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Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) is an Indian multinational public sector life insurance company headquartered in Mumbai. It is India's largest insurance company as well as the largest institutional investor with total assets under management worth ₹ 52.52 trillion (US$610 billion) as of March 2024. [ 4 ]
Life Insurance in India was nationalised by incorporating Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) in 1956. All private life insurance companies at that time were taken over by LIC. In 1993, the Government of India appointed RN Malhotra Committee to lay down a road map for privatisation of the life insurance sector. [2]
The LIC absorbed 154 Indian and 16 non-Indian insurers and 75 provident societies. The LIC had a monopoly until the late 1990s, when the insurance industry was reopened to the private sector. General insurance in India began during the Industrial Revolution in the West and the growth of sea-faring commerce during the 17th century.
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LIC is a three-letter abbreviation that may refer to: Hlai language (an ISO639-3 code: lic) Laudetur Iesus Christus, a Roman Catholic greeting; Abbreviation for license; Licentiate, a degree; Life Insurance Corporation, an Indian government-owned corporation; LIC or Love Insurance Corporation, working title for the Indian film Love Insurance ...
A man was left in critical but stable condition after he was pushed onto the subway tracks at the 18th Street station in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood. The 45 -year-old victim was pushed onto ...
Water Development of water resources. [155] Urea subsidy CS MoCF: 1977 Subsidy The first urea subsidy scheme was in 1977 in the form of Retention Price cum Subsidy scheme (RPS). From ₹ 4,389 crore (US$2.51 billion) in 1990 to ₹ 75,849 crore (US$17.43 billion) in 2008. As %ofGDP this is an increase from 0.8% to 1.5%.