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Books > Money & Finance > Insurance > General
For undergraduate courses in Risk Management and Insurance.
Principles and Practices: Managing Risk with Consumer
Considerations Redja's Principles of Risk Management and Insurance
provides an in-depth examination of major risk themes. Using rich
and up-to-date content on the basic concepts of risk and insurance,
and introductory and advanced topics in traditional and enterprise
risk management, the text is relevant to a wide number of
disciplines in the business realm. Fully updated and revised, the
Thirteenth Edition now covers global topics ranging from natural
disasters and terrorism, to domestic issues like the ever-evolving
Affordable Care Act and Healthcare Reform. Principles of Risk
Management and Insurance sets itself apart by placing primary
emphasis on insurance consumers and blends basic risk management
and insurance principles with consumer considerations, allowing
students to apply basic concepts to their own personal risk
management and insurance programs.
This book is aimed to those professionals in financial and risk
industry who would like to get good insight into raising
operational risk issue. Research in book describes oprisk maturity
of insurance companies in Adriatic region, so readers interested in
doing insurance business in this region will benefit of this book
most . Besides regional research approach, reader will get good
understanding of operational risk and its influence to insurance
and financial businesses overall. Reader will also understand the
value of ERM (enterprise risk management) and ERM-ORM relation.
Book should be carefully read from the beginning to the end so it
can lead the reader through the reasons, issues, regulation
examples and research results.
Despite the importance of insurance in enabling individual and
collective social, economic, and financial activities, discussions
about the macro-economic role and risks of insurance markets are
surprisingly limited. The core motivation for publishing this book
is to bring together academics, regulators, and industry experts to
provide a multifaceted array of research and perspectives on
insurance, its role and functioning, and the potential systemic
risk it could create. The first part discusses the macro-economic
role of insurance and how insurance is different from banking and
general finance. Understanding the differences between the balance
sheets of insurers and other financial intermediaries is essential
to understand the potential differences in risk nature and
differences in optimal regulation. The second part of the book
focuses on the risks of the insurance sector and the potential for
systemic risk. The various chapters discuss the risks both on the
asset and liability sides of insurers' balance sheets. The third
part of the book covers the impact of regulation on insurance
companies. Existing regulation is often complex and has a large
impact on insurance companies' decision-making and functioning. The
chapters also illustrate the unintended consequences of various
forms of regulation. The book concludes with a summary of a survey
that has been conducted in collaboration with McKinsey, where
insurance executives have been asked about the risks and regulation
in the insurance sector. The survey provides guidance for future
research on insurance markets.
The focus of this book is on the two major areas of risk theory:
aggregate claims distributions and ruin theory. For aggregate
claims distributions, detailed descriptions are given of recursive
techniques that can be used in the individual and collective risk
models. For the collective model, the book discusses different
classes of counting distribution, and presents recursion schemes
for probability functions and moments. For the individual model,
the book illustrates the three most commonly applied techniques.
Beyond the classical topics in ruin theory, this new edition
features an expanded section covering time of ruin problems,
Gerber-Shiu functions, and the application of De Vylder
approximations. Suitable for a first course in insurance risk
theory and extensively classroom tested, the book is accessible to
readers with a solid understanding of basic probability. Numerous
worked examples are included and each chapter concludes with
exercises for which complete solutions are provided.
If your goal is to pass your insurance test the first time without
the hassle of big thick study books, the Credit Insurance, Iowa
License Exam Manual is right for you. Every effort has been made to
reduce the number of pages necessary to pass the test. The fresh
format has smaller bites of information. Each exam topic is
followed by multiple choice questions to reinforce your learning.
Designed to stand alone or be used as a supplement, this easy to
read manual is complete with a table of contents, insurance text,
150 multiple choice practice questions, study tips and test taking
tips. You will learn the exam topics needed to successfully pass
your credit insurance test: general insurance terms and concepts,
types of credit insurance, consumer credit insurance definitions,
and Iowa laws, rules and regulations pertinent to credit insurance.
On October 29, 2012, Hurricane Sandy struck the East Coast region,
causing intense winds, high rainfall, waves, and storm surge, as
well as economic disruptions in states throughout the Northeast and
the mid-Atlantic region. Communities in New York, New Jersey, and
Connecticut were particularly hard hit. The devastating floods
exposed vulnerabilities in the region's public transportation and
infrastructure and underscores the nation's growing exposure to
coastal hazards. The full economic cost of Sandy will not be known
for years, but current preliminary estimates of physical property
damage, not including flood losses likely to be paid under the
government's National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), range from
$30 billion to $55 billion, of which about $16 billion to $22
billion will be privately insured losses. Sandy is expected to
require substantial federal disaster recovery assistance, including
tens of billions for flood and hurricane protection and coastal
restoration. Given the geographic scope of heavily flooded areas
and residential take-up rates (number of flood policies divided by
total number of households) in affected coastal communities that
participate in the NFIP, government payouts under the NFIP are
estimated to be from $12 billion to $15 billion in flood claims.
This amount exceeds the $4 billion in cash and remaining borrowing
authority from the Treasury Department. The Obama Administration
has announced it will ask Congress to raise the NFIP borrowing
authority to $25 billion, or $4.025 billion over its current
borrowing authority. But some experts have suggested a $30 billion
borrowing cap would be needed to cover even higher projected
losses. Emergency supplemental spending on disaster assistance
comes at a time when Congress is considering spending cuts and tax
increases to address the nation's fiscal debt. In the wake of
disaster clean-up and recovery along much of the East Coast region,
policymakers, local officials, and other stakeholder groups have
expressed a range of flood management concerns facing the NFIP.
These include (1) escalating spending on federal emergency
supplemental appropriations for disaster relief assistance; (2)
uncertainty surrounding the NFIP's ability to reduce the nation's
growing exposure to flood losses; (3) rising population growth and
economic development in coastal watershed counties or floodplains
areas exposed to hurricane induced coastal floods; (4) persistently
low insurance participation (take-up rates) in the NFIP; and (5)
financing the cost of rebuilding communities stronger, more
resilient. On July 6, 2012, President Obama signed into law the
Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2012, P.L. 112-141,
that reauthorized the NFIP through September 30, 2017, and made a
number of reforms to strengthen the future financial solvency and
administrative efficiency of the program by raising historically
low premiums and reducing homeowners' incentives for rebuilding in
flood risk zones. However, several post-reform issues of contention
remain for congressional consideration: revisions in the analysis
and mapping of non-accredited levees; actuarial soundness, program
solvency, and affordability; debt forgiveness; an integrated
watershed flood risk assessment framework; and expansion of the
private-sector role in flood risk. This publication provides an
analysis of flood risk management, summarizes major challenges
facing the NFIP, and outlines key reforms in the recently enacted
Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2012. The publication
also identifies and presents some key remaining flood management
issues for congressional considerations, and it concludes with a
discussion of relevant policy options for the future financial
management of flood hazards in the United States.
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