{"id":3641,"date":"1972-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1972-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1972-vol-53-no-4-the-insurance-principle-and-what-insurance-does\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:42:11","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:42:11","slug":"april-1972-vol-53-no-4-the-insurance-principle-and-what-insurance-does","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1972-vol-53-no-4-the-insurance-principle-and-what-insurance-does\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1972 &#8211; VOL. 53, No. 4 &#8211; The Insurance Principle and What Insurance Does"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Every one of us can, if he will, express                     his life&#8217;s material desires in a statement of a few words.<\/p>\n<p>We wish to have enough assets to give us today&#8217;s necessities                     and some luxuries; we wish to conserve enough assets to provide                     these necessities and luxuries when our earning power is reduced                     by retirement or disability; we wish to leave enough assets                     to assure continuation of these necessities and luxuries to                     our dependents; and we wish to protect ourselves against the                     loss or destruction of our homes and other belongings. The                     surest and most easily available help toward making certain                     that these needs will be met is insurance.<\/p>\n<p>Insurance is a device people have invented for taking the                     sting out of risks. It offers a plan (the policy) that enables                     a person (the policy-holder) to join a large group of people                     (through the insurance company) which undertakes to pay a                     sum of money to him, to his family, or to others (the beneficiaries)                     upon the happening of a specified event (death, fire, etc.)                     or upon a stated date. In return, the policy-holder invests                     a sum of money (the premium) with the insurance company.<\/p>\n<p>All kinds of people buy insurance, in widely varying amounts                     and at widely varying ages. Canadians rank third in life insurance                     ownership in the world, and relative to national income Canadians                     own more life insurance than the people of any other country.                     The fire and casualty insurance premiums written in a year                     exceed $2,000 million, and the claims amount to some $1,350                     million.<\/p>\n<p>In an age when insecurity seems to be felt in some degree                     by everyone, insurance provides a method by which large numbers                     of people, each in some danger of a loss which he cannot prevent,                     or provide for single-handed, are brought together for mutual                     protection. When one of the group suffers a loss, it will                     be made good, partly or wholly, from the contributions of                     the entire group.<\/p>\n<h3>The principle<\/h3>\n<p>The principle of insurance is that when the similar risks                     of many individuals, uncertain insofar as each one is concerned,                     are combined into a large group of risks of more certain occurrence,                     the individuals can be protected.<\/p>\n<p>Those who write insurance strive to be a constructive force                     in everyday life. They have professional rules of action and                     they are governed by codes of ethics.<\/p>\n<p>Insurance companies have training classes for their representatives,                     and their associations provide advanced courses. The Life                     Underwriters Association of Canada established a course of                     study for its members in 1924. Upon graduating, a member is                     entitled to call himself a &#8220;Chartered Life Underwriter&#8221; and                     to use the designation &#8220;C.L.U.&#8221;, which is accepted by the                     public as a hallmark of excellence. Fire and casualty underwriters                     and agents may qualify through a course of study for the degree                     of Fellow of the Insurance Institute of Canada.<\/p>\n<h3>Insurance services<\/h3>\n<p>People in the insurance business have a strong compulsion                     to serve their clients constructively. Some life insurance                     companies broadcast health talks based upon their research                     and study, and they distribute booklets and leaflets telling                     how to prevent disease.<\/p>\n<p>The service idea is also found in fire and casualty insurance.                     These companies engage in extensive campaigns to educate people                     about the causes of fires, and have had much to do with the                     public&#8217;s acceptance of standards of safety. The steam-boiler                     insurance companies have succeeded in forestalling by inspection                     every boiler explosion that could be prevented.<\/p>\n<p>Education by the insurance companies can accomplish much                     to reverse the unhappy tendency of human beings to get into                     disastrous trouble. We may learn to prevent what it is possible                     to prevent by thoughtfulness and carefulness, and we may learn                     about insurance so as to protect ourselves against the perils                     that are beyond our control.