1 / 61

Professionalism Event for Qualified Actuaries Wednesday 30 June 2010

Enhance your professionalism as a qualified actuary in this event. Explore key issues, responsibilities, and current professional matters. Contribute to public interest and uphold integrity.

kcrouch
Download Presentation

Professionalism Event for Qualified Actuaries Wednesday 30 June 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Professionalism Event forQualified ActuariesWednesday 30 June 2010

  2. Professionalism Event forQualified ActuariesWednesday 30 June 2010 Chris Daykin Past President, Institute of Actuaries

  3. Overview • Professional behaviour during the course • timely attendance expected for all sessions • active participation required • please turn off mobile phones • no office business • Key issues for the Profession • Need your input on the key issues facing the profession • Opportunity to ask questions • Get your questions ready for later

  4. Aims of this event • To think about topical professional matters, away from day-to-day pressures • To share experiences and views • To keep up-to-date in your understanding of professional as well as technical matters • To consider your responsibilities to your employer, clients, the public and the actuarial profession

  5. Professionalism for qualified actuaries • Professionalism is a key component of actuarial education (separate topic in IAA Core Syllabus) • Important to devote time to learning about professionalism as well as technical skills • Need to develop a professional attitude and way of thinking – there are often no simple black and white answers

  6. Added responsibilities for more experienced actuaries • Setting a good example/professional tone of firm • Management of (and advice to) colleagues • Closer involvement in agreeing scope and terms of engagements • Higher profile roles – more potential for adverse publicity or dissatisfaction of some party • Greater likelihood of exposure to conflicts • Dealing with adverse behaviours/attitudes of others • Reserved roles and contact with regulators

  7. Some current professional issues for actuaries • Integrity • Conflicts of interest • Policyholders/shareholders • Trustees /employers • Communicating risk and uncertainty • Peer review • Commercialism in conflict with professionalism • Criticising other actuaries • Ensuring competence for the task in hand

  8. Actuaries ‘need to be overseen’ Merck accused of 'unethical' secrecy re Vioxx Internet scandal forces Japanese stock exchange to halt trading BA price-fixing investigation Gangmaster culture spreads across Britain. Double rebuke to actuaries over savings products WorldCom's ex-boss gets 25 years AIG: $1.5bn fine for accounting misstatements

  9. Characteristics of a profession 6 key characteristics of a profession are: • members join together to apply a specialised skill • the skill has been developed through appropriate education • members have a special relationship with those served (fiduciary relationship) • recognised by the public as an authority in field of expertise, able to serve the public interest • standards of competence and conduct of members • high level of integrity by members in exercising judgement

  10. Clients, Public specialist skills quality control high standards of service integrity input into public debate statutory roles Members agreed standards mutual support lobby strength status income What do members, clients and the public gain from the existence of our Profession?

  11. What is expected of us as professional people? • demonstrating and applying specialist skills • reliable up-to-date technical knowledge and advice • complying with the profession’s code of conduct • complying with legislation and standards of practice • performing statutory roles to a high standard • behaving ethically • exercising judgement with high level of integrity • communicating well • having due regard to the interests of those affected

  12. What is expected of us as professional people?(continued) • respecting and supporting others • relationship of trust with clients • being reliably confidential • life-long learning – developing our knowledge and skills • having no adverse disciplinary record • assisting the profession to serve the public interest • contributing to public debate • contributing to the work of the profession

  13. The Profession’s Controls Code of Conduct qualification standards CPD Scheme Standards of Practice recommended practice educational notes disciplinary scheme External Controls legislation regulators accounting standards In our Profession, what must we comply with?

  14. In our Profession, how should we contribute? • marking exams • Participate actively in Israeli Association of Actuaries • writing a paper for, or speaking at, Conferences and Seminars • becoming a member of a committee • joining a working party or research group • representing the association on an IAA Committee Your Profession Needs You

  15. Professionalism in Practice Professionalism concerns behaviour of professionals and the profession which will: • maintain the reputation and integrity of the profession • serve the interests of our clients • serve the public interest (common good)

  16. Vision of IAA To seek worldwide recognition for the actuarial profession as a major player in the decision-making process within the financial services industry, in the area of social protection and in the management of risk, for the well-being of society as a whole.

  17. Professionalism at two levels • professional issues facing the profession, e.g. • responding to regulators • helping to educate government, the media and public • ensuring that the profession is ‘fit for purpose’ • individual matters of professionalism, e.g. • high ethical standards • adhering to the code and standards of practice • reporting if necessary (whistle-blowing)

  18. Professionalism for the profession • ensuring profession operates in public interest • …for the well-being of society as a whole • setting high standards • ensuring members comply with code/standards • making sure actuaries stay competent/up-to-date • educating policy-makers and opinion-formers • engaging with regulators and law-makers

  19. Professionalism for the individual - 1 • fiduciary relationship with client or employer • focusing on how issues may affect stakeholders • and bringing such issues to attention of the client • addressing the questions the client should ask • or which those affected may ask • defining clearly the scope of the advice • understanding and communicating well • operating within competence and experience

  20. Professionalism for the individual - 2 • readiness to speak your mind • not just doing what the client tells you to do • integrity in advice • prepared to report (blow the whistle) if necessary • not taking a narrow technical view • operating within code and standards of practice • demonstrating good judgement

