Title: Fundamentals of Risk and Insurance
1- Fundamentals of Risk and Insurance
2Chapter 1The Problem of Risk
- 1. The concept of risk
- Risk a condition in which there is a possibility
of an adverse deviation from a desired outcome
that is expected or hoped for
3Peril a cause of a lossHazard a condition
that may create or increase the chance of a loss
arising from a given peril
- Three categories of hazards
- Physical hazards
- Moral hazard
- Morale hazard
42. Classifications of risk
- Pure risk and speculative risk
- Pure risk the situations that involve only the
chance of loss or no loss - Speculative risk a situation in which there is a
possibility of loss, but also a possibility of
gain
5Chapter 2 Introduction to risk management
- 1. Risk management
- Risk management is a scientific approach to
dealing with pure risks by anticipating possible
accidental losses and designing and implementing
procedures that minimize the occurrence of loss
or the financial impact of the losses that do
occur
62. Risk management tools
- Include two broad approaches
- (1) Risk control focuses on minimizing the risk
of loss - A. Risk avoidance
- B. Risk reduction loss prevention loss control
- (2) Risk financing focuses on finding funds to
meet losses
7(2) Risk financing focuses on finding funds to
meet losses
- A. Risk retention (assumption)
- Intentional and unintentional
- B. Risk transfer
- Insurance, hedging
- Assume all risks that are not significant in
relation to the companys financial strength - Insure all risks not assumed
83. Risk management process
- (1) Determination of objectives
- (2) Identification of risks
- (3) Evaluation of risks
- (4) Considering alternatives and selecting the
risk treatment device - (5) Implementing the decision
- (6) Evaluation and review
9Determination of objectives
Post-loss objectives Pre-loss objectives
Survival Economy
Continuity of operations Reduction in anxiety
Earning stability Meeting externally imposed obligations
Continued growth Social responsibility
Social responsibility
10Chapter 3The insurance device
- 1. The nature and functions of insurance
- (1) Risk sharing and risk transfer
- A. Transferring or shifting risk from one
individual to a group - B. Sharing losses, on some equitable basis, by
all members of the group
11(2) Insurance defined from the viewpoint of the
individual
- Insurance is an economic device whereby the
individual substitutes a small certain cost (the
premium) for a large uncertain financial loss
(the contingency insured against) that would
exist if it were not for the insurance
12(3) Risk reduction through pooling
- The law of large numbers
- The larger the sample, the more accurate will be
the estimate of the probability - Once the estimate has been made, it must be
applied to a sufficient large number of exposure
units to permit the underlying probability to
work itself out - To make the estimate more accurate, we use
variance and standard deviation - The integration of inevitability and chance
13Each insured, and each class of insureds should
bear the mathematically fare share of the
insurance pools losses and expenses
- (4) Insurance defined from the viewpoint of
society - Insurance is an economic device for reducing and
eliminating risk through the process of combining
a sufficient number of homogeneous exposures into
a group to make the losses predictable for the
group as a whole
14(5) Elements of an insurable risk
- A. There must be a sufficient large number of
homogeneous exposure units to make the losses
reasonably predictable - B. The loss produced by the risk must be definite
and measurable - C. The loss must be fortuitous or accidental
- D. The loss must not be catastrophic
15(6) The fields of insurance
- A. Private (Voluntary) insurance
- Life insurance
- Health insurance
- Property and liability insurance
- Including named-peril coverage and open-peril
coverage - B. Social insurance
16Chapter 5 the private insurance industry
- 1. Insurers classification by legal form of
ownership - A. Capital stock insurance companies
- B. Mutual insurance companies
- C. Reciprocals or interinsurance exchange
- D. Lloyds associations
- E. Health expense associations
- F. Government insurers
172. Marketing systems
- The insurance occupations
- Agent
- Broker
- Underwriter
- Loss adjuster
- actuary
18(1) Life insurance distribution system
- A. General agents
- B. Branch office systembranch manager
- (2) Property and liability distribution system
(refer to the book) - A. Independent agents (U.S.A.)