<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s insurance business is carried on by companies incorporated                     under the law of the country in which they are established.                     Sound insurance laws and their enforcement by experienced,                     competent public officials are an assurance to policy-holders                     regarding the standing of any company, and the fairness of                     the terms and conditions of policies.<\/p>\n<p>Competition among life insurance companies is strong, and                     agents need to be men and women who are educated in their                     work, skilled in dealing with people, and keen in pursuit                     of prospective customers. In 1927 a group of 32 such people                     got together. They called themselves the &#8220;Million Dollar Round                     Table&#8221; because membership required that a man had sold at                     least a million dollars&#8217; worth of insurance in the year.<\/p>\n<p>Although it is made up exclusively of the most successful                     life insurance salesmen, the group discusses not only quantity                     but quality. It demands high ethical standards of its members                     and is constantly trying to raise the level of service. Both                     philosophy and practice are emphasized at its annual meeting,                     held in Montreal in June this year.<\/p>\n<p>There are more than 200 companies and fraternal benefit                     societies supplying Canadians with life insurance. At the                     end of 1970 there were more than eleven million policies in                     force. Federally registered, provincially registered, and                     other Canadian companies and societies had life insurance                     in force totalling $118,822 million. During the year 1970                     Canadians bought $14,247 million of life insurance and drew                     in benefits and dividends $1,304 million.<\/p>\n<h3>The magic of averages<\/h3>\n<p>Winston Churchill once referred to insurance as &#8220;bringing                     the magic of averages to the rescue of millions&#8221;. This magic                     is the outcome of voluntary economic co-operation by human                     beings.<\/p>\n<p>The famous French mathematician, Blaise Pascal, worked out                     the law of averages. It tells the probability or chance that                     an event will or will not happen. This law of probability                     does not show up clearly when only a small number is involved.                     If you toss a coin just once you have no way of knowing whether                     you will get heads or tails, but if you toss it a million                     times you can be sure of getting very close to 500,000 of                     each. It is the reliability of the law of probability when                     large numbers are involved that makes insurance possible.<\/p>\n<p>Records of births and deaths are used in figuring the premium                     rates based on how long people may be expected to live. The                     first real mortality table was prepared by the Astronomer                     Royal of England, Edmund Halley, the man who in 1705 predicted                     correctly the return of the famous comet named after him.                     The figures are revised from time to time in keeping with                     changing conditions.<\/p>\n<p>Actuaries, who are skilled mathematicians, calculate the                     rates of mortality based on hundreds of thousands of cases,                     and predict with a high degree of accuracy how many people                     in any age group are likely to die in any particular year.                     From this, the insurance companies learn what the risk is.                     They cannot tell whether any individual customer will die                     within the next or some other year, but if, for example, the                     customer is ten years old and the mortality table shows that                     32 of every 100,000 ten-year-olds die every year, the company                     knows the odds and the premium can be calculated accordingly.<\/p>\n<p>Benjamin N. Woodson, C.L.U., a member of the Round Table,                     says in <em>The Set of the Sail<\/em>, his book of reflections                     on life, life insurance and life underwriting: &#8220;Life insurance                     says to you in effect &#8211; set aside $40 or $50 or $60 a                     month, and we will earmark as much as $40,000 or $50,000 or                     $60,000 of property for the benefit of your family in the                     event of your death. It is the only property which you can                     buy (a) in sufficient amounts, (b) on terms that you can meet,                     and (c) which can guarantee unconditionally to do the job                     you want done when there is no earned income.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Purposes of life insurance<\/h3>\n<p>Life insurance is concerned with two hazards that stand                     across the life path of every person: that of dying prematurely,                     leaving a dependent family, and that of living to old age                     without adequate means of support.<\/p>\n<p>Life insurance enables the head of a family to discharge                     the sense of responsibility that he feels for those dependent                     on him. He is not satisfied to fulfil the obligations of the                     marriage ceremony: &#8220;till death us do part&#8221;, but wishes to                     continue his support of those who go on living. By payment                     of a small premium he will create an immediate estate for                     his family.