About


Who We Are and Our History

Who We Are

The Canadian Institute of Actuaries (CIA) is the qualifying and governing body of the actuarial profession in Canada. We develop and uphold rigorous standards, share our risk management expertise, and advance actuarial science to improve lives in Canada and around the world. Our more than 6,000 members apply their knowledge of math, statistics, data analytics, and business in providing services and advice of the highest quality to help Canadian people and organizations face the future with confidence.

The Head Office has a small dedicated staff group located in Ottawa. The Head Office looks after publications, communications, member services, translation, volunteer support, maintaining the website, and professional development. 

The CIA Board has 15 actuaries, six councils focused on the core needs of the profession, and over 40 committees and numerous task forces working on issues linked to the CIA's strategic plan.

The CIA

  • Promotes the advancement of actuarial science through research;
  • Provides for the education and qualification of members and prospective members;
  • Ensures that actuarial services its members provide meet extremely high professional standards;
  • Is self-regulating and enforces rules of professional conduct; and
  • Is an advocate for the profession with governments and the public in the development of public policy.

Our History

By Morris W. Chambers,
FCIA, FSA, MAAA, HonFIA, HonFASI

The CIA, the national organization of the actuarial profession in Canada, was established by an Act of the federal parliament on March 18, 1965. Since its formation, the Canadian Institute has grown steadily to its present size of about 3,900 member Fellows.

Actuarial thought and practice have a long history in Canada. The beginning of the actuarial profession in Canada can be dated in 1847, when the Canada Life Insurance Company was founded in Hamilton, Ontario, by Hugh Baker, who became a Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries in 1852. The federal Department of Insurance was established in 1875 and shortly thereafter recruited actuaries to its staff. The first actuarial organization in North America was the Actuarial Society of America, which was founded in 1889 in New York and included four Canadians among its 38 Charter Members.

The original organization of actuaries in Canada, the Actuaries Club, was founded in 1907 with 24 charter members, all actuaries living and working in Toronto. The Canadian Association of Actuaries was established on October 8, 1946, and included all members of the Actuaries Clubs of Toronto and Winnipeg as well as a group of Montreal actuaries. This was the organization that formed the membership basis of the CIA in 1965.

According to the federal Act that incorporated the CIA,

"The purpose and objects of the Institute shall be the following:

  • To advance and develop actuarial science,
  • To promote the application of actuarial science to human affairs, and
  • To establish, promote and maintain high standards of competence and conduct within the actuarial profession."

Following competitions, the Institute adopted the motto Nobis Cura Futuri, meaning We care about the future.

Within a few years, the need for a truly bilingual CIA was identified as a means of recognizing Canada's official languages policy, of improving service to members, and of strengthening the actuarial profession across Canada. A formal bilingualism policy, requiring that all publications of the Institute be available in both French and English and that simultaneous translation be provided at all general meetings, was adopted by the Institute's Council in 1977.

Statutory recognition of Fellowship of the Canadian Institute of Actuaries came rapidly. None of the provinces saw fit to license actuaries, but they made full use of the FCIA (FICA, en français) designation. Regulations under the Ontario and Québec pension plan legislation required non-insured pension plans to be valued at least once every three years by an FCIA, and that a cost certificate be filed. Other provinces followed this example a few years later. Many acts relating to public sector pension plans also require certification by an FCIA.

Even before 1965, the statements of insurance companies transacting life and health insurance in Canada had to be signed by an actuary who was a Fellow of a recognized actuarial body. With the advent of the CIA, most Canadian jurisdictions introduced the requirement that the actuary be an FCIA. A similar requirement became effective for federally-registered property/casualty insurers in 1992 and also, at that time, for provincially registered property/casualty companies in Québec and Ontario. In anticipation of these property/casualty insurer requirements, the CIA undertook a special program in the late 1980s to increase the number of qualified property/casualty practitioners.

The Institute's examination system has evolved to meet the needs of the profession and the changing social background. The early examinations are co-sponsored by the Canadian Institute of Actuaries, the Society of Actuaries, and the Casualty Actuarial Society. The later examinations of the Society of Actuaries are also co-sponsored by the CIA.

