The role of insurance in disaster reducation / Charles M van Oppen.
Material type: TextSeries: Institute of Civil Defence and disaster studiesPublication details: United Kingdom : Institute of Civil Defence and disatser studies, 2002.Edition: 1st editionDescription: [17] p. ; 30 cmReview: Insurance is a composite risk treatment - a risk transfer mechanism that reduces the adversity of the financial impact of hazards by (a) directly covering the loss, (b) indirectly reducing vulnerability to disasters by reducing the susceptability to poverty and (c) ensuring adherence to disaster preparedness and mitigation measures. Insurance has many benefits for the economy as a whole. The most appropriate method of insuring will depend on the needs of the country and it's people. Insurance may be organised by the state, private companies or mutuals. It may be mandatory of voluntary. It may be arranged on a macro-scale to cover sectors of the economy or specific catastrophes, or it may be arranged at a micro-level to serve the needs of poor people. It may be formal, enforced by law, or informal - organised on a local level enforced by social sanctions. The important point to realise is that the principal of insurance remains the sane: the many policy holders that do not suffer loss pay for the few that do. If properly managed insurance can increase the capacity of a person, a group or state to deal with disasters.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | Australian Emergency Management Library | BOOK | 368.122 OPP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 900098767 |
Insurance is a composite risk treatment - a risk transfer mechanism that reduces the adversity of the financial impact of hazards by (a) directly covering the loss, (b) indirectly reducing vulnerability to disasters by reducing the susceptability to poverty and (c) ensuring adherence to disaster preparedness and mitigation measures. Insurance has many benefits for the economy as a whole. The most appropriate method of insuring will depend on the needs of the country and it's people. Insurance may be organised by the state, private companies or mutuals. It may be mandatory of voluntary. It may be arranged on a macro-scale to cover sectors of the economy or specific catastrophes, or it may be arranged at a micro-level to serve the needs of poor people. It may be formal, enforced by law, or informal - organised on a local level enforced by social sanctions. The important point to realise is that the principal of insurance remains the sane: the many policy holders that do not suffer loss pay for the few that do. If properly managed insurance can increase the capacity of a person, a group or state to deal with disasters.
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