Audio By Carbonatix
Deloitte has described the introduction of the International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS 17) as one of the biggest recent changes to the insurance industry.
According to the professional services firm, this is not just true in Ghana, but across the continent and in many global insurance markets.
The IFRS 17 is the IASB’s financial reporting standard for insurance contracts.
In its 2024 Africa Insurance Outlook, Deloitte said the standard has had a massive impact on actuarial and finance processes, and data and technology systems in addition to requiring significant accounting policy changes.
“In response to the global implementation of IFRS 17, National Insurance Commission (NIC) has taken proactive steps to ensure that the country’s insurance sector remains compliant, competitive, and financially stable. When studied carefully, this new standard has one major goal: standardization”, the report disclosed.
Despite obvious implementation challenges, Deloitte said IFRS 17 is expected to improve the comparability of insurers’ financial reports.
Furthermore, the use of IFRS-based metrics as a primary consideration for regularity standards will have a favorable effect on overall financial stability.
It continued that in order to achieve the goal of comparability of financial performance reporting in the insurance sector, the IFRS 17 requires significant changes to the measurement models of the insurance accounting standards.
It mentioned that the Ghanaian regulator, just like many of their counterparts throughout the world, has responded to this shift in a number of ways to ensure that they continue to fulfil their regulatory mandate, despite the difficulties presented by the new standard.
Implementation Deadlines
The NIC released an implementation roadmap that included timelines for all streams from submission of vital policy documentation to audited financial statements fully compliant with IFRS 17.
To ease the burden, the Commission has considered a phased approach to implementation, allowing insurers to gradually adopt the new standard. This has reduced the impact of the operational changes needed to support the change.
Development of IFRS 17 Reporting Templates and Manuals
The NIC has also developed reporting templates for the industry in their supporting manuals, the Illustrative IFRS 17 Financial Statement and Supervision Department Reporting (SDR) Templates.
These templates were issued to enable insurance industry players to report their IFRS 17 numbers per the requirement in the standard.
Latest Stories
-
US Air Force B-52 bomber plane crashes after take off in California
6 minutes -
SpaceX IPO raised $10bn more than thought
7 minutes -
Heroic Cabo Verde clinch draw with Spain
12 minutes -
Parents of 24 Ghanata SHS students agree to pay GH¢5,200 over alleged food theft by their wards
34 minutes -
Kasapreko PLC lists on GSE, opens new chapter for growth
1 hour -
AI strategy key to positioning Ghana as leader in responsible AI development – Bandim Abed-Nego
1 hour -
Damongo MP urges CSOs to probe true cost of Mahama’s government
1 hour -
Ministerial numbers alone do not reveal government size – Samuel Jinapor
1 hour -
Ghana’s flooding problem caused by years of poor attitudes and weak enforcement – Researcher
1 hour -
Two diesel trailers collide at Kwahu Hwidiem
1 hour -
ACRC workshop pushes research-led reforms to strengthen decentralisation and urban governance
2 hours -
Diaspora Girls SHS in distress: Students learn under trees, attend classes in canteen amid severe infrastructure deficit
2 hours -
Accra Brewery PLC kicks off ‘Cheers to Bars’ with World Cup viewing experience
2 hours -
2026 World Cup: Cape Verde hold Spain to goalless draw in opener
2 hours -
Only 47% of ‘Big Push’ projects awarded through sole-sourcing — Gov’t
2 hours