The News Review:
- Different plans boil down to who gets insurance, how will they get it…
- Must you buy health insurance?
- Inaugural Insurance Taskforce on Corporate Governance meets in Dubai
- More tourists buy travel insurance in case of trip cancellation,…
- Texas approves Farmers Insurance’s revised premiums
- Lawmakers turn attention to insurance
- Higher insurance costs forecast
Different plans boil down to who gets insurance, how will they get it…
USA Today – Mar 26, 2008
Democratic rivals Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton would agree. But that’s about where agreement over health care ends. While McCain sees soaring medical costs as the initial problem to address, Obama and Clinton have competing plans that focus first on expanding coverage. They say too many Americans don’t have adequate health insurance, and 47 million aren’t covered at all.
Must you buy health insurance?
Christian Science Monitor – Mar 26, 2008
relocation {float: left;margin: 2px 0 0 5px;}#searchpanel {float:right;margin:-3px 0 0;}#searchpanel label {_margin: 0 -20px 0 0;padding: 0;}. processColumn(“column-1″) –> Must you buy health insurance? Plans from Clinton and Obama may be unconstitutional. By Karl Manheim and Jamie Court from the March 26, 2008 edition.
Related: Must you buy health insurance?
Inaugural Insurance Taskforce on Corporate Governance meets in Dubai
Al-Bawaba – Mar 26, 2008
The establishment of the Arab Forum of Insurance Regulatory Commissions (AFIRC) came as a prompt response to the accelerating developments in the regional insurance industry, and the challenges which face the Arab Insurance Industry. As part of its mandate, AFIRC aims to enhance cooperation among its members in order to regulate and develop the insurance businesses in the Arab World. The membership of the forum, include 15 Arab Countries namely, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, and YemenThe Hawkamah Institute for Corporate Governance is an international association of corporate governance practitioners, regulators and institutions whose primary mandate is to develop corporate governance best practices in the Middle East region. By promoting the core values of transparency, accountability, fairness, disclosure and responsibility, Hawkamah assists countries and companies in the region to develop and implement sound and globally integrated corporate governance frameworks.