The transaction involves the insured assuming a
guaranteed and known relatively small loss in the form of payment to the
insurer in exchange for the insurer's promise to compensate (indemnify) the insured in the case of a financial (personal) loss. The insured
receives a contract, called the insurance
policy, which details the conditions and circumstances
under which the insured will be financially compensated.
History
Early methods
Merchants have sought methods to minimize risks since early times.
Methods for transferring or distributing risk
were practiced by Chinese and Babylonian traders as long ago as the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC, respectively , Chinese merchants travelling treacherous river
rapids would redistribute their wares across many vessels to limit the loss due
to any single vessel's capsizing. The Babylonians developed a system which was
recorded in the famous Code of
Hammurabi, c. 1750 BC, and practiced by early Mediterranean sailing merchants. If a merchant received a loan to fund his shipment, he would pay the
lender an additional sum in exchange for the lender's guarantee to cancel the
loan should the shipment be stolen or lost at sea.
At some point in the 1st millennium BC, the
inhabitants of Rhodes created the 'general
average'. This allowed groups of merchants to pay to
insure their goods being shipped together. The collected premiums would be used
to reimburse any merchant whose goods were jettisoned during transport, whether
to storm or sinkage.
Separate insurance contracts (i.e., insurance
policies not bundled with loans or other kinds of contracts) were invented in Genoa in the 14th century, as were insurance pools backed by pledges of landed
estates. The first known insurance contract dates from Genoa in 1347, and in the next century maritime insurance developed widely and
premiums were intuitively varied with risks. These new insurance contracts
allowed insurance to be separated from investment, a separation of roles that
first proved useful in marine
insurance.
Modern insurance
Insurance became far more sophisticated in Enlightenment
era Europe, and specialized varieties developed.
Lloyd's Coffee House was the
first marine insurance company.
Property insurance as we know
it today can be traced to the Great Fire of London, which in
1666 devoured more than 13,000 houses. The devastating effects of the fire
converted the development of insurance "from a matter of convenience into
one of urgency, a change of opinion reflected in Sir Christopher
Wren's inclusion of a site for 'the Insurance Office' in his new plan for
London in 1667". A number of attempted fire insurance schemes came to
nothing, but in 1681, economist Nicholas
Barbon and eleven associates established the first fire insurance company, the
"Insurance Office for Houses", at the back of the Royal Exchange to
insure brick and frame homes. Initially, 5,000 homes were insured by his
Insurance Office.
At the same time, the first insurance schemes for the underwriting of business ventures became
available. By the end of the seventeenth century, London's growing importance
as a centre for trade was increasing demand for marine
insurance. In the late 1680s, Edward Lloyd opened a coffee house, which
became the meeting place for parties in the shipping industry wishing to insure
cargoes and ships, and those willing to underwrite such ventures. These
informal beginnings led to the establishment of the insurance market Lloyd's of London and several
related shipping and insurance businesses.
The first life insurance policies
were taken out in the early 18th century. The first company to offer life
insurance was the Amicable Society for a Perpetual
Assurance Office, founded in London in 1706 by William Talbot and Sir
Thomas Allen.[7][8] Edward
Rowe Mores established the Society for Equitable Assurances on Lives and
Survivorship in 1762.
It was the world's first mutual
insurer and it pioneered age based premiums based on mortality
rate laying "the framework for scientific insurance practice and development"
and "the basis of modern life assurance upon which all life assurance
schemes were subsequently based".
In the late 19th century, "accident insurance" began to become
available. This operated much like modern disability insurance. The
first company to offer accident insurance was the Railway Passengers Assurance
Company, formed in 1848 in England to insure against the rising number of
fatalities on the nascent railway system.
By the late 19th century, governments began to initiate national insurance
programs against sickness and old age. Germany built on a tradition of
welfare programs in Prussia and Saxony that began as early as in the 1840s. In
the 1880s Chancellor Otto
von Bismarck introduced old age pensions, accident insurance
and medical care that formed the basis for Germany's welfare
state. In Britain more extensive legislation was introduced by the Liberal government in the 1911 National Insurance Act. This gave the British working classes the first contributory system of
insurance against illness and unemployment. This system was greatly expanded
after the Second World War under the
influence of the Beveridge Report, to form
the first modern welfare state.
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