China's insurance sector
raked in 564.1 billion yuan (US$71.6 billion) in premiums last
year, up 14.4 percent on the previous year, according to a national
work conference held in Beijing on Sunday.
Insurance companies nationwide recorded returns of
95.5 billion yuan (US$12.1 billion), with their return ratio
averaging 5.8 percent, up 2.2 percent.
The total premiums included 150.9 billion yuan
(US$19.1 billion) for property insurance, up 22.6 percent, 359.3
billion yuan (US$45.6 billion) for life insurance, up 10.6 percent,
and 37.7 billion yuan (US$4.8 billion) for health insurance, up
20.9 percent.
Sources at the meeting said that the insurance
premiums made up two percent of China's GDP last year and averaged
431.3 yuan (US$54.7) per-capita.
In 2006 the insurance sector paid 143.8 billion yuan
(US$18.2 billion) in compensation, up 26.5 percent.
At the end of last year, gross assets of insurance
companies nationwide amounted to 1.97 trillion yuan (US$250
billion), up 29 percent.
"Despite the growth in business, problems remain,
including low efficiency and high costs," said Wu Dingfu, head of
the China Insurance Regulatory Commission, the industry watchdog,
at the conference.
(Xinhua News Agency January 22, 2007)
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