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Economic and environmental conditions for the diffusion of insurance in three non-Euro-American regions during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries

Pearson, Robin; Daudi, Francis; Kocher, Eva; Musterle, Claus

Authors

Francis Daudi

Eva Kocher

Claus Musterle



Abstract

This paper discusses the macroeconomic and environmental conditions for the spread of insurance in three non-Western world regions (China, Middle East and sub-Sahara Africa). Focusing on the 19th and 20th centuries, it examines the patterns of economic development relevant for the growth of insurance in these regions, and compares these against standard economic models of insurance diffusion. The paper argues that the growth of insurance must be explained by more than a simple linear relationship with the growth of per capita incomes. As well as income levels, other factors affecting insurance development include urbanization, taxation, savings rates, legal compulsion to insure, state provision of social security, state-owned insurance bodies and the presence of large infrastructural projects. The second part of the paper focuses on environmental conditions in these regions that drove insurance growth, including climate and geography, demography, drought and disease, building materials and risk-reduction technologies.

Citation

Pearson, R., Daudi, F., Kocher, E., & Musterle, C. (in press). Economic and environmental conditions for the diffusion of insurance in three non-Euro-American regions during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Asia-Pacific Journal of Risk and Insurance, https://doi.org/10.1515/apjri-2022-0045

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 7, 2023
Online Publication Date Apr 20, 2023
Deposit Date Mar 17, 2023
Publicly Available Date Apr 21, 2024
Journal Asia-Pacific Journal of Risk and Insurance
Print ISSN 1793-2157
Publisher De Gruyter
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1515/apjri-2022-0045
Keywords Africa; China; Insurance development; Ottoman Empire
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4241697

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© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston




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