The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has laid out a definitive and highly ambitious roadmap: achieving universal insurance coverage across the nation by 2047.
At the center of this nation-building vision is India’s vast intermediary distribution network, which grew 11% year-on-year to encompass 54.46 lakh professionals as of March 2025. For millions of first-generation buyers in Tier-2, Tier-3, and rural markets, these doorstep agents are not just salespeople—they are the critical human face of financial literacy and trust.
However, a pressing structural challenge is forcing a regulatory re-evaluation. The IRDAI is reportedly considering rolling back its flexible Expense of Management (EoM) framework, introduced in April 2023, in favor of reimposing rigid, product-level caps on intermediary commissions. This potential pivot comes at a time when the economics of last-mile insurance delivery are facing asymmetric pressures.
The Regulatory Dilemma: Rising Outlays vs. Slower Growth
The regulatory appetite to intervene stems from a stark disconnect between the escalating costs of acquiring customers and actual premium growth across the industry.
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The Cost Asymmetry: Industry-wide commission outgoes in the life insurance sector surged by 18% year-on-year, vastly outstripping premium volume expansion, which crawled forward at just 6.73%.
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The Mis-selling Problem: This steep rise in distribution outlays has fueled regulatory concerns regarding product-linked incentive structures, which are frequently blamed for a parallel rise in the mis-selling of complex financial policies.
The Distortion in Apparent Costs
While the numbers look concerning on paper, a significant portion of the commission spike can be attributed to recent regulatory reclassification. Prior to 2023, insurers split intermediary payouts across three distinct accounting buckets: commissions, remunerations, and rewards. Post-2023, the IRDAI consolidated all of these line items under a single “commission” definition, making the structural cost increase appear far steeper than actual changes in cash payouts.
A Tale of Two Models: Public vs. Private Distribution
A uniform, blanket commission cap risks penalizing the entire ecosystem without addressing where the actual cost escalation is occurring. IRDAI data exposes a deep divide in how public and private players deploy their sales forces:
| Insurance Segment | Commission Expense Trend (Post-EoM) | Primary Distribution Engine | New Policy Agent Share |
| Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) | Declined by 2.5% | Individual Boot-on-the-Ground Agents | > 93% |
| Private Life Insurers | Surged by 38.8% | Corporate Bancassurance (Bank Partners) | ~ 50% |
Corporate banks leverage intense pricing power to extract massive distribution fees from private insurance firms. A rigid product-level cap would apply equally to independent agents and boutique brokers, who possess zero equivalent leverage, severely damaging the financial viability of individual professionals working in lower-ticket rural geographies.
Global Precedents: Conduct vs. Numeric Caps
International experiences indicate that strictly capping or banning commissions often triggers an “advice gap,” leaving lower-income demographics with severely diminished access to financial protection.
Rather than implementing crude numeric limits, global bodies have increasingly turned toward conduct-based governance—tying deferred financial rewards directly to compliance, transparency, and policy retention metrics.
The Path Forward: Digitally Assisted Phygital Architecture
To comfortably achieve the 2047 target without breaking the bank, the Economic Survey 2025-26 highlights the need to build a tech-enabled, low-cost distribution ecosystem.
India can mirror its phenomenal UPI success by aggressively scaling the Bima Sugam platform—a centralized digital public infrastructure designed to act as a universal marketplace. By marrying tech-enabled Point of Sales Person (PoSP) networks and digital brokers with assisted human outreach, the industry can drastically depress upfront customer acquisition costs, insulate agent livelihoods in underserved markets, and safely drive insurance penetration deep into the Indian heartland.
