Bureau of Economic Analysis, Commerce.
Final rule.
This final rule amends regulations of the Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) to renew the reporting requirements for the mandatory BE–140 Benchmark Survey of Insurance Transactions by U.S. Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons. This survey applies to the 2018 calendar reporting year. This mandatory benchmark survey, conducted under the authority of the International Investment and Trade in Services Survey Act, covers the universe of transactions in insurance services and is BEA's most comprehensive survey of such transactions. For the 2018 benchmark survey, BEA is making several changes to the data items collected and the design of the survey form.
This final rule is effective July 12, 2019.
Christopher Stein, Chief, Services Surveys Branch (BE–50), Balance of Payments Division, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, 4600 Silver Hill Rd., Washington, DC 20233; phone (301) 278–9189; or via email at
On March 26, 2019, BEA published a notice of proposed rulemaking that set forth the revised reporting criteria for the BE–140 Benchmark Survey of Insurance Transactions by U.S. Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons (84 FR 11256). No comments on the proposed rule were received.
This final rule amends 15 CFR part 801 to set forth the reporting requirements for the BE–140 Benchmark Survey of Insurance Transactions by U.S. Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons for 2018.
The BE–140 Benchmark Survey of Insurance Transactions by U.S. Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons is a mandatory survey and is conducted once every five years by BEA under the authority provided by the International Investment and Trade in Services Survey Act (P.L.94–472, 90 Stat. 2059, 22 U.S.C. 3101–3108, as amended), hereinafter, “the Act.” The Act provides that data reported to BEA on this survey are confidential and may be used only for analytical and statistical purposes. Without prior written permission from the survey respondent, the data collected cannot be presented in a manner that allows individual responses to be identified. An individual respondent's report cannot be used for purposes of taxation, investigation, or regulation. Copies retained by BEA are exempt from legal process. Per the Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015, a respondent's data are protected from cybersecurity risks through security monitoring of the BEA information systems.
A response is required from persons subject to the reporting requirements of the BE–140, whether or not they are contacted by BEA, to ensure complete coverage of transactions in insurance services between U.S. persons (any individual or organization subject to the jurisdiction of the United States) and foreign persons.
In 2012, BEA established regulatory guidelines for collecting data on international trade in services and direct investment (77 FR 24373; April 24, 2012). This final rule, conducted pursuant to the Act, amends those regulations to require a response from persons subject to the reporting requirements of the BE–140, whether or not they are contacted by BEA.
The benchmark survey covers the universe of insurance transactions by U.S. insurance companies with foreign persons and is BEA's most
The benchmark data, which includes data from respondents not subject to filing on an ongoing quarterly basis, will be used, in conjunction with quarterly data collected on the companion BE–45 survey, to produce estimates of insurance transactions for BEA's international transactions accounts (ITAs), national income and product accounts, and industry accounts. These data are also used to monitor U.S. trade in insurance services, to analyze the impact on the U.S. economy and on foreign economies, to compile and improve the U.S. economic accounts, to support U.S. commercial policy on trade in services, to conduct trade promotion, and to improve the ability of U.S. businesses to identify and evaluate market opportunities.
A full list of the insurance transactions covered by the BE–140 survey can be found in the regulatory text for new § 801.12 at the end of this document.
This final rule amends the regulations at 15 CFR part 801 by adding new § 801.12 to set forth the reporting requirements for the BE–140 benchmark survey, and amends the survey form for the BE–140 benchmark survey to satisfy changing data needs and to improve data quality and the effectiveness and efficiency of data collections. These amendments include changes in data items collected and changes to the design of the survey form relative to the 2013 benchmark survey.
BEA adds and modifies some items on the benchmark survey form. The following items are added to the benchmark survey:
(1) Mandatory questions to request additional information from respondents that have direct insurance sales and/or losses. Additional questions, applicable to reporters of direct insurance transactions on Schedule B of the survey, will be added to request an estimate of what percentage of these transactions were: (1) Life insurance, (2) freight insurance, and (3) other direct insurance. To avoid imposing undue reporter burden, the estimates will be requested based on the reporter's knowledge of the U.S. operations, and are not required to be sourced from company records at an individual transaction level.
(2) A new schedule to collect information related to catastrophic losses from hurricanes and other significant natural disasters. The 2018 BE–140 survey will collect information from reporters for a sample of up to 5 catastrophic events that took place during 2018. Catastrophic events include events such as hurricanes, earthquakes, and wildfires, etc. The new schedule is structured to collect data on the loss amount, type of loss (assumed or ceded), the country of the foreign counterparty, the relationship to the foreign counterparty (foreign affiliate, foreign parent group, or unaffiliated), and the date for each event/transaction.
In addition, this final rule makes the following modifications to items collected on the previous BE–140 survey form:
(1) Lowering the threshold for reporting large, infrequent reinsurance transactions. On the 2013 BE–140 benchmark survey, the threshold for reporting these transactions was $1 billion. For the 2018 BE–140 benchmark survey, in order to collect more comprehensive information, a lower threshold of $250 million is used. In addition, reporters are required to indicate if the transactions either included a transfer of reserves or were related to a catastrophic event, for up to 10 transactions.