<\/p>\n<p>Insurance fosters independence, helps to preserve the family                     unit, provides for the education of children, and makes it                     unnecessary for the individual or his dependents to rely on                     government aid or charity. The insured family has prepared                     its own independence.<\/p>\n<p>For those who do not carry insurance, governments provide                     social insurance. The objective of social insurance is to                     provide the minimum standard desirable in the interest of                     society as a whole; private insurance seeks to make available                     to those who use it the maximum benefits that each individual                     policyholder may aspire to attain for himself or his family.<\/p>\n<h3>Kinds of life insurance<\/h3>\n<p>An excellent description of the various types of policy                     is given in <em>The Small Business Manual<\/em>, issued by                     the Department of Trade and Commerce, Ottawa. An ordinary                     (or &#8220;straight&#8221;) life policy is intended as protection for                     a family in case of premature death of the insured bread-winner.                     It requires payment of an annual premium varying in amount                     with the age of the insured person at the time of taking the                     policy. This continues until the death of the insured person,                     whereupon the company pays the amount of the insurance in                     cash to the beneficiaries. A limited payment policy is available,                     under which the premiums are payable until, at the end of                     a stated number of years, the policy is &#8220;paid up&#8221; and no further                     premiums are required.<\/p>\n<p>A term policy provides temporary protection. It is issued,                     not for the whole life of the insured person, but for a limited                     period. If the insured dies at any time within the term covered                     by the policy, the principal is paid to the beneficiary. At                     the end of the term, if the insured person is still alive,                     he usually gets nothing back and the coverage ceases unless                     the policy is renewed at a higher rate of premium or converted                     into some form of straight life insurance.<\/p>\n<p>Endowment insurance provides for the payment of a sum of                     money at the end of the endowment period. It may be made payable                     at the time when a child is about to enter university, or                     when the insured person plans to retire, or at any other date.<\/p>\n<p>Group insurance covers a group of persons in the same occupation                     or industry, working for the same employer. It is issued in                     most cases without medical examination, and the employer and                     the employee usually share the cost, the employee&#8217;s portion                     being deducted from wages.<\/p>\n<p>Most Canadians who apply for life insurance get it. There                     are &#8220;extra-risk&#8221; policies, which require higher than ordinary                     premiums, but of the policies purchased by Canadians in 1969                     only four per cent were in this class. The reasons were: 30                     per cent because of heart disease, 12 per cent because of                     weight problems, 28 per cent because of other physical impairments,                     20 per cent because of dangerous occupations, and 10 per cent                     for other reasons.<\/p>\n<p>It is worth noting that two out of every three dollars paid                     out in benefit payments by Canadian life insurance companies                     go to living policy-holders. In the main, these are payments                     of matured endowments, annuities, disability benefits, cash                     surrender values, and policy dividends. In 1970 these payments                     totalled $851 million.<\/p>\n<p>A life annuity provides for the payment of money in the                     form of an income for the remaining lifetime of the owner                     of the contract, thus robbing old age of the fear of destitution.                     If the annuitant dies within the period of a guaranteed annuity                     policy, the income payments are continued to a beneficiary                     named by the annuitant for the balance of the guaranteed period.<\/p>\n<h3>Planning life insurance<\/h3>\n<p>There are principles to be observed in investing in insurance.                     They involve analysis (how much will be needed) and planning                     (what sort of policy). How much insurance you buy is a matter                     of desires, needs and costs.<\/p>\n<p>It is not too strong to say that programming is the vital                     element in good life insurance. Planning the future should                     include facing up to the facts of life, analysing the risks,                     determining the available means for meeting them, and arranging                     a programme designed to meet them most effectively.<\/p>\n<p>This means far more than &#8220;buying insurance&#8221;. It means fitting                     life insurance in with other secured assets so as to project                     one&#8217;s support into the future for so long as one&#8217;s family                     needs it. It means trying to make sure that one&#8217;s desires                     in the way of comfort, education and a good start in life                     will be given one&#8217;s children.