- B. Direct writers
19Chapter 6 regulation of the insurance industry
- Regulation represents the rules by which the game
is played - The government as market regulator to protect
the weak group
201. The why of government regulation of insurance
- (1) Rationale for regulation of the insurance
industry - A. Vested-in-the-public-interest
- Solvency
- Complex nature of insurance contracts
- B. Destructive-competition
- Due to the unique nature of pricing
21(2) Goals of insurance regulationsolvencyequity
- 2. Regulation today
- The current regulatory structure
- Legislative branch
- Judicial branch
- Executive branch
223. Areas regulated
- (1) Solvency regulation
- A. Licensing of companies
- B. Reporting and financial analysis
- C. Risk-based capital
- D. Examination of companies
- E. Regulation of reserves
- F. Investments admitted/nonadmitted assets
- G. Dealing with insolvencies
23(2) Market regulation
- A. Unfair practices
- B. Policy forms
- C. Competence of agents
- D. Consumer complaints and assistance
24(3) Regulation of rates
- Principles
- Adequacy
- Not be excessive
- Not discriminate unfairly
- Ways for rate regulation
- Prior approval
- No filing
- File-and-use
- Informational filing
- Flex-rating
25Chapter 7 functions of insurers
- Ratemaking
- Methods
- Judgment rating
- Schedule rating
- Experience rating credibility factor
- Retrospective rating
26(2) Principle of the rate of premium
- A. Fairness
- B. Solvency avoid vicious competition
- C. Comparative stability
- D. Encouraging loss reduction
27(3) Setting of the property premium rate
- Rate of losscompensationinsurance amount
- Credibility factor usual 10 percent
- (This is also the adjustment rate)
- Rate of property premium
- Rate of lossX(110)X(1g) (1y)
- g extra rate, y investment gain.
- (4) Rate of life premium
28Chapter 11 introduction to life insurance
- Life insurance is a risk-pooling plan
- Life insurance does not violate the requirements
of an insurable risk, for it is not the
possibility of death itself that is insured, but
rather untimely death - Life insurance is not a contract of indemnity
291. Types of life insurance contracts
Term insurance (pure insurance protection) Cash value insurance (protection and savings)
Term insurance Whole-life insurance
Endowment insurance
Universal life insurance
Adjustable life insurance
Variable life insurance
30(1) Reasons for difference in term and cash value
insurance
- (2) The level premium concept
- 2. Current life insurance products
- (1) Term insurance
- Renewable term
- Convertible term
- Advantages of term life insuranceA. Greatest
amount of protection for a given outlayB. meet
temporary insurance needs
31Disadvantage adverse selection
- (2) Whole life insurance
- A. Straight whole life
- B. Limited-pay whole life
- (3) Universal life insurance
- Advantages of Universal Life Insurance
- Flexibility of Premium Payments
- Ability to earn a great return when interest
rates rise - Flexibility of death benefits
32Universal life insurance
- People buy a term policy and invest an additional
amount with the insurance company. - The minimum premium is to keep a term insurance
in force. - The insured is allowed to determine the amount
and frequency of the premium payments within
limits. - A guaranteed rate is specified in the contract,
while an excess interest rate is determined by a
formula or by company declaration.
