
World Insurance
The Evolution of a Global Risk Network
Oxford University Press
Published on 23. August 2012
Book
Hardback
752 pages
978-0-19-965796-4 (ISBN)
Description
Since the end of the eighteenth century, the insurance industry has cast a safety net around the world, first in the British Isles and then further afield, irrespective of cultural, political and ideological divides. Unlike previous publications on insurance history, which tend to discuss the development of national markets or individual companies, this book focuses on the creation of networks across borders from the end of the eighteenth century to the present day.
Distinguished international economic historians draw upon examples from twenty countries across the continents to demonstrate how what was called the 'British system' of risk management spread out in waves, and describes the forces that made this possible - first among them migration from Europe and international trade. The book explores the economic, political, religious, and cultural obstacles that blocked the path of this European invention - not only religious law and traditional practices, but above all protectionism, inflation, and political ideologies. It examines the process of transformation through which modern insurance supplanted traditional forms of protection against perils and risks and was able to keep on offering new ways of dealing with the risks of modern life. As well as discussing primary insurance, it also considers the role played by reinsurance, without which the losses arising out of today's natural and man-made disasters would be immeasurably greater. Finally, taking modern-day disaster scenarios as examples, the book shows just what the limits of insurability are and what risks worldwide networks entail.
Distinguished international economic historians draw upon examples from twenty countries across the continents to demonstrate how what was called the 'British system' of risk management spread out in waves, and describes the forces that made this possible - first among them migration from Europe and international trade. The book explores the economic, political, religious, and cultural obstacles that blocked the path of this European invention - not only religious law and traditional practices, but above all protectionism, inflation, and political ideologies. It examines the process of transformation through which modern insurance supplanted traditional forms of protection against perils and risks and was able to keep on offering new ways of dealing with the risks of modern life. As well as discussing primary insurance, it also considers the role played by reinsurance, without which the losses arising out of today's natural and man-made disasters would be immeasurably greater. Finally, taking modern-day disaster scenarios as examples, the book shows just what the limits of insurability are and what risks worldwide networks entail.
Reviews / Votes
For the first time, historians working across a range of subjects from finance and economic modernization to social welfare and even religion have access to a systematic account of how the insurance industry has transformed the risk environment faced by billions around the world and how that process has knit together the economies and fortunes of far flung societies and cultures ... Whether the post-2008 financial debacle will induce a return to a more stringent regulatory environment and a new generation of statist approaches to insurance is a question that must await a sequel to Borscheid and Haueters imposing and standard-setting World Insurance. * EH.net *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 250 mm
Width: 175 mm
Thickness: 44 mm
Weight
1443 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-965796-4 (9780199657964)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
08/2012
1st Edition
OUP Oxford
€184.19
Available for download
Persons
Peter Borscheid is Professor Emeritus of Economic and Social History at the University of Marburg. He has published numerous monographs on the history of science and technology, the history of the textile industry, the standard of living, the history of old age, and old-age pension, the cultural history of acceleration. He led several projects and international working groups on insurance history. He also served as a member of the German government commission "The situation of the older generation in the Federal Republic of Germany".
Niels Viggo Haueter is Head of Swiss Reinsurance Company's Corporate History team and the company's historical archives. He serves as an academic advisor on insurance and reinsurance history to the European Association for Banking and Financial History in Frankfurt.
Niels Viggo Haueter is Head of Swiss Reinsurance Company's Corporate History team and the company's historical archives. He serves as an academic advisor on insurance and reinsurance history to the European Association for Banking and Financial History in Frankfurt.
Editor
Professor Emeritus of Economic and Social History at the Philipps-University of Marburg
Corporate History, Swiss Reinsurance Company
Content
1. Introduction ; PART I. EUROPE ; 2. Europe: Overview ; 3. United Kingdom: Pioneering insurance internationally ; 4. Germany: Insurance, expansion and setbacks ; 5. France: Insurance and the French financial networks ; 6. Switzerland: Insurance and the need to export ; 7. Italy: Building on a long insurance heritage ; 8. Spain: International influence on the domestic insurance market ; 9. Russia: Early expansion, state involvement, and re-emergence of the insurance industry ; PART II. NORTH AMERICA ; 10. North America: Overview ; 11. Canada: Taking life insurance abroad ; 12. USA: The international attraction of the US insurance market ; PART III. SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA ; 13. Sub-Saharan Africa: Overview ; 14. South Africa: Leading African insurance ; PART IV. MIDDLE EAST & NORTHERN AFRICA ; 15. Middle East & Northern Africa: Overview ; 16. Maghreb: Naturalising insurance in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia ; 17. United Arab Emirates: Economic boom and insurance ; PART V. FAR EAST AND PACIFIC ; 18. Far East and Pacific: Overview ; 19. India: From a colonial outpost to a leading market ; 20. China: The indigenisation of insurance ; 21. Japan: The role of insurance in the rapid modernisation of Japan ; 22. Korea: Insurance in a tiger market ; 23. Australia and New Zealand: A tradition continued creating a domestic insurance market ; PART VI. LATIN AMERICA AND CARIBBEAN ; 24. Latin America and Caribbean: Overview ; 25. Brazil: The resilience of the Brazilian insurance market ; 26. Mexico: A history of the insurance industry in Mexico ; 27. Argentina: The changing fortunes of the Argentinean insurance market