Section 1
Insurable Interest
Any financial interest in life or property such that, if the life or property were lost or harmed, the insured would suffer financially.
Loss
Any reduction in the quality, quantity or value of something. Loss can mean bodily injury, property damage, death, loss of income
Physical Hazard
Anything that poses a risk and can be seen, heard, touched, tasted, or smelled e.g. weak tree limbs, worn-out brakes
Risk Managment Strategies
By minimizing your loss exposure by reducing the frequency and severity of losses
Sharing
No single insurer would be responsible for the total claim
3major types of Loss exposure
Personal, property and liability
Reinsurance
The transfer of insurance risk from one insurer to another through a contractual agreement under which one insurer (the reinsurer) agrees, in return for a reinsurance premium, to indemnify another insurer (the primary insurer) for some or all of the financial consequences of certain loss exposures covered by the primary's insurance policies. Normally for catastrophic loss
Retain/Retention
When a person or entity has the money to cover a loss and therefore doesn't buy insurance
Transfer
When the risk is shifted to another
Loss Ratio Formula
incurred losses + loss adjusting expense/earned premium = loss ratio.
Speculative Risk
involves the opportunity for either loss or gain. These are not insurable
Dimensions of a Loss Exposure
loss frequency; loss severity; total dollar losses; timing
Unilateral Contract
promise in exchange for an act (premium)
Moral Hazard
the actions people take after they have entered into a transaction that make the other party to the transaction worse off
Personal Contract
the contract is between the insured and the insurer. Company has a right to decide who they will do business with
Contract of Adhesion
the insured must accept the entire contract with all of its terms and conditions. Take it or leave it terms
Underwriting
the process of selecting, classifying, and pricing applicants for insurance
exposure unit
the unit of measurement used in insurance pricing
Elements of enforceable contract
Agreement, Consideration, Competent Patties, legal Purpose
Reinsurance Treaty
Also know as automatic transfers the agreed portion of the policy liability automatically on every policy
22 Classes of Insurance
Also known as lines of insurance. Casualty is not a class
aleatory
An insurance contract. Uncertain future
Insurable Events
Any contingent or unknown event whether last or future which may cause injury to a person having insurable interest
Law of Large Numbers
A principle stating that the larger the number of similar exposure units considered, the more closely the losses reported will equal the underlying probability of loss.
insurance
A substition exchange of a small certain loss (premium) for a large uncertain loss (claim)
STARR
5 methods of handling risk
Morale Hazard
A condition of carelessness or indifference that increases the frequency or severity of loss.
Legal Hazard
A condition of the legal environment that increases loss frequency or severity.
Adverse Selection
A high-risk person benefits more from insurance, so is more likely to purchase it.
Words for insurance company
Entity, company, principal, underwriter, insurer, carrier, we/us/our
miscellaneous insurance
Insurance that is not included in a specific class of insurance. Example: tornado, earthquake
Reduce/Reduction
Insured takes steps to prevent or minimize the chance of a loss example fire sprinklers
Named Peril Policy
Insures only against perils specifically listed in the policy
Tort Law
Involving a wrongful act that brings harm to a person or damage to property. This does not include crime.
Ideally Insurable Risk
Refers to risk that is financially within reason and is, therefore reasonable to insure. The loss must be an accident, create economic hardship, predictable, definite and measurable, cannot be catastrophic and the insured person must fit a category to which a company can apply the law of large numbers.
Avoid/Avoidance
Removing the hazard or object that causes the risk
Risk = Peril = Hazard =
Risk = chance Peril = cause Hazard = increase cause
Peril
The actual cause of a loss. Example: fire wind hail
conditional
The contract conditions must be met before the insurers promise is fullfilled
contract
a binding agreement between two or more persons that is enforceable by law.
Pure Risk
a risk that presents the chance of loss but no opportunity for gain
Deductibles
a specified amount of money that the insured must pay before an insurance company will pay a claim
Open Peril
all perils except those specifically excluded.
Loss Exposure
any situation or circumstance in which a loss is possible, regardless of whether a loss occurs
hazard
anything that increases the likelihood of loss through peril