|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The book addresses a topic at the intersection of two heavily
regulated sectors: insurance and investment services. Until
recently, scholars and professionals have approached insurance and
investment services as two separate categories in the financial
services sector, and as being governed by separate regulatory
frameworks. In practice, however, the boundaries were and are
blurred, a reality that regulators have begun to recognize and
address in their more recent regulatory texts. The first part of
the book approaches the new standards applicable to investment
products based on insurance: insurance-based investment products
(IBIPs). These rules are harmonized across the EU. The rationale
behind this new definition is provided, together with a description
of these products' limitations. The analysis addresses the new
rules and explores the legal regime and relevant standards
applicable to IBIPs. The organizational rules concerning the design
and distribution of IBIPs are also examined, and the book
highlights e.g. how these rules are inspired by the principles of
conduct. In closing, the ADR systems are analysed, in order to
ascertain whether or not they can offer an effective tool for
settling disputes over these products. In turn, the second part
focuses on the liability for distribution of IBIPs, which ranks as
one of the most conspicuous and relatively new legal phenomena, but
at the same time, represents an exceptionally important field of
civil liability in today's world. Liability is still regulated at
the national level. Thus, the four largest life insurance markets
in the EU are considered, along with the largest emerging market
for life insurance. The chapters on national laws also consider
whether, and if so, how the new harmonized rules on IBIPs are being
combined with those already in force in the jurisdictions
considered. The goal is to determine whether the new rules are
likely to change the doctrine and case law approach to these
products, or whether the European legislators' choices have no real
impact on the protection of clients.
This book adopts an international perspective to examine how the
online sale of insurance challenges the insurance regulation and
the insurance contract, with a focus on insurance sales, consumer
protection, cyber risks and privacy, as well as dispute resolution.
Today insurers, policyholders, intermediaries and regulators
interact in an increasingly online world with profound implications
for what has up to now been a traditionally operating industry.
While the growing threats to consumer and business data from cyber
attacks constitute major sources of risk for insurers, at the same
time cyber insurance has become the fastest growing commercial
insurance product in many jurisdictions. Scholars and practitioners
from Europe, the United States and Asia review these topics from
the viewpoints of insurers, policyholders and insurance
intermediaries. In some cases, existing insurance regulations
appear readily adaptable to the online world, such as prohibitions
on deceptive marketing of insurance products and unfair commercial
practices, which can be applied to advertising through social
media, such as Facebook and Twitter, as well as to traditional
written material. In other areas, current regulatory and business
practices are proving to be inadequate to the task and new ones are
emerging. For example, the insurance industry and insurance
supervisors are exploring how to review, utilize, profit from and
regulate the explosive growth of data mining and predictive
analytics ("big data"), which threaten long-standing privacy
protection and insurance risk classification laws. This book's
ambitious international scope matches its topics. The online
insurance market is cross-territorial and cross-jurisdictional with
insurers often operating internationally and as part of larger
financial-services holding companies. The authors' exploration of
these issues from the vantage points of some of the world's largest
insurance markets - the U.S., Europe and Japan - provides a
comparative framework, which is necessary for the understanding of
online insurance.
This book adopts an international perspective to examine how the
online sale of insurance challenges the insurance regulation and
the insurance contract, with a focus on insurance sales, consumer
protection, cyber risks and privacy, as well as dispute resolution.
Today insurers, policyholders, intermediaries and regulators
interact in an increasingly online world with profound implications
for what has up to now been a traditionally operating industry.
While the growing threats to consumer and business data from cyber
attacks constitute major sources of risk for insurers, at the same
time cyber insurance has become the fastest growing commercial
insurance product in many jurisdictions. Scholars and practitioners
from Europe, the United States and Asia review these topics from
the viewpoints of insurers, policyholders and insurance
intermediaries. In some cases, existing insurance regulations
appear readily adaptable to the online world, such as prohibitions
on deceptive marketing of insurance products and unfair commercial
practices, which can be applied to advertising through social
media, such as Facebook and Twitter, as well as to traditional
written material. In other areas, current regulatory and business
practices are proving to be inadequate to the task and new ones are
emerging. For example, the insurance industry and insurance
supervisors are exploring how to review, utilize, profit from and
regulate the explosive growth of data mining and predictive
analytics ("big data"), which threaten long-standing privacy
protection and insurance risk classification laws. This book's
ambitious international scope matches its topics. The online
insurance market is cross-territorial and cross-jurisdictional with
insurers often operating internationally and as part of larger
financial-services holding companies. The authors' exploration of
these issues from the vantage points of some of the world's largest
insurance markets - the U.S., Europe and Japan - provides a
comparative framework, which is necessary for the understanding of
online insurance.
|
You may like...
Dune: Part 1
Timothee Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson, …
Blu-ray disc
(4)
R277
Discovery Miles 2 770
Gloria
Sam Smith
CD
R176
Discovery Miles 1 760
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R367
R340
Discovery Miles 3 400
|