June 9, 2026

Newspageng

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Omosehin Charges Operators To Close Insurance Gap In Africa

By Sola Alabadan

Nigeria’s Commissioner for Insurance and Chief Executive of the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), Mr. Olusegun Omosehin said the insurance operators have a duty to design and distribute products that meets the needs of the people wherever they are, in order to bridge the insurance gap in Africa.
Omosehin, who spoke on Monday as one of the panelists at the 52nd African Insurance Organisation (AIO) Conference in Egypt, stated that “The gap is not about willingness to pay—it is about our ability to design and distribute products that reach people where they are”.
The NAICOM boss emphasised that Africa’s low insurance penetration represents a multi-billion-dollar opportunity rather than a limitation.

Despite the recorded gap in Africa’s insurance penetration, the continent already commands an estimated $68 billion premium pool, signaling strong underlying demand where access exists.

A key theme of the discussion was that distribution failure—not lack of demand—is the primary driver of low insurance penetration. Traditional agent-based models fail to reach up to 90 percent of the addressable population, particularly in rural and informal sectors.

Panelists stressed that scaling insurance across Africa requires a shift to: mobile-first distribution, embedded insurance models, community-based delivery channels and digital infrastructure unlocking access.
Africa’s rapidly expanding digital ecosystem is enabling this transformation: Over 500 million mobile subscribers; More than 350 million mobile wallets. These platforms provide ready-made infrastructure for low-cost, scalable insurance distribution and claims payments.

The panel highlighted the importance of regulatory evolution in unlocking growth, particularly: Transitioning from rule-based to principles-based supervision, Implementing risk-based capital frameworks, Expanding regulatory sandboxes for innovation
Nigeria’s NIIRA 2025 reform agenda was cited as a leading example, promoting flexibility, innovation, and proportional oversight.

Omosehin in his proposal to the challenge of balancing Innovation with consumer protection, expressed that whilst technology such as AI and blockchain is driving efficiency, he cautioned on emerging risks including: Data privacy, Cybersecurity threats, Algorithmic bias. Et cetera.
As a result, consumer protection and trust-building were identified as critical to scaling adoption. “Innovation and consumer protection are not opposing forces—they are mutually reinforcing,” the panel emphasised.

The session concluded with a call for coordinated action across regulators, insurers, and technology providers to achieve: 3–5 percent insurance penetration within the next 5–7 years, expanded access to financial protection for underserved populations, and for a greater economic resilience across African economies

The panel underscored that Africa’s insurance sector is at a defining moment, where the convergence of regulatory reform, digital innovation, and market demand creates a unique opportunity to transform the industry.