<\/p>\n<p>Although we have not seen it in any textbooks, the following                     may be a sensible way to approach a solution of the problem                     of how much life insurance to carry.<\/p>\n<p>What were your personal expenses last year (for clothes,                     travelling, entertaining, lunches, magazines, books, tobacco,                     and all the rest)? What did you pay in life, annuity, and                     health insurance premiums, pension fund contributions, taxes,                     and investments last year? What did you spend on other things                     that will not be needed by your family?<\/p>\n<p>Deduct the sum of these personal expenditures from your                     net income for the year (gross income less tax, unemployment                     insurance, and any other similar deductions). What is left                     should tell you as nearly as is important the annual amount                     needed to maintain your present living establishment and dependents                     on the same standard as last year. What is not available through                     widow&#8217;s pension, government allowances, return on investments,                     etc., can be provided by insurance.<\/p>\n<p>The qualified life insurance agent is competent to sit down                     with a man and help him to make a programme that will do with                     maximum benefit the things a man wants done. He will continue                     to give service when circumstances change in such a way as                     to modify needs. He will serve the beneficiaries by discussing                     with them arrangements for the payment of policy proceeds                     in the way best suited to their particular needs.<\/p>\n<h3>Property insurance<\/h3>\n<p>Property insurance differs from life insurance in its operation,                     though not in the principles of insurance. When a person invests                     in any form of life insurance he is protecting himself and                     others against an event that is sure to happen sooner or later.                     When he takes out property insurance of any kind he is investing                     in protection against an event that may or may not happen.<\/p>\n<p>The business of fire insurance, like that of life insurance,                     is founded on the doctrine of averages. It cannot be known                     whether a particular property will be burned down, but there                     is reasonable probability, based upon statistical experience,                     that about the same proportion of all similar property exposed                     to fire will be burned in a year.<\/p>\n<p>The first step toward setting up a fire insurance programme                     on business premises or on a home, is to appraise the value                     of your property. A home inventory should list all goods &#8211;                     furniture, clothing, books, musical instruments, tools, paintings,                     silverware, and all other personal property of those living                     in the house or apartment. A copy should be kept in a safety                     deposit box with other valuable papers.<\/p>\n<p>In a typical year the most frequent known causes of fire                     in Canada, as reported in <em>Canada Year Book<\/em>, are in                     this order: smokers&#8217; carelessness, electrical wiring and appliances;                     stoves, furnaces, boilers and smoke pipes; matches; lightning;                     petroleum and its products; defective and over-heated chimneys                     and flues. Fire insurance claims in Canada run at the rate                     of about $180 million a year.<\/p>\n<p>Explosion, riot and civil commotion, vandalism and malicious                     mischief make up a group of perils which can be insured against.                     Usually they are added to a fire insurance policy at an additional                     premium.<\/p>\n<p>Casualty insurance is a recent development as compared with                     marine and fire insurance. It started with the growth of railways                     in England, where the first &#8220;casualty&#8221; company was formed                     about 1849 to provide accident insurance to those exposing                     themselves to the danger of travelling by steam-engine.<\/p>\n<p>A long list of injuries and damage is covered by casualty                     insurance today: bad debts, breakage of plate glass, burglary,                     damage to crops by hail, and a hundred others.<\/p>\n<p>Even the fixed expenses and the loss of business profit                     when a factory is shut down following a fire may be insured                     against through a &#8220;business interruption&#8221; policy. A person                     who travels may carry a &#8220;floater&#8221; policy, covering his movable                     property wherever he may take it.<\/p>\n<p>Insurance is available to cover burglary, which is marked                     by forcible entry; robbery, which is the taking of property                     by violence or threat of violence; and theft, which is stealing                     property while it is unprotected.