33(4) Variable life insurance
- A modification of universal life insurance
- One insured has two accounts an insurance
account and a separate account - (5) Adjustable life insurance
- (6) Endowment life insurance
- (7) Participating and nonparticipating life
insurance - The dividends
343. General classifications of life insurance
- (1) Ordinary life insurance
- (2) Industrial life insurance
- Small amount but higher frequency of premiums
- (3) Group life insurance
- Provided to a well-defined group of people who
are associated for some purpose other than
purchasing life insurance - Generally costs less than similar individually
purchased insurance - (4) Credit life insurance
35Chapter 13 The life insurance contract
- 1. Inception of the life insurance contract
- Conditional binding receipt usually called a
binder, which is the temporary life insurance
contract after the payment of a premium. - The binder has the same legal effect as the
formal insurance contract
362. General provisions of life insurance contracts
- Entire contract clause
- Ownership clause
- Beneficiary clause primary or contingent
- Revocable or irrevocable
- Incontestable clause
- Misstatement of age clause
- Grace period
- Reinstatement
37Suicide clauseAviation exclusionsWar clause
- 3. Settlement options
- (1) Interest option
- (2) Installments for a fixed period
- (3) Installments of a fixed amount
- (4) Life income options
- Straight life income
- Life income with period certain
- Life income with refund
- Joint and survivor income
38Example of payments under any one of the above
life income options
- Chapter 15 Disability income insurance
- 1. General nature of disability income insurance
- Periodic payments to the person insured when he
or she is unable to work because of injury or
illness - Benefit eligibility presumes a loss of income
39(1) Types of insurersProperty and liability
insurers, life insurers and specialty health
insurers
- (2) Methods of marketing
- Mainly sold on a group basis
- (3) Short-term versus long-term disability
coverage - Short-term up to 2 years with an elimination
period (waiting period) - Long-term from the date of disability to
retirement with an elimination period. It is a
logical complement to life insurance
40Chapter 16 coverage for medical expenses
- The insurance product
- 1. Traditional forms of medical expense
insurance - (1) Base plan coverage
- Hospitalization, surgical expense coverage and
physicians coverage are written together - Covers the costs of both hospitalization and
outpatient - First dollar coverage base plan coverage
policies often have no-deductible provision
41A. Hospitalization insuranceBlue Cross service
plans provide a semiprivate room in a
participating hospital for a stated number of
days, rather than a cash benefit
- Hospital expense policies offered by commercial
insurers reimburse some or all of the cost of
room and board when the insured is confined to a
hospital - Policies of both Blue Cross and commercial
insurance companies cover incidental hospital
expenses
42B. Surgical expense insurance Specify a maximum
amount of coverage. If one patient needs more
than one procedures, the most expensive treatment
determines the payment
- UCR charges
- C. Physicians expense insurance
- (2) Major Medical Insurance
- Major medical policies have a substantial
deductible provision - Major medical policies have a participation
provision - Major medical policies have a high limit of
liability - See the example
432. Exclusions under health insurance policies (12
exclusions)
- 3. Coordination of benefit
- In the double-income family, one or both partners
may be covered under two policies - The coordination of benefit is to eliminate
double payment when two policies exist - An individuals policy applies before the
spouses policy - Children are covered under the policy of the
parent whose birthday is earliest in the year
44Chapter 19 the automobile and its legal
environment
- Automobile coverage is a type of property
insurance with the apparent elements of life
insurance - The purchase of the automobile coverage is not a
mere personal choice, instead, it is a social
obligation
451. A brief overview of automobile coverages
- (1) Automobile liability insurance (also called
the third party liability), which covers the
injuries to other persons and damages to caused - Single limit of liability
- Split limits of liability
- Insureds---the named insured and her consentients
- Exclusions
46(2) Medical payments coverageIt is written with
a maximum limit per person per accident
- (3) Physical damage coverage, also called damage
to the auto - Insures against loss of the policyholders own
automobile - The coverage is written under two insurance
agreements A. other than collision B. collision - Exclusions
47(4) Uninsured motorists coverage
- Purpose protect people from the loss of accident
caused by another uninsured motorist - Uninsured motorist
- Drivers without insurance
- Drivers with less insurance than the minimum
required by the state law - Hit-and run Drivers
- Drivers with coverage provided by insolvent
insurers
482. The no-fault concept
- No-fault vs. tort system
- The no-fault insurance provides one more option
