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5. Insurance: The Archetypal Risk Management Institution

7 Views· 02 Sep 2019
YaleCourses
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Financial Markets (ECON 252)

Insurance provides significant risk management to a broad public, and is an essential tool for promoting human welfare. By pooling large numbers of independent or low-correlated risks, insurance providers can minimize overall risk. The risk management is tailored to individual circumstances and reflects centuries of insurance industry experience with real risks and with moral hazard and selection bias issues. Probability theory and statistical tools help to explain how insurance companies use risk pooling to minimize overall risk. Innovation and government regulation have played important roles in the formation and oversight of insurance institutions.

00:00 - Chapter 1. Circumventing Selection Bias in the Equity Premium Puzzle
10:13 - Chapter 2. Politics in the Stock Market and Modern Mutual Funds
19:43 - Chapter 3. The Intuition behind Insurance
34:54 - Chapter 4. Multiline, Monoline, and P&C Insurances
43:52 - Chapter 5. The Advent and Development of the Insurance Industry
56:06 - Chapter 6. Government and NAIC Regulation of Insurance
01:05:14 - Chapter 7. Problems with Insurance Companies Today

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Spring 2008.

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