The examinations of the Society of Actuaries had, during the 1990s, been modified to provide a Canadian option and a United States option in a number of the later examinations dealing with taxation, law, social security and the like. Only an actuary who had passed the Canadian options could be granted Fellowship in the Canadian Institute of Actuaries. In addition to opting for the United States or Canadian streams, a student of the Society of Actuaries could choose to concentrate on group benefits, individual life and annuity risks, pensions, or finance and investments. As co-sponsor, the CIA has an influential voice regarding examination content and methods, particularly as they affect Canadians. Examinations can be taken in various cities in Canada and, in the main, are bilingual.

In 2000, the Society of Actuaries examinations were modified and, in the process, the later examinations were changed to be less nation-specific. Consequently, in order to demonstrate knowledge of Canadian practice, FCIA candidates writing the Society of Actuaries examinations are now required, as well, to complete the CIA-administered Practice Education Course (PEC). The PEC offers separate courses in insurance, group benefits, pension, and investment/finance areas of practice and in all cases concludes with a written examination.

Similar policies are pursued with the Casualty Actuarial Society, which specializes in property/casualty risks. For the later examinations, the Casualty Actuarial Society conducts separate exams that are jointly sponsored by the Canadian Institute of Actuaries and that incorporate Canadian content.

Actuaries from the United Kingdom and other countries are also required to complete the CIA's Practice Education Course to demonstrate that they have adequate knowledge of Canadian practice before they can be admitted as FCIAs.

The CIA and its members are active in the international actuarial community. The CIA was active in the 1998 restructuring of the International Actuarial Association and prides itself in being a founding member of that body. In fact, for many years, the IAA Secretariat was co-located with the CIA Head Office in Ottawa.

An Act to Incorporate Canadian Institute of Actuaries

Presidents

1965
1965–1966
1966–1967
1967–1968
1968–1969
1969–1970
1970–1971
1971–1972
1972–1973
1973–1974
1974–1975
1975–1976
1976–1977
1977–1978
1978–1979
1979–1980
1980–1981
1981–1982
1982–1983
1983–1984
1984–1985
1985–1986
1986–1987
1987–1988
1988–1989
1989–1990 
1990–1991
1991–1992
1992–1993
1993–1994
Carman Naylor
Richard Humphrys
E. Sydney Jackson
Archie McCracken
Colin Jack
Laurence Coward
J. Craig Davidson
Léon Mondoux
John Maynard
Robert Dowsett
C. Garfield White
Robin Leckie
M. David Brown
W. James Lewis
Thomas Suttie
John Birkenshaw
Charles Galloway
L. Blake Fewster
Yves Guérard
Christopher Chapman
C.S. (Kit) Moore
Michael Rosenfelder
Kenneth Clark
J. Dickson Crawford
Jacques Cloutier
Peter Hirst
Robert Brown
W. Paul McCrossan
Morris Chambers
Jim Brierley
  1994–1995
1995–1996
1996–1997
1997–1998
1998–1999
1999–2000
2000–2001
2001–2002
2002–2003
2003–2004
2004–2005
2005–2006
2006–2007
2007–2008
2008–2009
2009–2010
2010–2011
2011–2012
2012–2013
2013–2014
2014–2015
2015–2016
2016–2017
2017–2018
2018–2019
2019–2020
2020–2021
2021–2022
2022–2023
Kurt von Schilling
Marc Fernet
Neville Henderson
Harry Panjer
Peter Morse
Stuart Wason
David Oakden
Jean-Louis Massé
A. David Pelletier
Mike Lombardi
Brian FitzGerald
Charles McLeod
Normand Gendron
Jim Murta
Mike Hale
Robert Howard
Micheline Dionne
James Christie
Simon Curtis
Jacques Lafrance
Jacques Tremblay
Robert Stapleford
David Dickson
Sharon Giffen
John Dark
Marc Tardif
Michel St-Germain
Jacqueline Friedland
Hélène Pouliot (President)



1990–1991 
1990–1991