GIM1090 - Economic basis of insurance: transfer and sharing of risk
Insurance as an economic device involves the transfer and
sharing of risk. It is one of the ways in which risk can be
managed. For example, risk may be avoided by not engaging in any
form of hazardous enterprise at all. It may be retained, so that
the person exposed to risk accepts responsibility for the potential
financial loss, sometimes called self-insurance, that groups of
companies may undertake using a captive (see
GIM11000). It may be reduced, by
limiting the magnitude of the loss or the likelihood of its
occurrence, for example by installing a sprinkler system, or
putting more secure locks on your doors and windows. It may be
shared, for example by combining with others as members of a
company.
Insurance is a way of sharing risk by transferring it to
another person who is more willing to bear it. Such a transfer may
be contractual, but not all contracts which transfer risk are
contracts of insurance. Hedging instruments and guarantees are
examples of non-insurance contracts which transfer risk, though the
dividing line between insurance and other forms of risk transfer,
and in particular derivatives, is sometimes a very fine one. The
economic benefits of insurance are that the transfer and sharing of
risk encourages economic activity, as the full risk does not fall
on the entrepreneur.
Emmett J. Vaughan in Fundamentals of Risk and Insurance sums
up the economic function and mathematical basis of insurance as
follows:
‘From the social point of view,
insurance is an economic device for reducing and eliminatingrisk through the process of combining a
sufficient number of homogeneous exposures into agroup in order to make the losses predictable
for the group as a whole.’
