On the Life Assurance Companies of Germany—their Constitution, Condition and Prospects: being the substance of a Paper presented to the Institute of Actuaries

Author(s):  
Herr Rath G. Hopf

Next to England, Germany is the country in which the principles of life assurance have had the most successful development. It is true the more recent French Companies, La Caisse Paternelle, L'Equitable, La Caisse des Ecoles et des Families, which also call the assurances granted by them assurances sur la vie, show a greater extension in a shorter time; but what they guarantee to the public are not life assurances in our sense of the word. They are neither assurances granted for previously specified sums, nor is the payment of the claim dependent on the death of the assured. The more modern French life assurances are rather indefinite reversions obtained by paying in any sum the assured pleases, the interest of which (as in the Tontines), according to the mortality found to prevail in the different classes, may prove sometimes greater, sometimes less, and is only divided amongst those who attain the term of life which may have been previously agreed on. The contributions of those who die early, together with the interests thereon, go to augment the dividends to the surviving members. Whilst life assurance amongst the English and Germans is therefore calculated to be on the death of the assured a source of provision for their families, the more recent mode of life assurance amongst the French principally aims at granting to the assured himself, in his lifetime, an annuity or sum of money, which, increasing according as the computations are made for an earlier or later period, affords him the means of extending his business, of completing his education, of securing a dowry on marriage, or a provision in old age. In consequence, partly of the prospect of selfenjoyment of the reserve thus made, partly the possibility of obtaining a high profit for a small investment through a greater mortality in the classes than the tables assumed, this kind of assurance became very much in vogue amongst the French. Recently, however, a clearer understanding of the matter, and the exposure of some deceptions which a few of the Companies or their managers have been guilty of, have in some degree cooled the public favour.

1962 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 19-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. R. Cox ◽  
R. H. Storr-Best

SynopsisThe paper is in the nature of a summary of the authors' book “Surplus in British Life Assurance—Actuarial Control over its Emergence and Distribution during 200 Years”. Copies may be purchased direct from the Institute of Actuaries (price 17s. 6d.). Members and Students of the Faculty may obtain a copy for personal use at the reduced price of 11s. post free. It begins with a survey of the principal factors that have influenced the development of theory and practice in regard to surplus throughout the years. It describes the manner in which surplus first arose in scientific life assurance, and traces how this and other historical developments have had an important effect both in the early days and later as a valid standard of equity was gradually evolved. At the same time the influence of long-dated contracts and of the expectations of the public has been a stabilising factor in spite of rapid changes in the economic and social scene.The characteristics of the nineteenth-century image of equity are described, and the history of the twentieth century in regard to surplus is seen as one of attempts to preserve that image through sharp and contrasting vicissitudes. This idea is explored in some detail for both ordinary and industrial life business.The problems of the present day are reviewed one by one and the paper touches on such matters as economic inflation, the public demand for pension schemes, the introduction of computers and data-processing devices and the prospect of Britain joining the Common Market. Against this background, various modern concepts of equity are contrasted and brief reference is made to matching, immunisation and gearing. Equity in with-profit pension schemes and systems of variable policies are also considered.This general survey leads the authors in the end to ask some critical questions about the performance of the profession throughout its history. These questions relate to the success or otherwise of actuaries in foreseeing the future, in attaining equity and in progressing with the times. The authors attempt to answer them and are able to end on a cheerful note as regards past achievements and to express great hopes for the future, which may well bring a new era for the profession.


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 137-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Brogaard

Governments increasingly use novel forms of public procurement to stimulate innovation in public service delivery. A notable example is pre-commercial procurement. Launched by the European Commission a decade ago, pre-commercial procurement encourages research and development of new solutions for the public sector. However, limited theoretical and empirical studies have made it difficult to assess and improve use of the model to foster public innovation. Based on two pre-commercial procurement projects in Denmark, the article aims to complete the first systematic and theory-based evaluation of national experiences. The evaluation shows that sufficient resources, participant and management commitment, and focused management of the collaborative process contributed to successful development and testing of a new solution in one of the projects. Meanwhile, technical obstacles in developing a prototype resulted in termination of the other project. In this case, the pre-commercial procurement model cannot accommodate significant changes to the agreed solution during the innovation process.


1869 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-145
Author(s):  
Wilhelm Lazarus

Life Assurance provides for the family of the deceased in case of premature death; deferred Annuities provide for old age; but both institutions leave uncovered the risk of premature inability to work. Invalidity Assurance, including the benefits of a deferred Annuity, would be the real complement to Life Assurance. This truth is so deeply felt in Germany, that a good many institutions, employing a large number of officers, workmen, and labourers; many mills, and particularly the Railway Companies, long since directed their attention to the providing for their officers in case of their being invalided. How were they to calculate the annual contribution, how to make the valuation of their liabilities?


