|
|
Books > Business & Economics > Finance & accounting > Finance > Insurance
Running an insurance agency requires many skills. Questions arise
such as "How do I hire the right people that complement my
operation? How can I streamline my agency so that we maximize the
potential of every person in the agency? How do I market and brand
my agency?" These are only a few of the questions that every
business owner must answer in order to run an efficient agency.
This book covers the business aspect of running an agency,
maximizing profit, and improving customer service. Whether you are
new to the industry or have been an agent for decades, this book
will evoke thought-provoking perspectives and vision that will make
a positive impact on your agency operation.
The federal crop insurance program began in 1938 when Congress
authorized the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. The current
program, which is administered by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Risk Management Agency (RMA), provides producers with
risk management tools to address crop yield and/or revenue losses
for about 130 crops. The federal farm safety net also includes the
farm commodity support programs, which provide price and income
support for a much narrower list of "covered and loan commodities"
such as corn, wheat, rice, and peanuts. In purchasing a crop
insurance policy, a producer growing an insurable crop selects a
level of coverage and pays a portion of the premium -- or none of
it in the case of catastrophic coverage -- which increases as the
level of coverage rises. The federal government pays the rest of
the premium. This book provides a primer on the federal crop
insurance program and briefly summarises changes to the program by
the 2014 farm bill.
This policy note provides an initial assessment of Libya's labor
market and discusses policy options for promoting employability as
part of a broader jobs strategy. It is intended as a contribution
to evidence on Libya's labor market for the benefit of policy
makers, civil society and the broader international community.
The formation of health professionals is critical for the health
system to function and to achieve its universal health coverage
(UHC) goals, and this is well recognized by the majority of
governments that plan to ensure enough training places and aim to
regulate in order to ensure quality. But the importance of market
forces is often overlooked, resulting in interventions and
regulations that often fail to achieve their intended effects. This
publication aims to inform the design of health professionals'
education policies to better manage health labor market forces
toward UHC. It documents what is known about the influence of
market forces on the health-professional formation process. The
report sought to answer the following questions: What have been the
large global and regional trends in the development of health
professions? How have these trends affected the career decisions of
current and potential health professionals? What is the evidence
base on the value and effectiveness of health professional
education of different types? How has the market for health
professional education evolved, and with what interrelationships
with the health labor and health care markets? The contexts of the
market for health professional training have been subject to
important changes in recent decades, in particular: the growing
extent of employment of mid-level cadres of health professionals;
changes in technology and the associated growth of high skilled
occupations; the increasing interconnectedness of national health
systems through globalization, with its implications for
international health professional mobility; and the greater
complexity of the public-private mix in employment options. There
is a need to ensure that market forces align with the intentions of
planning and regulation and the needs of UHC goals. This
publication provides recommendations to support the design of
policies that help to achieve these.
"Wir sichern Generationen." heisst es im OEffentlichkeitsauftritt
der Deutschen Rentenversicherung. Doch was heisst die gesetzliche
Rentenabsicherung, fur die rund 81 Millionen Burger in Deutschland
heute und vor allem in 20, 30 oder gar 50 Jahren? Bei vielen
Burgern bildet die Deutsche Rentenversicherung (DRV) und deren
gesetzlichen Leistungen eine feste Planungsgroesse. Der Versicherte
erhalt Schutz - ob bei Erwerbsminderung oder im Alter. Fur viele
Hinterbliebene entsteht ein zusatzlicher finanzieller Anker. Mit
der Einfuhrung des Alterseinkunftegesetzes im Jahre 2005 wurde die
steuerliche Betrachtungsweise der gesetzlichen Rentenversicherung
neu geregelt. Auf Grundlage derer, entstand das
Drei-Schichten-Modell. Das vorliegende Buch betrachtet die
Erwerbsphase und auch die Rentenphase, mit zahlreichen
Praxisbeispielen, innerhalb der gesetzlichen Vorsorgeschicht I -
der Basisversorgung. Was das fur die Beitragsaufwendungen und die
daraus resultierenden gesetzlichen Rentenleistungen bedeutet und
warum die gesetzliche Rentenversicherung Grundlage fur viele
Beratungen ist und bleibt, zeigt Ihnen das vorliegende Werk. Das
Buch richtet sich dabei sowohl an Berater der Finanzbranche, als
auch alle Interessierten, die tiefer in die Materie der Deutschen
Rentenversicherung einsteigen moechten. Es bringt Klarheit in teils
nebuloese Sachverhalte und verspricht anwendbare Antworten aus der
Praxis. Der Leser erhalt ein verlassliches Kompendium, das
umfassende und praktische Informationen bereithalt. Bringen Sie
Licht ins Dunkel und beantworten Sie Ihre und komplexe
Fragestellungen von Kunden souveran. Nutzen Sie den Mehrwert an
Kompetenz und entdecken Sie neue Moeglichkeiten durch eine
AEnderung der Perspektive. Die neuen Regelungen ab Juli 2014
(Mutterente, Rente ab 63 etc.) werden dabei berucksichtigt.
Traditionally, organizational risk managers focused on cost
containment, aiming to attain the highest level of protection at
the lowest possible cost. More recently, the growing embrace of
enterprise risk management is prompting organizations to look at
risk management as a source of value creation and competitive
advantage. The leading enterprise risk management (ERM) frameworks
- ISO 31000 and COSO - present compelling rationale but leave the
"how-to" operational questions largely unanswered. Building on the
idea of "risk profiling," Banasiewicz presents his vision for how
the promise of ERM can be turned into an operational reality by
thoughtfully leveraging quantitative & qualitative, numeric
& text data. He outlines a step-by-step process for
transforming readily available and informationally-rich, though not
always well-utilized data into objective estimates of downside and
upside risks. The overall focus of Risk Profiling of Organizations
is on showing how otherwise diverse organizational exposures can be
looked at as different parts of a single whole.
|
You may like...
Suspects
Danielle Steel
Paperback
(3)
R401
Discovery Miles 4 010
|