Insurance, size and exposure to actuarial risk: empirical evidence from nineteenth- and early twentieth-century German Knappschaften
By the mid nineteenth century, German miners relied on their own job-related social insurance scheme providing them with sickness, invalidity and survivorship insurance benefits. Addressing the period from 1867 to 1913, this article investigates whether the mineworkers' insurance funds, the <italic>Knappschaften</italic>, could effectively minimise their exposure to the actuarial risk inherent in their operations – and, in fact, inherent in all such insurance schemes – by increasing the scale of pooling. Contemporary observers of the <italic>Knappschaften</italic> tended to focus on whether financial stability could be improved by exploiting economies of scale, rather than by improving the pricing techniques themselves. Evidence suggests that actuarial risk was minimised at around 5,000 contributors in a <italic>Knappschaft</italic>'s pension insurance section and at about 1,000 contributors in its sickness insurance section.
Year of publication: |
2012
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Authors: | Jopp, Tobias Alexander |
Published in: |
Financial History Review. - Cambridge University Press. - Vol. 19.2012, 01, p. 75-116
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Publisher: |
Cambridge University Press |
Description of contents: | Abstract [journals.cambridge.org] |
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