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The Insurer's Dilemma in Early Insurance Markets
Early insurers faced a significant dilemma. To remain profitable, they needed to accurately price risk. However, the very act of providing insurance changed the behavior of the insured party in a way that was difficult to observe. An insured merchant, for example, might be less vigilant against piracy or storms. This 'hidden action' meant the insurer's initial risk assessment became unreliable after the policy was sold, creating a fundamental challenge for the sustainability of the insurance market.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Learn After
The Underwriter's Predicament
A 17th-century insurance syndicate begins offering policies to merchants to cover cargo losses during sea voyages. They calculate their premiums based on the best available historical data for shipwrecks on a given route. However, after several years, they find that their claim payouts are consistently higher than their initial projections, threatening their solvency. Which statement best analyzes the core economic dilemma the syndicate is likely facing?
The Paradox of Early Insurance
Match each key technological innovation from the British Industrial Revolution to the primary industrial problem it was designed to solve or the major economic transformation it enabled.
An early maritime insurer's primary challenge in setting profitable rates was accurately predicting the frequency of unpredictable events like major storms and pirate attacks, as the vigilance of a ship's captain was a constant factor that did not change after a cargo was insured.
The Unreliable Risk Calculation
Evaluating a High-Interest Investment Loan
A 17th-century insurance underwriter is developing a new policy for merchants shipping goods. Arrange the following events in the logical order that illustrates the fundamental dilemma the underwriter faces after selling the policy.
An 18th-century maritime insurance company observes that the ships it insures have a consistently higher rate of cargo loss compared to the general fleet of uninsured ships sailing the same routes. Assuming the company's initial risk assessments were based on the general fleet's historical data, which statement provides the most accurate economic explanation for this discrepancy?
Mitigating Risk in Early Insurance