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CHAPTER THREE

INSURANCE

“An ingenious modern game of chance


in which the player is permitted to enjoy
the comfortable conviction that he is
beating the man who keeps the table”
Ambrose Bierce

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OUTLINES
Insurance Defined
Basic characteristics of insurance
Fundamentals of insurable risk
Insurance and gambling compared
Insurance and Speculation compared.
Benefits and costs of insurance
Benefits of insurance to the society
Cost of insurance to society
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Insurance Defined
Insurance can be defined as a contractual agreement
between two parties: the insurer and the insured.
Under the agreement, the insurer agrees to reimburse
loss (as defined in the insurance contract) in return for
the insured's premium payment
Insurance is a system used to handle risk, or transfer
risk.
Insurance is a device used to spread the loss suffered by
an individual or firm to the members in the group.
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The following Three points must be considered
regarding insurance contracts
1. There are usually two parties in the contract:
the insurer and the insured.
2. The insured transfers his risk to the insurer.
To this effect, he will have to pay premium.
3. If the specified risk materializes (happened
to the insurance), within a specified period,
the insurer will make financial compensation
to the insured or his beneficiary.
The insured is restored to his former position
called Indemnification.
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Basic characteristics of insurance
An insurance plan or arrangement typically has
certain characteristics.
Pooling of losses
– Spreading losses incurred by the few over the
entire group
– Risk reduction based on the Law of Large
Numbers
Payment of fortuitous losses
– Insurance pays for losses that are unforeseen,
unexpected, and occur as a result of chance
– The loss must be accidental
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Risk transfer
– A pure risk is transferred from the insured to
the insurer, who typically is in a stronger
financial position

Indemnification
– The insured is restored to his or her
approximate financial position prior to the
occurrence of the loss
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Fundamentals of insurable risks
Not all risks are commercially insurable.
• Insurers normally insure only pure risks.
• However, not all pure risks are insurable.
• A risk could be considered an ideally
insurable risk if it satisfies the six conditions
below.
1. There must be a large number of exposure units
2. The loss must be accidental and unintentional
3. The loss must be determinable and measurable
4. The loss should not be catastrophic
5. The chance of loss must be calculable
6. The premium must be economically feasible
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1. There must be a large number of exposure units
– There must be a sufficiently large number
of homogeneous exposure units to make
the losses reasonably predictable.
2. The loss must be accidental and unintentional
– The loss must be the result of a contingency
– The loss must not be something that is certain to
happen
– To control moral hazard
– To assure randomness
3. The loss must be determinable and measurable
– To facilitate loss adjustment
• Insurer must be able to determine if the loss is
covered and if so, how much should be paid.
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4. No catastrophic loss
– Losses occurred from earth quakes, floods and other
natural disasters will not be insured.
– To allow the pooling technique to work
– Exposures to catastrophic loss can be managed by:
• dispersing coverage over a large geographic area
• using reinsurance
5. Calculable chance of loss
– The insurer must be able to calculate both the
average frequency and the average severity of
future losses with some accuracy
– to establish an adequate premium
6. Economically feasible premium
- The cost of insurance must not be high in
relation to the possible loss
- so people can afford to buy 9
Insurance vs. Gambling
Insurance Gambling
• Insurance is a technique • Gambling creates a new
for handing an already speculative risk
existing pure risk

• Insurance is socially • Gambling is not socially


productive: productive
– both parties have a – The winner’s gain comes
common interest in the at the expense of the
prevention of a loss loser

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Insurance vs. Speculation
Insurance Speculation
• Risk is transferred by a • Risk is transferred by a
contract contract
• Insurance involves the • Speculation involves
transfer of insurable risks that are typically
risks uninsurable
• Insurance can reduce • Speculation involves
the objective risk of an only risk transfer, not
insurer through the risk reduction.
Law of Large Numbers

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Benefits and Costs of Insurance
Benefits of Insurance
Indemnification for Loss
– To provide financial compensation to those insured
who suffered losses due to accidental misfortune
– Contributes to family and business stability
Source of Investment Funds
– Premiums may be invested, promoting economic growth
Reduction of Worry
– Insurance reduces the physical and mental stress that
insured’s face concerning the possibility or financial loss.

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Encourages Saving
– In life insurance, certain policies have dual
advantages: Financial protection in the event of
death, and saving in the event of survival.
Enhances Efficient Utilization of Resources

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Limitations of Insurance
Insurance deals with only pure risks.
- Not all pure risks are insurable.

- Examples include Flood, earthquake …


Cost of Doing Business

– Insurers consume resources in providing insurance to


society
– An expense loading is the amount needed to pay all
expenses, including commissions, general
administrative expenses, state premium taxes,
acquisition expenses, and an allowance for contingencies
and profit
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Fraudulent Claims
Examples include the following:
Auto accidents are faked or staged to collect
benefits.
Dishonest claimants fake slip-and-fall accidents.
Inflated Claims
Another cost of insurance relates to the
submission of inflated or “padded” claims.
Although the loss is not intentionally caused by
the insured, the dollar amount of the claim may
exceed the actual financial loss.
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