Problem

The Insurer's Dilemma in Early Insurance Markets

Early insurers faced a significant dilemma caused by moral hazard. To remain profitable, they needed to accurately price risk. However, the act of providing insurance often changed the insured party's behavior in unobservable ways. For example, a fully insured merchant might be less vigilant against piracy or storms. These "hidden actions" meant the insurer's initial risk assessments became unreliable after a policy was sold, creating a fundamental problem for the sustainability of early insurance markets.

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Updated 2026-07-04

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