The Impact of Insurance - Feb. 15 Flashcards
What is insurance? (Feldman)
Insurance is “a device for reducing risk by combining a sufficient number of exposure units [e.g., wood frame houses exposed to risks of fire] to make their individual losses collectively predictable. The predictable loss is then shared proportionately by all units in the combination.” (727)
How many kinds of insurance are there? (Feldman)
Two.
What are the kinds of insurance? (Feldman)
Loss insurance and liability insurance.
What is loss insurance? (Feldman)
Loss insurance – also called first-party insurance – pays you back directly for actual damages that you suffer.
What is liability insurance? (Feldman)
Liability insurance – also called third-party actor insurance – pays back others for harms you cause them.
When are risks insurable? (Feldman)
Risks are insurable when there are enough risk impositions to satisfy the law of large numbers.
What are the five main limits of the law of large numbers? (Feldman)
- A large group of homogenous exposure units;
- Accidental, as opposed to intentional, loss;
- Economically feasible cost (e.g., the cost of issuing life insurance to a 99-yearold is too high because the probability of death is too high);
- Calculable chance of loss (statistics or some basis for estimation); and
- Non-correlation of losses (e.g., earthquakes are difficult to insure because they inflict highly correlated losses).
What is moral hazard? (Feldman)
Moral hazard is the tendency of insurance to induce intentional, wrongful acts designed to recover under the policy (e.g., fire insurance can increase the incidence of arson).
What is morale hazard? (Feldman)
Morale hazard is the tendency of insurance to induce indifference to loss or relaxation of vigilance against loss (e.g., fire insurance can lead to less vigilance in guarding against a fire).
What are some ways to mitigate moral and morale hazards? (Feldman)
Premium pricing differentials, exclusions, deductibles, and co-payments are various ways of attempting to mitigate moral and morale hazard.
Is it possible to accurately measure the risk an actor creates in a given time period? (Feldman)
The theoretical ideal is to measure the risk an actor creates in a given time period, but doing so accurately is not possible because of infrequency of harm
and variable conduct.
When is deterrence pressure on a large actor high? (Feldman)
Deterrence pressure on a large actor is high if the actor self-insures or if insurance rates are determined solely by the actor’s own experience.
What is a large actor? (Feldman)
Hospitals, trucking companies, etc.
What is a small actor? (Feldman)
An individual doctor, a truck driver, etc.
How may insurance pressure be dissipated from small actors? (Feldman)
Where insurance rates are determined based on
past experience and class rating, deterrence pressure may be dissipated.