Financial Economics of Insurance
By (Author) Ralph S.J. Koijen
By (author) Motohiro Yogo
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
4th April 2023
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Economic theory and philosophy
Organizational theory and behaviour
Finance and the finance industry
Macroeconomics
368
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
An authoritative and comprehensive graduate textbook on the modern insurance sector
The traditional role of insurers is to insure idiosyncratic risk through products such as life annuities, life insurance, and health insurance. With the decline of private defined benefit plans and government pension plans around the world, insurers are increasingly taking on the role of insuring market risk through minimum return guarantees. Insurers also use more complex capital management tools such as derivatives, off-balance-sheet reinsurance, and securities lending. Financial Economics of Insurance provides a unified framework to study the impact of financial and regulatory frictions as well as imperfect competition on all insurer decisions. The book covers all facets of the modern insurance sector, guiding readers through its complexities with empirical facts, institutional details, and quantitative modeling.
Ralph S. J. Koijen is the AQR Capital Management Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Motohiro Yogo is a Professor of Economics and the Hugh Leander and Mary Trumbull Adams Professor for the Study of Investment and Financial Markets at Princeton University.