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Published byJoy Armstrong Modified over 8 years ago
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The Insurance Device Chapter 3
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Private and Social Private (Commercial) –Auto, Life etc. Social (Publicly provided) –Social security, Medicare etc Quasi-social –FDIC, SIPC, PBGC etc.
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What is insurance? The insured exchanges a large uncertain loss for a small certain cost The insured can be an individual or a corporation
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What is involved in insurance? Risk gets transferred from individual to a group A group of individuals can agree to share the losses of any one member (mutual insurance) There is risk reduction through pooling or diversification (The law of large numbers)
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Two uses of the law of large numbers Estimation of loss probability becomes accurate with large data sets Selling insurance becomes feasible when risk is pooled (diversified)
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Some probability concepts Subjective and objective A priori and a posteriori Uncorrelated outcomes and variance of sums
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Pooling and risk reduction Let x represent the loss from a set of policies Let there be many such identical sets that are uncorrelated with each other As a compnay adds additional sets to its portfolio, the variance increases linearly Standard deviation increases as the square root of n
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Pooling and risk reduction The standard deviation per set declines (risk reduction) The standard deviation of losses for the portfolio increases Reinsurance allows the insurer take a small piece of a large pie Need pooling and sharing for risk reduction
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Some problems Stability of the probability process Adverse selection (unobservable knowledge) Morale hazard (unobservable action) Economic feasibility
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Self insurance Large firms may have a large number of homogenous exposure units May be able to do in-house pooling Risk divided up among shareholders May have to be funded adequately for legal/regulatory reasons
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