(2) Modifying mandatory Schedule C to collect additional information regarding the expected average maturity of reserves that are transferred and included in the premiums reported on the survey. Information about reserve transfers will be collected for the large, infrequent reinsurance transactions collected at a threshold of $250 million (modification (1) above). Reporters of such transactions are required to provide additional information about those transactions that included a transfer of reserves at the inception of new reinsurance contracts, or for the recapture or termination of reinsurance contracts. The schedule requests information about the type of premium/loss (either assumed or ceded), the country of the foreign counterparty, the relationship to the foreign counterparty (foreign affiliate, foreign parent group, or unaffiliated), the expected average maturity of the reserves, the reserve amount, and the date of the transaction. A text field will also be provided to allow the respondent to include additional details about each transaction.
In addition, BEA has redesigned the format and wording of the survey. The new design incorporates improvements made to other BEA surveys. Some enhancements are the result of a recent cognitive review conducted with selected survey respondents during the planning for the 2017 BE–120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions in Selected Services and Intellectual Property with Foreign Persons. Survey instructions and data item descriptions have been changed to improve clarity and ensure the benchmark survey form is consistent with other BEA surveys.
BEA received no comments on the proposed rule. We note that we have made a change to paragraph (f), entitled “
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for purposes of E.O. 12866.
This final rule does not contain policies with federalism implications sufficient to warrant preparation of a federalism assessment under E.O. 13132.
The collection-of-information in this final rule was submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) pursuant to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–3520 (PRA). OMB approved the reinstatement of the information collection under OMB control number 0608–0073.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, no person is required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a
The BE–140 survey is expected to result in the filing of reports from approximately 1,300 respondents. Approximately 1,000 respondents will report mandatory data on the survey, and approximately 300 will file exemption claims. The respondent burden for this collection of information will vary from one respondent to another, but is estimated to average (1) 9 hours for the 600 respondents that file mandatory or voluntary data by country and affiliation for relevant transaction types on the mandatory schedules; (2) 2 hours for the 400 respondents that file mandatory data by transaction type but not by country or affiliation; and (3) 1 hour for other responses. These burden-hour estimates consider time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Thus the total respondent burden for this survey is estimated at 6,500 hours, or 5 hours per response (6,500 hours/1,300 respondents), compared to 4,689 hours, or about 4.5 hours per response (4,689 hours/1,042 respondents) for the previous BE–140 benchmark survey in 2013. The increase in burden hours is due to an estimated increase in the size of the respondent universe from 2013 to 2018, as well as changes to the content of the survey.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in the final rule should be sent to both BEA via email at
The Chief Counsel for Regulation, Department of Commerce, certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business Administration, under the provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that this action will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The factual basis for the certification was published in the proposed rule and is not repeated here. No final regulatory flexibility analysis was prepared, as no comments were received regarding the determination that this action will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Economic statistics, Foreign trade, International transactions, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For reasons set forth in the preamble, BEA amends 15 CFR part 801 as follows:
5 U.S.C. 301; 15 U.S.C. 4908; 22 U.S.C. 3101–3108; E.O. 11961 (3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 86), as amended by E.O. 12318 (3 CFR, 1981 Comp. p. 173); and E.O. 12518 (3 CFR, 1985 Comp. p. 348).
Except for surveys subject to rulemaking in §§ 801.7, 801.8, 801.9, 801.10, 801.11, and 801.12 reporting requirements for all other surveys conducted by the Bureau of Economic Analysis shall be as follows:
(a) Notice of specific reporting requirements, including who is required to report, the information to be reported, the manner of reporting, and the time and place of filing reports, will be published by the Director of the Bureau of Economic Analysis in the
(b) In accordance with section 3104(b)(2) of title 22 of the United States Code, persons notified of these surveys and subject to the jurisdiction of the United States shall furnish, under oath, any report containing information which is determined to be necessary to carry out the surveys and studies provided for by the Act; and
(c) Persons not notified in writing of their filing obligation by the Bureau of Economic Analysis are not required to complete the survey.
The BE–140 Benchmark Survey of Insurance Transactions by Insurance Companies with Foreign Persons will be conducted covering calendar year 2018. All legal authorities, provisions, definitions, and requirements contained in §§ 801.1 through 801.2 and §§ 801.4 through 801.6 are applicable to this survey. Specific additional rules and regulations for the BE–140 survey are given in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section. More detailed instructions are given on the report form and in instructions accompanying the report form.
(a)
(1) Completing and returning the BE–140 by the due date of the survey; or
(2) If exempt, by completing the determination of reporting status section of the BE–140 survey and returning it to BEA by the due date of the survey.
(b)
(c)
(2)
(i)
(ii) [Reserved]
(3)
(d)
(1) Premiums earned on reinsurance assumed from companies resident abroad;
(2) Losses incurred on reinsurance assumed from companies resident abroad;
(3) Premiums paid for reinsurance ceded to companies resident abroad;
(4) Losses recovered on reinsurance ceded to companies resident abroad;
(5) Premiums earned from direct insurance sold to foreign persons;
(6) Losses incurred on direct insurance sold to foreign persons;
(7) Receipts for auxiliary insurance services provided to foreign persons; and
(8) Payments for auxiliary insurance services provided by foreign persons.
(e)
(f)