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  2. Insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurance

    An entity which provides insurance is known as an insurer, insurance company, insurance carrier, or underwriter. A person or entity who buys insurance is known as a policyholder, while a person or entity covered under the policy is called an insured. The insurance transaction involves the policyholder assuming a guaranteed, known, and ...

  3. Life insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_insurance

    It was the world's first mutual insurer and it pioneered age based premiums based on mortality rate laying "the framework for scientific insurance practice and development" [12] and "the basis of modern life assurance upon which all life assurance schemes were subsequently based". [13]

  4. Uberrima fides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uberrima_fides

    Uberrima fides is strictly limited in English law to the formation of the insurance contract. [5] During the mid-20th century, American courts expanded it much farther into a post-formation implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Violation of that implied covenant came to be seen as a tort, now known as insurance bad faith. [5]

  5. Insurance law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurance_law

    The earliest form of insurance is probably marine insurance, although forms of mutuality (group self-insurance) existed before that. Marine insurance originated with the merchants of the Hanseatic league and the financiers of Lombardy in the 12th and 13th centuries, recorded in the name of Lombard Street in the City of London, the oldest trading insurance market.

  6. Insurance cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurance_cycle

    Insurance Cycle is a term describing the tendency of the insurance industry to swing between profitable and unprofitable periods over time is commonly known as the underwriting or insurance cycle. The underwriting cycle is the tendency of property and casualty insurance premiums , profits , and availability of coverage to rise and fall with ...

  7. Joseph Stiglitz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Stiglitz

    Stiglitz and Rothschild showed that in an insurance market, firms have an incentive to undermine a 'pooling equilibrium', where all agents are offered the same full-insurance policy, by offering cheaper partial insurance that would only be attractive to the low-risk types, meaning that a competitive market can only achieve partial coverage of ...

  8. Insurance Institute of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurance_Institute_of_India

    The institute, formerly known as Federation of Insurance Institutes (J.C. Setalvad Memorial) (Regd.), was created for the purpose of promoting insurance education and training in India. [1] The institute conducts examinations at various levels. It is the professional institute in India devoted solely to insurance education.

  9. Social insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_insurance

    Social insurance provides protection against certain risks in the economy that private insurance fails to deal with. Private insurance often becomes extremely unaffordable due to the issues of adverse selection and moral hazard, and to counteract such steep prices, the need for a publicly mandated social insurance increases. [12]