  21. Sins of the past that may haunt usLife • products designed to disguise charges • high risk products (e.g. precipice bonds) • instances of mis-selling of life products • weak reserving for financial guarantees • underestimating the need for economic capital • insufficient consideration of uncertainty • high profile failures (in UK Equitable Life…)

  22. Sins of the past that may haunt usNon-life Sins of the past that may haunt usNon-Life • weak reserving • inadequate recognition of latent claims • being ‘compliant’ with the management • mis-interpreting claim settlement dynamics • high profile failures (e.g. HIH in Australia) • and Independent in UK…

  23. Sins of the past that may haunt usPensions Sins of the past that may haunt usPensions • encouraging employer contribution holidays • aggressive financial assumptions • slow to recognise improving mortality • insufficient consideration of uncertainty • giving the client what he wanted

  24. Generic professional issues • economy with the truth

  25. Generic professional issues • economy with the truth • answering the question as asked … ???....

  26. Generic professional issues • economy with the truth • answering the question as asked • not making clear the limits of advice

  27. Generic professional issues • economy with the truth • answering the question as asked • not making clear the limits of advice • not considering the wider impact …on third parties

  28. Generic professional issues • economy with the truth • answering the question as asked • not making clear the limits of advice • not considering the wider impact …on third parties • failing to blow the whistle

  29. Where might we now be at risk? • over-reliance on complex models • are they the right models? • underestimating the fatness of the tail • failing to predict the financial crisis • (not) treating the customer fairly • poor communication of risk • inadequate scrutiny and peer review • conflicts of interest

  30. Professionalism Event forQualified ActuariesWednesday 30 June 2010 Code of Conduct

  31. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA • Having a code of conduct meeting the IAA minimum is one of main requirements to be fulfilled before an actuarial association can be admitted as a Full Member Association of the IAA

  32. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (a) • An actuary shall perform professional services with integrity, skill and care (client responsibility) • fulfil professional responsibility to client or employer • fiduciary relationship with client

  33. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (b) • An actuary shall act in a manner to fulfil the profession’s responsibility to the public (common good) • uphold the reputation of the actuarial profession • not engage in false or misleading advertising or business solicitation

  34. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (c) • An actuary shall co-operate with others serving the actuary’s client or employer • no disclosure of confidential information

  35. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (d) • An actuary shall perform professional services only if competent and appropriately experienced • an association may permit derogations, e.g. • where client would be disadvantaged if advice denied • where actuary is working with another fully competent and experienced actuary

  36. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (e) • An actuary is responsible for conforming to all applicable practice standards • conform to relevant binding (mandatory) practice-related guidance or standards issued or endorsed by actuary’s Association • take into account any non-binding (recommended) guidance • know the requirements of the relevant Code of Conduct

  37. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (f) • An actuary shall, in communicating professional findings, show that he/she takes full responsibility for them • indicate whether the actuary is available to provide supplementary information and explanation

  38. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (g) • An actuary shall, in communicating professional findings, identify the client and the capacity in which the actuary is acting

  39. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (h) • An actuary shall not perform professional services involving the actuary in an actual or potential conflict of interest • unless ability to act is unimpaired (no inhibition); and • there has been full disclosure of actual or potential conflict • Associations may require that an actuary may only act in these circumstances if all principals have expressly agreed to it

  40. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (i) • When asked to take on professional services previously provided by another actuary, the actuary shall consider whether it is appropriate to consult the previous provider to ensure there are no professional reasons to decline to take it on

  41. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (j) • An actuary shall disclose to the client any sources of material income that are related to any service on behalf of the client, as soon as such a source is identified

  42. Minimum Code of Conduct of IAA (k) • An actuary shall be subject to the disciplinary procedures for his/her Association and, subject to any right of appeal, shall accept any judgement passed or the decision of any appeal procedure

  43. The Actuaries’ Code(Institute and Faculty of Actuaries)Chris Daykin

  44. The Actuaries’ Code • principles-based • small number of principles • supported by Actuarial Profession Standards • actuaries who disregard the principles… • or operate outside their reasonable interpretation • …may be guilty of misconduct

  45. The Actuaries’ Code (effective 1 October 2009) • Integrity • Competence and Care • Impartiality • Compliance • Open Communication

  46. The Actuaries’ Code Integrity Members will act honestly and with the highest standards of integrity • show respect • confidentiality • honest, open and truthful

  47. The Actuaries’ Code Competence and Care Members will perform their professional duties competently and with care • understand who your client is • appropriate level of knowledge and skill • care • new appointments • keep competence up to date (CPD)

  48. The Actuaries’ Code Impartiality Members will not allow bias, conflict of interest, or the undue influence of others to override their professional judgement • objective and uncompromised advice • avoidance/management of conflicts of interests • consulting with previous adviser

  49. The Actuaries’ Code Compliance Members will comply with all relevant legal, regulatory and professional requirements….. • challenging non-compliance • speaking up

  50. The Actuaries’ Code Open Communication Members will communicate effectively and meet all applicable reporting standards • clear and appropriate communication for • the intended audience • the purpose of the communication • the significance of the communication for the audience • the capacity in which the member is acting • accurate and not misleading

More Related