Soziales und Gesundheit

Performance Measurement in the Life Insurance Industry: An Asset-Liability Perspective

Explaining Returns in the Cat Bond Market: Factor Models and Fund Performance

Can Group Incentives Alleviate Moral Hazard? The Role of Pro-Social Preferences

Description: 

Incentivizing unobservable effort in risky environments, such as in insurance, credit, and labor markets, is vital as moral hazard may otherwise cause significant welfare losses including the outright failure of markets. Ensuring incentive-compatibility through state-contingent contracts between principal and agent, however, is undesirable for risk-averse agents. We provide a theoretical intuition on how pro-social preferences between agents in a joint liability group con-tract can ensure incentive-compatibility. Two independent large-scale behavioral experiments framed in an insurance context support the hypotheses derived from our theory. In particular, effort decreases when making agents’ payoff less state-dependent, but this effect is mitigated with joint liability in a group scheme where agents are additionally motivated by pro-social concerns. Activating strategic motives slightly increases effort further; particularly in non-anonymous groups with high network strength. The results support existing evidence on joint liability groups and further suggest that even if peer pressure to ensure effort provision is absent, such group policies can improve efficiency when agents are pro-social.

The Structure of the Global Reinsurance Market: An Analysis of Efficiency, Scale, and Scope

Description: 

We estimate economies of scale and scope as well as cost and revenue efficiency to explain the structure of the global reinsurance market, where large reinsurers dominate but both diversified and specialized reinsurers are competitive. The costs and benefits of size and product diversification are particularly relevant to the reinsurance industry, as risk diversification is central to the industry's business model. We find that reinsurers with total assets less than USD 2.9 billion exhibit scale economies, while those with total assets greater than USD 15.5 billion do not. Large reinsurers are characterized by high cost efficiency, while small reinsurers exhibit superior efficiency only when specialized. Large reinsurers also exhibit revenue scope economies when operating both life and nonlife reinsurance. Moreover, the evidence is in line with the efficient structure hypothesis: cost-efficient reinsurers can charge lower prices without sacrificing profitability.

Preisfindung im Primärmarkt für Katastrophenanleihen: Neue empirische Erkenntnisse

On the Willingness to Pay for Term Life Insurance

On the Relationship between Mutual and Stock Insurance Premia

Medical Underwriting and Valuation in the Life Settlements Market

Life Settlement Pricing: An Econometric Approach

Les B. Strickler Innovation in Instruction Award : Insurance-Linked Securities

Seiten

Le portail de l'information économique suisse

© 2016 Infonet Economy

RSS - Soziales und Gesundheit abonnieren