The Nature Of Insurance Flashcards

1
Q

What is Adverse Selection?

A

Adverse Selection is the tendency of people with higher risks to seek or continue insurance more than those with lower risks. This occurs when the percentage of poor risks among those covered exceeds the ratio predicted by actuaries.

It also includes the tendency of policy owners to take advantage of favorable options in insurance contracts.

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2
Q

What is a Hazard in insurance?

A

A Hazard is any factor, condition, or situation that increases the possibility that a peril will occur.

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3
Q

What are Homogeneous Exposure Units?

A

Homogeneous Exposure Units are similar ‘objects of insurance’ exposed to the same group of perils, such as persons, businesses, or properties.

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4
Q

What does Indemnify mean?

A

To Indemnify is to restore insureds to the financial condition that existed prior to a loss.

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5
Q

What is Indemnity?

A

Indemnity is the amount needed to restore an individual to their financial condition before suffering a loss. It can be a reimbursement or a fixed dollar amount.

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6
Q

What is an Indemnity Contract?

A

An Indemnity Contract is a contract that attempts to return the insured to their original financial position.

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7
Q

What is the Law of Large Numbers?

A

The Law of Large Numbers is a principle stating that the larger the number of individual risks combined into a group, the more certainty there is in predicting the degree or amount of loss incurred in a given period.

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8
Q

How is Loss defined in the insurance industry?

A

Loss is defined as the unintentional decrease in the monetary value of an asset due to a peril.

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9
Q

What is Loss Exposure?

A

Loss Exposure is the risk of a possible loss.

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10
Q

What is a Loss Exposure Unit?

A

A Loss Exposure Unit refers to each individual, organization, or asset exposed to potential financial loss due to a defined peril. When aggregated, it expresses the overall loss exposure.

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11
Q

What is Moral Hazard?

A

Moral Hazard is the type of hazard that exists due to an insured’s personal reputation, character, associates, living habits, or degree of financial responsibility, including criminal activity.

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12
Q

What is Morale Hazard?

A

Morale Hazard arises from an insured’s indifference to loss because of the existence of insurance, often associated with a careless attitude.

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13
Q

What is a Peril?

A

A Peril is the immediate, specific event that causes loss and gives rise to risk.

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14
Q

What is a Physical Hazard?

A

A Physical Hazard is a tangible condition that makes a loss more likely to occur.

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15
Q

What does Primary Insurance Company mean?

A

Primary Insurance Company refers to the first policy to pay when more than one policy covers the same claim, or it writes a policy to cover a risk and surrenders a portion of the risk to a reinsurer.

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16
Q

What is Pure Risk?

A

Pure Risk involves the chance of loss only, with no opportunity for gain; it is the only form of insurable risks.

17
Q

What is Reinsurance?

A

Reinsurance is the acceptance by one or more insurers, referred to as reinsurers, of a portion of the risk underwritten by another insurer that has contracted with an insured to provide coverage for the total value of a loss exposure.

18
Q

What is a Reinsurer?

A

A reinsurer is an insurance company that assumes a portion of the risk underwritten by a primary insurance company.

19
Q

What is Risk?

A

Risk is the uncertainty regarding loss. It is the probability of a loss occurring for an insured or prospect.

20
Q

What is Risk Avoidance?

A

Risk avoidance occurs when individuals evade risk entirely. It’s the act of NOT participating in an activity that could possibly cause a loss.

21
Q

What is Risk Management?

A

Risk management is the process of analyzing exposures that create risk and then designing programs to address them.

22
Q

What is Risk Reduction?

A

Risk reduction is the risk management strategy that focuses on taking actions which decrease the chances of a loss occurring. It also refers to action taken to lessen the severity of a loss if one occurs.

23
Q

What is Risk Retention?

A

Risk retention is the act of analyzing the loss exposure presented by a risk and determining that the potential loss is acceptable. It is often associated with self-insurance.

24
Q

What is Risk Selection?

A

Risk selection describes the insurance company’s process for determining whether to cover a new loss exposure. If done correctly, the ratio of losses to premium should reflect what actuaries predicted when they created the product, established the price, and set the underwriting criteria.

25
Q

What is Risk Sharing?

A

Risk Sharing (Risk Pooling or Loss Sharing) is a risk management technique that manages an individual’s risk by sharing the possibility of loss with others and spreading the cost over a large number of individuals. This technique transfers risk from an individual to a group.

26
Q

What is Risk Transfer?

A

Risk Transfer is the act of exchanging the responsibility for a significant potential loss (risk) to another party in exchange for a smaller, preset cost or premium.

27
Q

What is Self-Insurance?

A

Self-Insurance is a risk retention process where an individual or organization maintains monetary reserves to cover potential costs in the event of a financial loss occurring.

28
Q

What is Speculative Risk?

A

Speculative Risk is a type of risk that involves the chance of both loss and gain; it’s not insurable.