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Insurance
In insurance, the insured makes payments called "premiums" to an insurer, and in return is able to claim a payment from the insurer
if the insured suffers some kind of loss. This relationship is usually drawn up in a formal legal contract.
In one classic example of insurance quotes, a ship-owner insures a ship and receives payment if the ship is damaged or destroyed. This example
is one of the earliest uses and developments of concepts like insurance. Interestingly, ships are now more often insured through
risk pooling and spreading organizations such as Lloyd's of London because the loss of a large ship going down is too great for
one insurer to accept.
In the case of insurance quotes online, such as a pension, similar concepts apply, but in some sense in the reverse. When applied to annuities,
the terms risk and loss are somewhat different from traditional insurance as they concern the chances of living beyond life expectancy
and the need for income during the period between annuitization and death.
Insurance attempts to quantify risk by pooling together the lowest insurance rates. This makes use of the law of large numbers.
As applied to insurance, this means that the greater the number of similar risks, the greater accuracy with which insurers can
estimate the overall risk.
For example, many individual people purchase health insurance policies and they each pay a small monthly or yearly premium to an
insurance company. When a policyholder gets ill, the insurance company provides money to cover medical treatment. For some
individuals the insurance benefits may total far more money than they have ever paid into the insurance policy. Others may never
make a claim. When averaged out over all of the people buying policies, value of the claims even out. Insurance companies set
their premiums based on their calculated payouts. They plan to take in more money than they pay out in the end to cover expenses.
For-profit insurance companies set their rates to make a profit rather than to break even.
Insurance estimates also earn investment profits, because they have the use of the premium money from the time they receive it
until the time they need it to pay claims. This money is called the float. When the investments of float are successful, they may
earn large profits, even if the insurance company pays out in claims every penny received as premiums. In fact, most
insurance companies pay out more money than they receive in premiums. The excess amount that they pay to policyholders is the cost
of float. An insurance company will profit if they invest the money at a greater return than their cost of float.
An insurance contract or policy will set out in detail the exact circumstances under which a benefit payment will be made and the
amount of the premiums.
Copyright 2008 Harriman Systems
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