatory Issues in Creating a Single Insurance Market
The incomplete European market for financial services, the obstacles to its integration and the potential benefits from more integration are subject of this book which is largely focussing on retail markets. The analysis can be regarded as a modernised follow-up to the financial market part of the famous 1988 Cecchini Report "The cost of non Europe". Even in the Euro age, retail financial markets in the EU are heavily fragmented and the consumers pay a large price for this fragmentation. This also weakens the growth perspective of EU and its international role. Explanations originate both from natural and policy-induced factors. Priorities for future policies are the dismantling of tax discriminations and further harmonisation in consumer protection and financial supervision.