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Insurance
Insurance,
in law and economics, is a form of risk management primarily used to
hedge against the risk of a contingent loss. Insurance is defined as the
equitable transfer of the risk of a loss, from one entity to another, in
exchange for a premium. Insurer is the company that sells the insurance.
Insurance rate is a factor used to determine the amount, called the
premium, to be charged for a certain amount of insurance coverage. Risk
management, the practice of appraising and controlling risk, has evolved
as a discrete field of study and practice.
Profit = earned premium + investment income - incurred loss -
underwriting expenses.
Insurers make money in two ways: (1) through underwriting, the process
by which insurers select the risks to insure and decide how much in
premiums to charge for accepting those risks and (2) by investing the
premiums they collect from insureds.
The most difficult aspect of the insurance business is the underwriting
of policies. Using a wide assortment of data, insurers predict the
likelihood that a claim will be made against their policies and price
products accordingly. To this end, insurers use actuarial science to
quantify the risks they are willing to assume and the premium they will
charge to assume them. Data is analyzed to fairly accurately project the
rate of future claims based on a given risk. Actuarial science uses
statistics and probability to analyze the risks associated with the
range of perils covered, and these scientific principles are used to
determine an insurer's overall exposure. Upon termination of a given
policy, the amount of premium collected and the investment gains thereon
minus the amount paid out in claims is the insurer's underwriting profit
on that policy. Of course, from the insurer's perspective, some policies
are winners (i.e., the insurer pays out less in claims and expenses than
it receives in premiums and investment income) and some are losers
(i.e., the insurer pays out more in claims and expenses than it receives
in premiums and investment income).
An insurer's underwriting performance is measured in its combined ratio.
The loss ratio (incurred losses and loss-adjustment expenses divided by
net earned premium) is added to the expense ratio (underwriting expenses
divided by net premium written) to determine the company's combined
ratio. The combined ratio is a reflection of the company's overall
underwriting profitability. A combined ratio of less than 100 percent
indicates underwriting profitability, while anything over 100 indicates
an underwriting loss.
Insurance companies also earn investment profits on “float”. “Float” or
available reserve is the amount of money, at hand at any given moment,
that an insurer has collected in insurance premiums but has not been
paid out in claims. Insurers start investing insurance premiums as soon
as they are collected and continue to earn interest on them until claims
are paid out. |
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