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Title: Determinants of Insurers' Performance in Risk Pooling, Risk Management, and Financial Intermediation Activities
Authors: Dionne, Georges
Gagné, Robert
Nouira, Abdelhakim
Keywords: Risk pooling
Risk management
Financial intermediation
Property-liability insurance
Efficiency
Agency costs
Issue Date: 2007-05
Series/Report no.: Cahiers du CIRPÉE;07-15
Abstract: Corporate finance theory predicts that firms' characteristics affect agency costs and hence their efficiency. Cummins et al. (2006) have proposed a cost function specification that measures separately insurer efficiency in handling risk pooling, risk management, and financial intermediation functions. We investigate the insurer characteristics that determine these efficiencies. Our empirical results show that mutuals outperform stock insurers in handling the three functions. Independent agents and high capitalization reduce the cost efficiency of risk pooling. Certain characteristics such as being a group of affiliated insurers, handling a higher volume of business in commercial lines, assuming more reinsurance, or investing a higher proportion of assets in bonds, do significantly increase insurers' efficiency in risk management and financial intermediation.
URI: http://132.203.59.36/CIRPEE/cahierscirpee/2007/files/CIRPEE07-15.pdf
https://depot.erudit.org/id/001044dd
Appears in Collections:Cahiers de recherche du CIRPÉE

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