GIM1140 - Economic basis of insurance: spread of business
The central point is that the risk borne by the insurer is not
the sum of the risks transferred but rather the possibility of an
adverse deviation from the desired outcome.
This is significant when considering captive insurance (see
GIM11000) and financial insurance and
reinsurance (
GIM8000).
The law of large numbers only works when the risks are
independent of each other. The risk of a car being stolen is
largely independent of the risk that a neighbour’s car will
be stolen; but if a house is damaged by a storm it is quite likely
that the same will happen to a neighbour’s house. An insurer
writing property insurance therefore needs to ensure that it has a
good geographical spread of business.
In the past some UK insurance companies suffered large
losses on mortgage indemnity business, which protects lenders
against the risk that the sale of a repossessed property will not
provide sufficient money to pay off the outstanding debt. Such
risks were not independent, as insurers discovered in 1990 when an
economic downturn simultaneously threw people out of work and
depressed house prices.
