Author: Sampson Tagbor
At a time when Ghana is actively rethinking the governance and performance of its state-owned enterprises, the question of how public institutions can work more cohesively to generate and retain value has assumed renewed urgency.
Within this evolving policy landscape, SIGA’s integrating approach to insurance placement has sparked important debate across the industry.
Yet, beyond the initial reactions lies a deeper strategic proposition—one that invites a more careful and analytically grounded assessment.
From the standpoint of the Ghana Insurers Association, this policy, when properly understood and responsibly implemented, represents not a departure from market principles but a thoughtful effort to align public ownership with commercial rationality, strengthen institutional synergies, and position the insurance sector as a critical pillar in Ghana’s broader economic transformation.
From the perspective of the Ghana Insurers Association, a strong case can be made that SIGA’s integrating policy represents not a distortion of the insurance market, but a strategic effort to strengthen value retention, institutional coordination, and long-term market development within Ghana’s state enterprise ecosystem.
Properly understood, the policy is not an attempt to replace competition with administrative preference.
Rather, it is an effort to encourage commercially rational collaboration among state-linked entities, provided that such collaboration remains anchored in transparency, procurement compliance, and merit-based decision-making.
Indeed, this is consistent with SIGA’s own clarification that the initiative is meant to promote inter-trading within the state enterprise system and “is not a call for blind loyalty, but rather a strategic business decision.”
The central analytical strength of the policy lies in its recognition that state-owned enterprises should not operate as isolated commercial islands when they are, in fact, part of a broader public asset portfolio. In any serious ownership framework, the state must seek to maximize value not only at the level of individual firms but across the entire ecosystem of enterprises in which it holds an interest.
When insurance business generated by state-owned enterprises is placed with capable state-owned insurers such as SIC Insurance PLC and SIC Life Insurance Ltd, the result is not merely a transfer of premiums from one company to another. It is the internal circulation of value within a public investment architecture.
Premium income, underwriting profits, investment returns, and related financial benefits are more likely to remain within the broader state enterprise network, thereby reinforcing capital strength, improving institutional sustainability, and potentially enhancing dividend capacity over time. That logic is economically defensible and strategically sound.
From an industry standpoint, the policy can also be defended as a disciplined form of market integration rather than an anti-market intervention.
The GIA’s own position, as reflected in its communiqué, is not that movement of insurance business is illegitimate, but that such movement is a normal feature of a competitive market and must occur in an orderly, transparent, and lawful manner.
That point is crucial. A market is not compromised simply because buyers are encouraged to consider insurers within a defined institutional network.
Markets are compromised only when choice is stripped away, standards are abandoned, or regulatory fairness is ignored.
SIGA’s clarification directly addresses this concern by rejecting exclusivity and emphasizing sound commercial and procurement principles.
On that basis, the integrating policy can be seen as fully compatible with competition, so long as state-owned insurers win business through credible pricing, technical competence, service quality, and compliance with established procurement rules.
There is also a broader developmental argument in favor of integration.
Ghana’s insurance sector does not advance simply by redistributing existing premium flows; it advances by building stronger institutions, expanding trust, and creating the conditions for deeper penetration across the economy.
The GIA correctly notes that redistribution alone does not increase insurance penetration. Yet that observation does not weaken the case for integration. On the contrary, it sharpens it.
If integration is implemented intelligently, it can become a stabilizing platform from which stronger insurers invest in product innovation, digital channels, claims efficiency, and outreach to underserved markets. In other words, integration can help create the institutional muscle required for future expansion.
A stronger state-linked insurance base can serve as a foundation for broader inclusion rather than an end in itself.
Equally important, the policy has symbolic and governance value. It signals that the state is beginning to think more coherently about how public enterprises relate to one another.
For too long, public sector commercial entities in many contexts have functioned without strategic coordination, often procuring externally even where reliable internal capacity exists. SIGA’s approach challenges that fragmentation by encouraging a portfolio mindset.
This is especially relevant in insurance, where risk pooling, long-term asset accumulation, and institutional confidence matter enormously. Encouraging state entities to look first within the public enterprise space is a way of asking whether Ghana’s own institutions can be trusted, strengthened, and scaled before value is routinely exported elsewhere.
That is not protectionism in the crude sense; it is a deliberate effort to align public ownership with public value creation.
From the GIA’s perspective, supporting this policy need not mean abandoning its duty to all members.
The Association’s communiqué makes clear that SIC Insurance PLC and SIC Life Insurance Ltd are valued members alongside private insurers, and that GIA remains committed to representing all licensed insurers without distinction. That balanced position provides the ideal foundation for a nuanced endorsement of SIGA’s integrating policy.
GIA can support the principle of strategic internal collaboration while insisting on the safeguards that preserve market credibility: transparency, regulatory compliance, merit-based procurement, and fair practice. Such a stance is not contradictory. It is precisely the kind of mature institutional leadership the sector requires.
It affirms that integration and competition are not mutually exclusive; rather, integration can be a legitimate commercial strategy within a competitive framework.
In the final analysis, GIA’s support for SIGA’s integrating policy deserves commendation because it reflects a more sophisticated understanding of state asset management.
It seeks to convert fragmented public ownership into coordinated economic advantage. It encourages public enterprises to see one another not merely as separate entities, but as potential partners in value preservation and value creation.
For the insurance sector, this can translate into stronger domestic capacity, better retention of premium value, improved institutional resilience, and a more intentional alignment between public procurement and national economic interests. The real task, therefore, is not to reject integration, but to govern it well.
When pursued within the boundaries of law, transparency, and commercial merit, SIGA’s policy is not only defensible; it is a strategically intelligent step toward a more integrated, confident, and development-oriented insurance market in Ghana.







