to the insureds so that it is more flexible - Under the no-fault system, there is no attempt to
fix blame or to place the burden of the loss on
the party causing it - All parties receive compensation from their own
insurer, regardless of who caused the accident - No-fault insurance is to speed the compensation
in less serious traffic accidents
49Pure no-fault proposalsthe tort system would be
abolished for bodily injuries arising from auto
accidents
- (2) Modified no-fault proposals
- Tort action would be retained for losses above
the amount recovered under first-party coverage - (3) Expanded first-party coverage
- No exemption from tort liability
- Most important, the responsibility of the
negligent driver is retained by permitting
subrogation by the insurer paying the first-party
benefits
503. Cost of automobile insurance
- Most automobile rating systems begin with three
basic factors - A. Age and sex of the driver
- B. Use of the automobile
- C. The drivers record
- In China, the region in which the automobile is
used is also considered - Poor vs. rich, plain vs. mountainous
51Chapter 20 commercial property insurance
- Can be classified into 7 broad categories
- 1. Commercial property insurance
- 2. Boiler and machinery insurance
- 3. Transportation insurance
- 4. Crime insurance
- 5. Commercial liability insurance
- 6. Commercial automobile insurance
- 7. Workers compensation and employers liability
insurance
52Commercial Package PolicyInsureds must purchase
at least two of the packages components, and as
many as they need
- 1. Commercial property direct loss coverage
- (1) Building and Personal Property Form
- A. Property Covered
- Building
- Your Personal Property
- Personal Property of others
53B. Perils insuredbasic form, broad form, special
form
- C. Other provisions
- property excluded from coverage, deductibles,
actual cash value - D. Coinsurance
- Guard against the possible intentional inadequate
coverage
54E. Reporting form coverage
- Reporting forms are designed to meet the needs of
business firms whose stocks of merchandise
fluctuate over time - The insured must report 100 percent of the values
of the property insured. Late reports or
underreporting of values, intentional or
otherwise, may result in a penalty at the time of
a loss
552. Commercial property coverage for indirect loss
- Commercial property forms do not provide coverage
for the indirect loss resulting from damage to
the insured property. - Such protection must be obtained under a separate
form for an additional premium
56(1) Business interruption insurance
- Business income forms
- Business income coverage (and extra expense)
- Business income coverage (without extra expense)
- If the business is interrupted, payment is made
for the loss of business income, defined as the
net profit that would have been earned and the
necessary expenses that continue during the
period of restoration
57(2) Contingent business interruption and extra
expenses
- A. Contributing property
- B. Manufacturing property
- C. Recipient property
- D. Leader property
583. Transportation coverages
- (1) Ocean marine insurance
- A. Hull insurance
- Protects the owner of a vessel against loss to
the ship itself - The coverage is written on an open-perils basis
- B. Cargo insurance
- Main form of ocean marine insurance, written
separately from hull insurance - C. Freight insurance
- D. Protection and indemnity
59Perils insured---open perils agreementValuation
- Average conditions
- particular average general average
- (2) Inland marine insurance
- Not limited to the transportation in the rivers
- 6 forms of coverage
604. Insurance against dishonesty
- (1) Employee crime coverage
- Also called fidelity bonds
- A. Schedule bonds
- Cover the specific person or position that is
listed in the policy - B. Blanket bonds
- Cover all the employees, regardless of position
61(2) Nonemployee crime coverageprotect against
burglary, robbery, theft, forgery, some of which
with evidence
- Chapter 21 commercial liability insurance
- 1. Employers liability and workers compensation
- To protect both the employees and the employer
- The largest firms self-insure
62(1) Workers compensation insurance
- A. The insuring agreement obligates the insurer
to pay the benefits for which the insured is
liable under the workers compensation law - B. There are no exclusions under the coverage and
no maximum limit on the insurers liability - C. It makes the insurer directly and primarily
liable to employees who are entitled to benefits
63D. The insurers obligation to employees is not
affected by any default of the insured
- E. The insurers liability to the employees is
governed by the workers compensation law, the
insurers obligation to the employer is governed
by the policy terms - (2) Employer liability insurance
- If an injured employee brought suit, the legal
principles generally favored the employer
642. General liability insurance
- Protect the firm against the peril of legal
liability that involves injuries to persons other
than employees of the insured - (1) General liability exposure
- Every business firm is subject to one or a
combination of the following liability exposures
