Chapter 2: Insurance contracts Flashcards
For a risk to be insurable:
- The policyholder must have an interest in the risk being insured, to distinguish between insurance and a wager.
- A risk must be of a financial and reasonably quantifiable nature.
Ideally, risk events also need to meet the following criteria if they are to be insurable:
- Individual risk events should be independent of each other.
- The probability of the event should be relatively small. In other words, an event that is nearly certain to occur is not conducive to insurance.
- Large numbers of potentially similar risks should be pooled in order to reduce the variance and hence achieve more certainty.
- There should be an ultimate limit on the liability undertaken by the insurer.
- Moral hazards should be eliminated as far as possible because these are difficult to quantify, result in selection against the insurer, and lead to unfairness in treatment between one policyholder and another.
The types of insurance cover provided by short-term insurance products can be classified under four main headings:
- Liability
- Property damage
- Financial loss
- Fixed benefits.
In South Africa, the Short-term Insurance Act (Act no. 53 of 1998, as amended) categorises short-term insurance policies in terms of the area in which they provide cover. The Act defines a short-term policy as including:
- An engineering policy
- A guarantee policy
- A liability policy
- A miscellaneous policy
- A motor policy
- An accident and health policy
- A property policy
- A transportation policy
- A contract comprising a combination of any of these policies
The basic benefit provided by any liability insurance is an amount to indemnify the policyholder fully against a financial loss. However, subject to any statutory requirements, this benefit may be restricted by:
- A maximum indemnity per claim or per event (this may involve more than one claim), or an aggregate maximum per year
- An excess (meaning that the insured has to bear the first fixed amount of a claim rather than recovering it from the insurer).
The main types of liability insurance are:
- Employers’ liability
- Motor third party liability
- Public liability (often linked to other types of insurance such as property, marine, etc.)
- Product liability
- Professional indemnity
Employers’ liability perils can be largely grouped into the following:
- Accidents caused by the negligence of the employer or his employees
- Exposure to harmful substances (for example, chemicals, coal dust, asbestos)
- Exposure to harmful working conditions (for example, loud noises or repetitive strain)
Public liability
The insured is indemnified against legal liability for the death of or bodily injury to a third party or for damage to property belonging to a third party, other than those liabilities covered by other liability insurance. As this type of insurance forms part of many types of insurance policy, the insured perils will relate to the type of policy.
Product liability
This insurance indemnifies the insured against legal liability for the death of or bodily injury to a third party or for damage to property belonging to a third party, that results from a product fault.
Professional indemnity
The insured is indemnified against legal liability resulting from negligence in the provision of a service, for example, unsatisfactory medical treatment or incorrect advice from an actuary solicitor, etc. The perils here depend on the profession of the insured.
The main types of property that are subject to such damage are:
- Residential building (for example, house)
- Moveable property (for example, contents of house)
- Commercial building (for example, office)
- Land vehicles (for example, car)
- Marine craft
- Aircraft.
Household and commercial buildings property
In respect of buildings, fire is the principal peril insured against but policies can cover many other perils such as explosion, lightning, theft, storm and flood. Damage to the insured property caused by measures taken to put out a fire is also covered.
Motor property
The perils include accidental or malicious damage to the insured vehicle, and fire or theft of that vehicle.
Marine property
The following perils relate specifically to marine hull cover, but similar perils are covered for marine cargo, marine freight and aviation insurance
Financial loss insurance can be categorised as follows:
- Pecuniary loss
- Fidelity guarantee
- Business interruption cover (also known as consequential loss)