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesse Eduard Verdier ◽  
Sake Jan De Vlas ◽  
Inge D. Kidgell-Koppelaar ◽  
Jan Hendrik Richardus

Contact investigations around tuberculosis patients enable early detection of infection and disease, and prevention of secondary tuberculosis cases. We aim to identify risk factors for <em>M. tuberculosis </em>transmission to contacts of tuberculosis patients, based on unique data from routine contact investigations by the Public Health Service in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, collected between 2001 and 2006. Through logistic regression analysis, we determined the effect of various risk factors on the chance of finding a latent tuberculosis (TB) infection or overt tuberculosis case among contacts. A total of 1165 index patients with active tuberculosis were registered and at least one contact was investigated in 731, resulting in 21,540 contacts overall. Altogether, the contact investigations led to 91 cases of active tuberculosis. Of the 12,698 contacts eligible for screening by tuberculin skin test, 1091 (9%) were diagnosed with latent tuberculosis infections. Risk factors were old age of the contact, old age of the index patient, and the relationship to the index. A larger fraction of infected close contacts was strongly associated with infections among more distant contacts. Our findings emphasize the importance of including these personal and interpersonal risk factors in decision making in contact investigations.


Author(s):  
Mark Thomas ◽  
Paul Johnson

This chapter focuses on one fundamental aspects of an ageing population — how to pay for old age, individually and collectively. It also presents a study of the history of old age support in the UK and US and concludes that despite the quite different beginnings of the public pension and social security systems, government policy in both countries has become similarly locked in to a set of institutional arrangements which were devised to respond to immediate social and economic problems, but which have acquired a rationale and a dynamic of their own.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 129-153
Author(s):  
Daniel C.S. Wilson

This article examines life assurance and the politics of ‘big data’ in mid-19th-century Britain. The datasets generated by life assurance companies were vast archives of information about human longevity. Actuaries distilled these archives into mortality tables – immensely valuable tools for predicting mortality and so pricing risk. The status of the mortality table was ambiguous, being both a public and a private object: often computed from company records they could also be extrapolated from public projects such as the census, or clerical records. Life assurance more generally straddled the line between private enterprise and collective endeavour, though its advocates stressed the public interest in its success. Reforming actuaries such as Thomas Rowe Edmonds wanted the data on which mortality tables were based to be made publicly available, but faced resistance. Such resistance undermined insurers’ claims to be scientific in spirit and hindered Edmonds’s personal quest for a law of mortality. Edmonds pushed instead for an open actuarial science alongside fellow travellers at the Statistical Society of London, which was populated by statisticians such as William Farr (whose subsequent work, it is argued, was influenced by Edmonds) as well as by radical mathematicians such as Charles Babbage. The article explores Babbage’s little-known foray into the world of insurance, both as a budding actuary but also as a fierce critic of the industry. These debates over the construction, ownership, and accessibility of insurance datasets show that concern about the politics of big data did not begin in the 21st century.


Author(s):  
Juan Carlos Olaya Molano ◽  
Carolina Aguirre Garzón ◽  
Jaime Manuel Mora Cruz ◽  
Jorge Eliecer Gaitán Méndez

The application of the public policy of aging and old age in the city of Bogotá in the last 10 years has forced people over 60 years to regularly undertake activities in which they worked for many years as employees. Other older adults have continued working to meet their basic needs. However, under this reference, the methodology used in the research was a mixed qualitative-quantitative approach because the two are of great importance to deduce whether the national public policy of aging has brought advantages or disadvantages to the development and/or continuity of the business plans being prepared by senior entrepreneurs.


1938 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 106-135
Author(s):  
Sydney Henry Levine

I should like to say first that I am extremely sensible of and greatly appreciate the honour that the Institute has done me by inviting me to submit this paper. In writing it I have felt throughout the difficulty that arises from the very different approach which a lawyer makes to legal decisions from that which an actuary may be expected to make. Cases interest me because of the niceties of construction they involve or of their subtle distinctions from other cases, or again because they mark the gradual development of the judicial mind in conformity with the public opinion of the preceding generation. To actuaries the interest of cases must primarily lie in their bearing on the practical problems of life assurance work. In discussing cases, therefore, I have felt that the reaction of readers will be sometimes that I have been labouring a decision that was obvious from the start, at others that the point at issue is obsolete because no company has had such a condition in its policies for the last ten years or for some equally good reason. Knowing next to nothing of life assurance practice, I have been unable to avoid this defect, and can only ask that it be excused.


2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-2 ◽  
Author(s):  
JUBIN ABUTALEBI ◽  
HARALD CLAHSEN

Topics in psycholinguistics and the neurocognition of language rarely attract the attention of journalists or the general public. One topic that has done so, however, is the potential benefits of bilingualism for general cognitive functioning and development, and as a precaution against cognitive decline in old age. Sensational claims have been made in the public domain, mostly by journalists and politicians. Recently (September 4, 2014) The Guardian reported that “learning a foreign language can increase the size of your brain”, and Michael Gove, the UK's previous Education Secretary, noted in an interview with The Guardian (September 30, 2011) that “learning languages makes you smarter”. The present issue of BLC addresses these topics by providing a state-of-the-art overview of theoretical and experimental research on the role of bilingualism for cognition in children and adults.


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