Unit 1 Flashcards
What is a risk?
Risk is the possibility that a loss will occur.
What is insurance?
Insurance is a contract that transfers the risk of financial loss from an individual or business to an insurance company.
What is insurance designed for?
Insurance is designed to cover only losses that involve risk.
What are the two types of risks? Define them.
Speculative riskshave a possibility of a loss and also the possibility of a gain. Gambling and investing are examples of speculative risks; you could win money or you could lose money. Insurance companies will not insure you to go to Las Vegas to gamble in case you lose money.
Pure risks only involve the possibility of experiencing a loss, not a gain. ‘The chance of being in a car accident is a pure risk. Pure risks can be covered by insurance.
What is an exposure?
The potential for accidents and other losses.
Risks for which the insurance company would be liable.
Ex. a person who drives his car to and from sales calls all day will have a higher exposure to risk than someone who works remote and makes sales calls over the telephone. The higher the exposure to risk, the higher the premium.
What is a peril?
The cause of a loss. Insurance policies will cover various perils.
Ex.if a house burns down, the peril (cause of loss) is the fire. If electronics in a home are destroyed because of lightning, the cause of loss (peril) is lightning. If you drive your car through a hailstorm and the car body is damaged, the peril is hail. A peril is simply what caused the loss.
Define a loss.
A loss is defined as: (1) the unintended, unforeseen damage to property, (2) injury, or (3) amount paid.
What are the two types of loss?
Direct loss is physical loss to property with no intervening cause. Examples of direct loss include lightning striking a house and an automobile hitting a tree.
Indirect loss is a consequential loss as the result from a direct loss. Examples of indirect loss include loss of rental income due to house fire, which cause a loss of profits for the landlord. The indirect loss is always consequential of the direct loss.
What is a hazard? Describe the three types of hazards.
Hazard-increases the chance of loss
• Physical hazard–the hazard can be seen
• Moral hazard-dishonesty
• Morale hazard–carelessness
What is a method of handling risks?
STARR-Method of handling risk
• Sharing
• Transfer
• Avoidance
• Retention
• Reduction
Explain STARR.
Sharing In risk sharing, two or more individuals or businesses agree to pay a portion of any loss incurred by any member of the group. Stockholders in a corporation share the risk.
Transfer-Risk transfer is what happens with insurance. The insurer (insurance company) agrees to pay if an insured (customer) has a loss–the insured no longer bears that risk. The individual has a cost in the form of a premium payment. But, in contrast to the loss which is large and uncertain, the premium is a much smaller certainty.
Avoidance-Risk avoidance means eliminating a particular risk by not engaging in a certain activity.
For example, an individual who does not drive avoids the risk of injuring someone in an automobile collision and being held liable for those damages.
Retention- Risk retention means the individual or business will pay for the loss if it occurs, or a portion of the loss via a deductible. If you don’t have car insurance to pay for the damages you cause to another person in an accident, you have retained that risk.
Reduction- Risk reduction refers to lessening the chance that a loss will occur, or lessening the extent of a loss if it occurs. If a business installs a sprinkler system in its building, this will help reduce or eliminate the damage caused by a fire.
What is a contract (policy)?
Contract (Policy)
• An agreement between the insured and the insurer
• Ist party-insured (customer)
•2nd party–insurer (insurance company)
What is the Law of Numbers? Explain.
The law of large numbers is the principle that makes insurance possible.
Law of large numbers–the larger the group, the more accurately losses can be predicted
While insurance companies cannot specifically name which individuals will have a can predict fairly accurately how many dollars in claims they will have to pay out ea the actual losses they experienced in the past. This prediction allows them to charge premium that, pooled together, will cover all claims and operating costs.
Are all risks insurable?
Not all risks are insurable. Pure risks have certain characteristics and can be remembered using the acronym CANHAM
What is CANHAM? Explain.
Calculable- Premiums must be calculable based upon prior loss statistics for that particular risk in order to predict future losses.
Affordable- The premium for transferring the risk should be affordable for the average consumer.
Non-catastrophic–The risk must be non-catastrophic for the insurance company. National or area disasters, such as floods, riots, wars, and earthquakes, will often have coverage limitations in insurance policies. These events cause widespread simultaneous losses to many insured properties. ‘The peril of war is excluded from most policies. If the insurer were to cover these types of risk, the risk could be detrimental (or catastrophic) to the insurer.
Homogeneous The risk must be similar in nature so the same factors affect the chance of loss. For example, if an actuary was going to predict the likelihood that a wood frame house would suffer a fire in California, the actuary would not include brick houses in the sample.
Accidental-‘The loss must have been caused due to chance (accident). Intentional losses caused by the insured are not covered by insurance.
Measurable A definite (time and place) and measurable loss means that proof of loss must be established with numbers and dollar amounts, not just casual references.