General
Insurance Information
What are the differences
among the major types of insurers in the United States?
The insurance industry is typified by insurers
with a number of different organizational forms. Stock insurers
are corporations owned by the shareholders of the firm. The shareholders
hire managers to run the company and the insurance product is
sold to customers who may or may not be shareholders in the firm.
Mutual insurers are companies which are owned by their
customers. Any policyowner of the company also owns a portion
of the company. Reciprocal insurers or reciprocal exchanges
are insurance companies where the policyowners of the exchange
agree to insure one another. They are very similar to mutual companies.
Lloyd's associations are insurance companies where the
manager who makes the decisions for the firm also has his/her
own personal wealth at stake in the firm. Blue Cross/Blue Shield
insurers are typically nonprofit (some may now be for profit),
community oriented health insurance providers. Blue Cross/Blue
Shield companies typically offer traditional indemnity health
insurance. HMO's or Health Maintenance Organizations
are companies which provide comprehensive health care coverage
to their customers. HMO's, in their simplest form, provide prepaid
health care coverage. Once you pay your premium you can use the
services of the HMO at little or no further cost to you.
Should I care which type of insurer
I purchase insurance from?
From the customer's point of view, the company
which offers you the product and service you want, at the quality
you desire, for the lowest cost should be the company you purchase
insurance from regardless of their organizational form. Economists
have tried in numerous studies to identify which one of its organizational
forms can provide the insurance product at the lowest cost and
the answers are mixed. Therefore, potential customers should probably
base their purchasing decisions on other factors such as the financial
quality of the firm.
Some insurance agents I talk to
say they are paid employees of the insurance company while other
agents says they are independent business people -- why the difference?
Should I care which one I purchase insurance from?
Insurers deliver their insurance products to policyowners
primarily through independent agents or through exclusive agents.
Historically, almost all insurance agents were independent business
people paid on commission. More recently, many insurance companies
have adopted a system where the agent is a paid employee of the
firm rather than an independent business person. These agents
are referred to as exclusive agents. Economists who have studied
the differences between these two types of distribution systems
have long argued that the independent agency system is a less
efficient method of getting the insurance product to the customer
as measured by statistics such as the ratio of expenses incurred
to premiums written. However, the most recent studies suggest
that the reason for the higher expenses by independent agents
is that they offer better quality service to policyowners through
more personalized service, more advice on policy limits, more
help when a claim is filed with the company, etc.
What do I give up by not using
an agent to purchase insurance?
Many life insurance and property-casualty insurance
products can be purchased without the use of an agent. Typically
potential policyholders will either be contacted through the mail
or they can call a 1-800 number to apply for the insurance product.
The advantage of this type of distribution system is that the
expenses of selling the product are usually much lower because
their are no agent commissions to be paid. These savings may then
be passed onto the consumer through lower premiums. The main disadvantage
is that the policyholder does not receive as much, or sometimes
any, personal service either purchasing the product or in filing
a claim.
I understand there are organizations
that assign financial ratings to insurance companies. Who are
they and what do they do?
Insurance is a product where the insurance company
promises to make future loss payments in return for a premium
you pay today. It is therefore important that you know the financial
health of the insurer when you are deciding how much you are willing
to pay for the product. For example, holding all other things
equal, people should pay slightly more for a life insurance policy
from an insurance company with a higher financial rating, or should
pay slightly less for the same policy from a company which is
not as financially strong. In order to make this kind of informed
purchasing decision, a number of private organizations, called
rating agencies, rate the financial stability of insurance companies.
Major insurance rating agencies include the A.M.
Best Company, Standard & Poor's, Weiss Research, Duff
and Phelps, and Moody's. Each of these companies uses data obtained
from various sources to rate the financial strength of insurance
companies. It should be noted, however, that each organization
has its own rating standards and therefore the financial grades
from two different rating agencies may be different. The best
advice usually given to insureds is to check the financial rating
of the insurer from as many rating agencies as possible to determine
the range of opinions of the financial health of the company.
Where can information be found
on the largest insurance companies in the United States?
The monthly publication Best's Review (Life
and Health Edition) periodically contains information on assets,
premium income and products sold by most of the largest life insurance
companies operating in the U.S. The sister publication, Best's
Review (Property and Casualty Edition) provides certain statistical
information on large property-casualty companies. Both magazines
are published by the A.M. Best Company in Oldewick, N.J. Public
libraries in cities of medium to large size frequently subscribe
to one or both of these magazines.
What kinds of questions should I be expected
to answer when I am applying for an insurance policy? Why do insurers
ask all of these questions?
When you apply for an insurance policy, you will
be asked a number of questions. For example, the agent will ask
you a number of demographic questions such as your name, age,
sex, address, etc. In addition to these demographic questions,
you will be asked a number of other questions which will be used
to determine what type of risk you are. For example, when an insurance
company is deciding whether or not to offer automobile insurance
to a potential policyowner, it will want to know about the person's
previous driving record, whether there have any recent accidents
or tickets, what type of car is to be insured and various other
types of information. All of this information will be used for
two purposes. First, based upon the responses to these questions,
the insurance company will decide whether the profile of the applicant
is consistent with the type of risks the insurer is trying to
attract. Some insurers specialize in offering insurance to only
very safe drivers and therefore will only accept applications
from people who fit the profile of a safe driver. Once the insurer
has decided that your risk profile is consistent with the types
of risks it accepts, the answers to the questions will be used
to determine which rate to charge you. For example, the insurance
company will decide whether you should be offered insurance at
the high risk driver rate or the low risk driver rate. Collectively,
this entire process is known as the underwriting process. The
primary function of the underwriting department in an insurance
company is to decide whether or not to offer insurance to a person
who has completed an application. If the answer is yes, then the
underwriting department seeks to determine the "quality"
of that risk so that the proper premium can be charged. That is,
high risk people should pay more than low risk people.
|