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REINSURANCE
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2016
REINSURANCE  
REINSURANCE

8. Reinsurance

In the ordinary course of business, our insurance companies may use both treaty and facultative reinsurance to minimize their net loss exposure to any single catastrophic loss event or to an accumulation of losses from a number of smaller events or to provide greater diversification of our businesses. In addition, our general insurance subsidiaries assume reinsurance from other insurance companies. We determine the portion of the incurred but not reported (IBNR) loss that will be recoverable under our reinsurance contracts by reference to the terms of the reinsurance protection purchased. This determination is necessarily based on the estimate of IBNR and accordingly, is subject to the same uncertainties as the estimate of IBNR. Reinsurance assets include the balances due from reinsurance and insurance companies under the terms of our reinsurance agreements for paid and unpaid losses and loss adjustment expenses incurred, ceded unearned premiums and ceded future policy benefits for life and accident and health insurance contracts and benefits paid and unpaid. Amounts related to paid and unpaid losses and benefits and loss expenses with respect to these reinsurance agreements are substantially collateralized. We remain liable to the extent that our reinsurers do not meet their obligation under the reinsurance contracts, and as such, we regularly evaluate the financial condition of our reinsurers and monitor concentration of our credit risk. The estimation of the allowance for doubtful accounts requires judgment for which key inputs typically include historical trends regarding uncollectible balances, disputes and credit events as well as specific reviews of balances in dispute or subject to credit impairment. The allowance for doubtful accounts on reinsurance assets was $207 million and $272 million at December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively. Changes in the allowance for doubtful accounts on reinsurance assets are reflected in Policyholder benefits and losses incurred within the Consolidated Statements of Income.

The following table provides supplemental information for loss and benefit reserves, gross and net of ceded reinsurance:

At December 31, 20162015
AsNet ofAsNet of
(in millions)ReportedReinsuranceReportedReinsurance
Liability for unpaid losses and loss adjustment expenses$(77,077)$(61,545)$(74,942)$(60,603)
Future policy benefits for life and accident and health insurance contracts(42,204)(41,140)(43,585)(42,506)
Reserve for unearned premiums(19,634)(16,280)(21,318)(18,380)
Reinsurance assets(a)19,95018,356

Short-Duration Reinsurance

Short-duration reinsurance is effected under reinsurance treaties and by negotiation on individual risks. Certain of these reinsurance arrangements consist of excess of loss contracts that protect us against losses above stipulated amounts. Ceded premiums are considered prepaid reinsurance premiums and are recognized as a reduction of premiums earned over the contract period in proportion to the protection received. Amounts recoverable from reinsurers on short-duration contracts are estimated in a manner consistent with the claims liabilities associated with the reinsurance and presented as a component of Reinsurance assets. Assumed reinsurance premiums are earned primarily on a pro-rata basis over the terms of the reinsurance contracts and the portion of premiums relating to the unexpired terms of coverage is included in the reserve for unearned premiums. For both ceded and assumed reinsurance, risk transfer requirements must be met for reinsurance accounting to apply. If risk transfer requirements are not met, the contract is accounted for as a deposit, resulting in the recognition of cash flows under the contract through a deposit asset or liability and not as revenue or expense. To meet risk transfer requirements, a reinsurance contract must include both insurance risk, consisting of both underwriting and timing risk, and a reasonable possibility of a significant loss for the assuming entity. Similar risk transfer criteria are used to determine whether directly written insurance contracts should be accounted for as insurance or as a deposit.

The following table presents short-duration insurance premiums written and earned:

(a) Represents gross reinsurance assets, excluding allowances and reinsurance recoverable on paid losses.