65A. Ownership and maintenance of premises
- B. Conduct of business operations
- C. Products
- Negligence, breach of warranty, strict liability
- D. Completed operations
- E. Contingent liability
- F. Contractual liability
663. Commercial automobile insurance
- Four commercial automobile forms
- Business auto coverage
- Garage coverage
- Truckers coverage
- Motor carriers coverage
- (1) Business auto coverage form
- Similar in all the aspects with that of the
personal auto policy
67(2) Garage coverage form
- To provide comprehensive liability coverage for
garages, sales agencies, repair shops, service
stations, storage garages and public parking
places - Hazards covered
- Premises and operations
- Products and completed operations
- Automobile liability
68(3) Truckers coverage form
- A modified version of the Business Auto Coverage
Form designed to meet the special needs of
truckers. - Extend the coverage from the licensed truckers to
the independent owner-operators
694. Aviation insurance
- Purchased by the owners and operators of
aircraft, airport operators, and by companies
building and supplying parts for aircraft, but
not passengers - Including planes, helicopters, hot air balloons,
hang gliders and space satellites
70(1) Aircraft liability insurance
- A. Passenger
- B. Bodily injury excluding passengers
- C. Property damage liability
- (2) Hull coverage
- The core problem facing aviation insurers is the
weakening of law of large numbers
71Chapter 22 surety bonds and credit insurance
- Both are designed to protect against financial
losses from default by someone on whom the
insured depends - 1. Surety bonds
- It is reserved for the nonfidelity field
72One party (the surety) agrees to be held
responsible to a second party (the obligee) for
the obligations of a third party (the principal)
- The principal buys the surety bond. The surety
lends its name and credit to guarantee the
obligation of the principal. If the principal
fails to perform, the surety is responsible to
the obligee for the amount of the bond.
73(1) Suretyship distinguished from insurance
- A. The most frequently stated distinction is that
a surety bond is a three-party contract, whereas
the insurance policy is a two-party contract - B. The most important distinction is one of the
basic philosophy regarding losses. In the
insurance field, the insurer generally expects
losses. In the surety field, no losses are
expected.
74C. Whereas actuarial science is the basis for
insurance rates, the fee for a surety bond is a
payment for investigation and certification
- The main categories of surety bonds
- Contract bonds
- Court bonds
- License and permit bonds
- Public official bonds
- Miscellaneous bonds
752. Credit insurancePurchased by the creditor
- It is sold only to manufacturers and wholesalers,
which protects against loss resulting from the
inability to collect accounts due to insolvency
or unwillingness or inability to pay by the
purchasers - Back coverage policies cover losses arising out
of defaults during the policy period
76Forward coverage policies cover losses stemming
from sales during the policy period
- (1) Types of policies
- A. Extraordinary coverage
- Generally purchased by companies that deal with a
limited number of buyers. - It is issued after an investigation of the
individual debtors and acceptance of each one by
the insurer. - The insurer is permitted to cancel coverage as to
future shipments to any debtor.
77B. General coverageIt includes protection on all
policyholders customers with a credit rating
- Investigation of the individual customers is not
needed because the coverage on each account is
determined by a table of mercantile ratings,
selected by the insured and incorporated into the
contract. - Only debtors whose credit rating comes within the
limitations of the ratings adopted by the insured
are covered.
78(2) Coinsurance and the normal loss
- The insured shall assume two proportions of each
net loss - A. Coinsurance percentage (10 or 20)
- B. Annual deductible (known as the primary loss
or normal loss) - It is calculated from the previous experience of
the firm insured or as a percentage of the firms
net sales from tables that express bad debt
ratios for various industries
79Loss settlement is made on an annual basis, with
the coinsurance percentage applied to each loss
before the application of the normal loss
deductible
- (3) Collection service
- The collection service is one of the most
attractive aspects of credit insurance - If the insured is required or permitted to turn
past due accounts over to the insurer, accounts
that are overdue a stated period under the
original terms of sale are turned over to the
insurer for collection. If the insurer succeeds,
a small service charge is made for the
collection. If it is unsuccessful, the account
becomes a loss under the policy.
803. Credit enhancement insurance
- Also called financial guarantee, is a combination
of suretyship and insurance - The insurer insures the purchaser of bonds and
other debt instruments that the debt will be paid
and substitutes its financial strength for the
financial strength of the borrower
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