Insurance fundamentals
law of numbers
A fairly accurate predictions of what will happen to a large group of similar individuals over a given time period
insurance
A method of handling pure risk by spreading it over a large number of people
Morale hazard
And attention and disregard for one's life, health or property by engaging in behaviors that increase the frequency or severity of a loss
Risk is best to find as
And uncertainty of loss
Adverse selection occurs when
Applicants are excepted by their ensure with no attention given to underwriting
And example of a risk retention
Canceling my health insurance after never getting sick
Examples of physical hazards
Defective building materials exposure to toxic chemicals or slippery sidewalks are all physical hazards
When must liability insurance exist
During time of loss
Risk reduction
Employing loss prevention methods such as installing a sprinkler in a building or losing weight for health reasons
Placing gasoline next to a fire
Hazard
What is a moral hazard
Hazards that increase the probability that a person would intentionally cause create or inflate a loss
What is reinsurance
Insurance purchased by an insurance company from another insurance company
What is over insurance
Insured purchasing more coverage than needed , insured purchasing more than one policy
Adverse Selection
Insurers must carefully underwrite all risks to avoid being a victim of adverse selection. Adverse selection is the tendency of injuries with a greater than average chance of loss to purchase insurance insurance agencies are confronted with the possibility of loss due to risk factors that would not factor in at the time the policy was sold
Risk pools
Large group of similar individuals
What is physical hazards
Material structure environmental or operational features of an insured risk that may create or increase the opportunity for injury or damage
Embezzlement is an example of
Moral hazard
Fabricating a claim so it would appear legitimate is an example of
Moral hazard
A recent purchaser of auto insurance drives less carefully knowing that the insurance will cover any losses that occur. what type of hazard is this?
Morale hazard
Are all risks insurable?
No
Are all seven elements in insurable risk required?
No
Pure Risk
Only loss. no financial gain
Self insurance
Paying for risk at your own expense without insurance
Slippery floor is an example of
Physical hazard
Speculative risk
Possibility of financial gain or profit. Speculative risk is not insurable
What violates the principles of indemnity
Profit from loss, over insurance
Example of over insurance
Purchasing more than one health insurance policy
The only possibility is loss
Pure risk
What are the two categories of risk?
Pure risk and speculative risk
Examples of morale hazard
Purposely driving without a seatbelt because you know insurance will cover the cost
Insurable interest
Refers to the financial interest one might have in a property, a liability or a person being insured ( you can have insurance on your house, but not your neighbors house)
Installing a sprinkler system in a flammable house
Risk reduction
What is dynamic risk? provide an example. Are they insurable?
Risks associated with change. An example would be if a fatal virus erupted into society or technological advances that may cause a business to lose market share. these risks are not insurable
What is fundamental risks? provide an exampl. are they insurable?
Risks that Affect entire groups of people or properties within society. this includes floods earthquake terrorism and economic collapse
Sharing a risk. provide an example
Sharing risk with an insurance company such as Paying premiums and deductibles.
Actuaries
Someone who makes Mathematical predictions of how many people will be affected in the risk pool
Four types Of risks
Static risk, dynamic risk, Fundamental risk and particular risk
What is static risk. provide an example. Are they insurable?
Static risks are historical factors that do not frequently fluctuate. they result from a static or unchanging environment. An example of static risk is an area that may only flood every 100 years. They are insurable
What is the primary source of information use my insurance companies during the underwriting process
The application for insurance
Principle of indemnity
The insured must only be restored to the approximate financial condition that existed prior to loss. No better or worse
What is risk
The possibility that a loss may occur
What is underwriting
The process of selecting certain types of risks that have historically produce a profit and rejecting those risk that do not fit the underwriting criteria for the insurer. This results in profit produced for the insurer
Your computer gets stolen what is the peril
The theft of the computer
Spreading the risk
This can be achieved by insuring (during the same underwriting period) Either a very large number of similar risk, multiple insured locations or activities with this similar risk. insurance can avoid adverse selection by pulling a risk
What is Risk avoidance. Provide an example
To avoid the hazard completely. To avoid a car accident you were just simply not drive a car
Why do insurance companies use "the law of numbers"
To calculate their probably loses and establish an accurate premium
Why do companies use reinsurance
To reduce their loss exposure on a particular risk
Transfer of risk. Provide example
Transferring a risk to an insurance company in exchange for paying a regular premium
Peril versus hazard
Underlying causes of a loss may result from physical hazard, moral hazard or moral hazard
What is particular risk? providing an example. are they insurable?
Where is the only affect one individual or family. Does not affect entire community or a society. These risks arise from situations occur simultaneously with another specific event that increases the chance of loss.
Could someone purchase a life insurance policy on their business partners life and why
Yes because they would have insurable interest in their business partners life
What is underwriting
risk selection and classification process
What are the sources of underwriting information used by insurance companies
• consumer reports • Inspection reports •Credit reports •Insurance map •Insurance company records •Insurance industry statistics and reports
List the seven characteristics of an insurable risk
• definite loss •Accidental loss • Chance of loss must be calculable •Law of large numbers must apply • Lost must create economic hardship • Insurance must be at a reasonable cost • Los must not be catastrophic in nature
What are the five methods of risk management
• risk avoidance • Transfer of risk • sharing a risk • self insurance / assumption of risk • risk reduction/risk control