Years Ended December 31,
(in millions)201620152014
Premiums written:
Direct$33,970$37,698$39,375
Assumed2,8242,9723,399
Ceded(7,561)(7,604)(8,318)
Net$29,233$33,066$34,456

Premiums earned:
Direct$34,869$37,105$38,707
Assumed2,9622,6593,258
Ceded(7,284)(7,593)(8,140)
Net$30,547$32,171$33,825

For the years ended December 31, 2016, 2015 and 2014, reinsurance recoveries, which reduced losses and loss adjustment expenses incurred, amounted to $2.1 billion, $4.1 billion and $2.6 billion, respectively.

Long-Duration Reinsurance

Long-duration reinsurance is effected principally under yearly renewable term treaties. The premiums with respect to these treaties are earned over the contract period in proportion to the protection provided. Amounts recoverable from reinsurers on long-duration contracts are estimated in a manner consistent with the assumptions used for the underlying policy benefits and are presented as a component of Reinsurance assets.

The following table presents premiums for our long-duration life insurance and annuity operations:

Years Ended December 31,
(in millions)201620152014
Gross premiums$4,732$5,240$4,070
Ceded premiums(789)(756)(661)
Net$3,943$4,484$3,409

Long-duration reinsurance recoveries, which reduced Policyholder benefits and losses incurred, were approximately $1.0 billion for both of the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015, and $731 million for the year ended December 31, 2014.

The following table presents long-duration insurance in-force ceded to other insurance companies:

At December 31,
(in millions)201620152014
Long-duration insurance in force ceded$174,363$177,025$180,178

Long-duration insurance in-force assumed represented 0.03 percent of gross long-duration insurance in-force at December 31, 2016, and 0.04 percent at both December 31, 2015 and 2014; and premiums assumed represented 3 percent, 0.1 percent and 0.5 percent of gross premiums for the years ended December 31, 2016, 2015 and 2014, respectively.

The U.S. Life Insurance Companies manage the capital impact of their statutory reserve requirements, including those resulting from the NAIC Model Regulation “Valuation of Life Insurance Policies” (Regulation XXX) and NAIC Actuarial Guideline 38 (Guideline AXXX), through unaffiliated and affiliated reinsurance transactions. Effective July 1, 2016, one of the U.S. Life Insurance Companies entered into an agreement to cede approximately $5 billion of statutory reserves for certain whole life and universal life policies to an unaffiliated reinsurer. Effective December 31, 2016, the same life insurance subsidiary recaptured term and universal life reserves subject to Regulation XXX and Guideline AXXX, previously ceded to an affiliate, and ceded approximately $14 billion of such statutory reserves to an unaffiliated reinsurer under an amendment to the July 1, 2016 agreement. Under GAAP, these unaffiliated reinsurance transactions use deposit accounting with a reinsurance risk charge recorded in income, whereas such affiliated transactions are eliminated in consolidation. Under one affiliated reinsurance arrangement, one of the U.S. Life Insurance Companies obtains letters of credit to support statutory recognition of the ceded reinsurance. As of December 31, 2016, this subsidiary had two bilateral letters of credit totaling $450 million, which were issued on February 7, 2014 and expire on February 7, 2020. The letters of credit are subject to reimbursement by AIG Parent in the event of a drawdown. See Note 19 for additional information on the use of affiliated reinsurance for Regulation XXX and Guideline AXXX reserves.

Reinsurance Security

Our third-party reinsurance arrangements do not relieve us from our direct obligations to our beneficiaries. Thus, a credit exposure exists with respect to both short-duration and long-duration reinsurance ceded to the extent that any reinsurer fails to meet the obligations assumed under any reinsurance agreement. We hold substantial collateral as security under related reinsurance agreements in the form of funds, securities, and/or letters of credit. A provision has been recorded for estimated unrecoverable reinsurance. We believe that no exposure to a single reinsurer represents an inappropriate concentration of credit risk to AIG. Gross reinsurance assets with our three largest reinsurers aggregate to approximately $8.2 billion and $6.5 billion at December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively, of which approximately $4.4 billion and $3.7 billion at December 31, 2016 and 2015, respectively, was not secured by collateral.