Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2014
More than ten years ago I wrote a paper with the title “The Economic Theory of Insurance” [6]. I was not particularly happy about this paper, and I do not think it contributed much to the development of a sastifactory theory. The paper did however make me—and I hope some readers—acutely aware of the difficulties and problems which must be overcome before a proper theory can be constructed. These problems are still unsolved, so I have on the present occassion chosen a more modest title for a paper on substantially the same subject.
Insurance is an economic activity of some importance, and there is an obvious need for a theory to explain and analyse the activity in the insurance sector of the economy. During the last decade many economists seem to have felt the need, and to have taken it as a challenge. The results have been a fair amount of research, and a number of publications, which I shall not try to review here. It may however be useful to refer to three very recent survey articles by Farny [10], Ferry [11] and Rosa [14], which give extensive bibliographies. The three articles seem to indicate that the economics of insurance is becoming a fashionable subject of research.