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STATUTORY ACCOUNTING AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2013
Notes to Financial Statements [Abstract]  
STATUTORY ACCOUNTING AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS
STATUTORY ACCOUNTING AND DIVIDEND RESTRICTIONS
Our insurance subsidiaries are required to report their results of operations and financial position to state insurance regulatory authorities on the basis of statutory accounting practices prescribed or permitted by such authorities. Statutory accounting practices primarily differ from U.S. GAAP by charging policy acquisition costs to expense as incurred, establishing future policy benefit liabilities using different actuarial assumptions as well as valuing investments and certain assets and accounting for deferred taxes on a different basis.

Aflac, the Company's most significant insurance subsidiary, reports statutory financial statements that are prepared on the basis of accounting practices prescribed or permitted by the Nebraska Department of Insurance (NEDOI). The NEDOI recognizes statutory accounting principles and practices prescribed or permitted by the state of Nebraska for determining and reporting the financial condition and results of operations of an insurance company, and for determining a company's solvency under Nebraska insurance law. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners' (NAIC) Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual (SAP) has been adopted by the state of Nebraska as a component of those prescribed or permitted practices. Additionally, the Director of the NEDOI has the right to permit other specific practices which deviate from prescribed practices. Aflac has been given explicit permission by the Director of the NEDOI for two such permitted practices. These permitted practices, which do not impact the calculation of net income on a statutory basis or prevent the triggering of a regulatory event in the Company's risk-based capital calculation, are as follows:

Aflac has reported as admitted assets the refundable lease deposits on the leases of commercial office space which house Aflac Japan's sales operations. These lease deposits are unique and part of the ordinary course of doing business in the country of Japan; these assets would be non-admitted under SAP.

Aflac utilized book value accounting for certain guaranteed separate account funding agreements instead of fair value accounting as required by SAP.  The underlying separate account assets had an unrealized gain of $35 million as of December 31, 2013, compared with an unrealized gain of $46 million as of December 31, 2012.

A reconciliation of Aflac's capital and surplus between SAP and practices permitted by the state of Nebraska is shown below:
(In millions)
2013
 
2012
Capital and surplus, Nebraska state basis
 
$
9,630

 
 
 
$
8,892

 
State Permitted Practice:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Refundable lease deposits – Japan
 
(41
)
 
 
 
(49
)
 
Separate Account Funding Agreements
 
35

 
 
 
46

 
Capital and surplus, NAIC basis
 
$
9,624

 
 
 
$
8,889

 

As of December 31, 2013, Aflac's capital and surplus significantly exceeded the required company action level capital and surplus of $1.3 billion. As determined on a U.S. statutory accounting basis, Aflac's net income was $2.4 billion in 2013, $2.3 billion in 2012 and $444 million in 2011.

Aflac Japan must report its results of operations and financial position to the Japanese Financial Services Agency (FSA) on a Japanese regulatory accounting basis as prescribed by the FSA. Capital and surplus of the Japan branch, based on Japanese regulatory accounting practices, was $4.2 billion at December 31, 2013, compared with $3.9 billion at December 31, 2012. Japanese regulatory accounting practices differ in many respects from U.S. GAAP. Under Japanese regulatory accounting practices, policy acquisition costs are expensed immediately; deferred income tax liabilities are recognized on a different basis; policy benefit and claim reserving methods and assumptions are different; the carrying value of securities transferred to held to maturity is different; policyholder protection corporation obligations are not accrued; premium income is recognized on a cash basis; reinsurance is recognized on a different basis; and investments can have a separate accounting classification and treatment referred to as “policy reserve matching bonds,” or “PRM.”

The Parent Company depends on its subsidiaries for cash flow, primarily in the form of dividends and management fees. Consolidated retained earnings in the accompanying financial statements largely represent the undistributed earnings of our insurance subsidiary. Amounts available for dividends, management fees and other payments to the Parent Company by its insurance subsidiary may fluctuate due to different accounting methods required by regulatory authorities. These payments are also subject to various regulatory restrictions and approvals related to safeguarding the interests of insurance policyholders. Our insurance subsidiary must maintain adequate risk-based capital for U.S. regulatory authorities and our Japan branch must maintain adequate solvency margins for Japanese regulatory authorities. Additionally, the maximum amount of dividends that can be paid to the Parent Company by Aflac without prior approval of Nebraska's director of insurance is the greater of the net income from operations, which excludes net realized investment gains, for the previous year determined under statutory accounting principles, or 10% of statutory capital and surplus as of the previous year-end. Dividends declared by Aflac during 2014 in excess of $2.4 billion would require such approval. Aflac declared dividends of $962 million during 2013.

A portion of Aflac Japan earnings, as determined on a Japanese regulatory accounting basis, can be repatriated each year to Aflac U.S. after complying with solvency margin provisions and satisfying various conditions imposed by Japanese regulatory authorities for protecting policyholders. Profit repatriations to the United States can fluctuate due to changes in the amounts of Japanese regulatory earnings. Among other items, factors affecting regulatory earnings include Japanese regulatory accounting practices and fluctuations in currency translation of Aflac Japan's dollar-denominated investments and related investment income into yen. Profits repatriated by Aflac Japan to Aflac U.S. were as follows for the years ended December 31:
  
In Dollars
 
In Yen
(In millions of dollars and billions of yen)
2013
 
2012
 
2011
 
2013
 
2012
 
2011
Profit repatriation
 
$
771

 
 
 
$
422

 
 
 
$
143

 
 
 
76.8

 
 
 
33.1

 
 
 
11.0

 


We had entered into foreign exchange forwards and options as part of an economic hedge on 65.0 billion yen of the 2013 repatriation, resulting in $24 million of additional funds received when the yen was exchanged into dollars in July 2013. As of December 31, 2013, we had foreign exchange forwards and options as part of a hedging strategy on 47.5 billion yen of the profit repatriation expected to be received in July 2014. In January 2014, we restructured this hedging strategy with a new 52.5 billion yen foreign exchange forward contract.