<\/p>\n<p>Complete automobile insurance coverage includes these types                     of protection: liability for bodily injury and property damage,                     collision, fire, theft, medical payment for injuries, and                     miscellaneous perils such as explosion, flying objects, and                     malicious damage.<\/p>\n<p>There are in Canada more than 300 competing companies in                     the fire and casualty insurance business registered with the                     Federal Government, and several hundred incorporated in the                     provinces. All of them operate subject to government supervision,                     and all are required to maintain reserves calculated to be                     sufficient to protect their policy-holders.<\/p>\n<h3>Business insurance<\/h3>\n<p>In carrying on business from day to day, insurance is of                     important service. The mere fact that a business concern carries                     life insurance on its key men is an indication to creditors                     that it has taken precautions to protect the business against                     the sudden removal of important individuals. Borrowing, too,                     is affected by the amount of life insurance the applicant                     carries, so that his insurance plays a vital part not only                     in the physical life of a person but in his financial affairs                     if he becomes a borrower.<\/p>\n<p>More than almost any other kind of business, a partnership                     may be thrown into difficulties by the death of one partner,                     so partnership insurance provides funds to aid reorganization                     into a new partnership or a sole proprietorship.<\/p>\n<p>Honest discharge of duty by employees is necessary in any                     kind of business. Fidelity bonds protect the business man                     against loss by dishonest or fraudulent acts of employees;                     surety bonds guarantee the performance of an obligation or                     a contract; forgery bonds protect against loss resulting from                     forgery or alteration of cheques and other securities.<\/p>\n<p>Credit insurance offers protection against abnormal bad                     debt losses through, for example, the sudden insolvency of                     a large and hitherto trustworthy customer. It is available                     to manufacturers, wholesalers and jobbers, but not generally                     to retailers.<\/p>\n<p>All who own property, whether business premises or a home,                     are responsible for it. There is a well-established principle                     in British law that a person is held accountable for the consequences                     of his acts and omissions if through failure to exercise reasonable                     care another person suffers damage to his person or property.<\/p>\n<p>This is an obligation that should be closely attended to                     by business people and home owners. Even small claims may                     be troublesome and expensive, while damages given in serious                     accidents can be enormous. The contract assumed by the liability                     insurance company usually includes the furnishing to the insured                     of certain services, the payment of certain costs, and the                     payment of damages assessed upon the insured because of negligence.<\/p>\n<h3>Insurance must fit needs<\/h3>\n<p>What kind and amount of insurance to carry, and the value                     of the premium measured against other wants and needs: these                     are individual matters to be calculated against the possible                     effects of not being insured.<\/p>\n<p>It can be said that when a man has adequate insurance covering                     his life, so as to provide for his family; insurance on his                     home against fire and burglary; protection against liability                     claims made on him; insurance according to the needs of his                     business; and insurance that will provide him with maintenance                     upon his retirement: that man can sleep well at night because                     he has financial peace of mind.<\/p>\n<p>No one can hedge against every possibility of loss, but                     the growth of insurance to cover so many contingencies in                     one&#8217;s life is one of the cheering developments of our day.<\/p>\n<p>Every person must analyse his own situation, calculate his                     risks and the cost of covering each risk by insurance, and                     choose accordingly. After making sure of catastrophe protection                     &#8211; insurance against any occurrence that would wipe him                     out financially or cause a major set-back in his family&#8217;s                     level of living &#8211; insurance against minor misfortunes                     can be taken purely as a matter of choice.<\/p>\n<p>Arranging insurance coverage is making a programme to meet                     well-defined objectives, not merely the buying of a new policy                     from time to time. The policies, like your clothes, must fit                     you.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[52],"class_list":["post-3641","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-52"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 4 - The Insurance Principle and What Insurance Does - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1972-vol-53-no-4-the-insurance-principle-and-what-insurance-does\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1972 - VOL. 53, No. 4 - The Insurance Principle and What Insurance Does - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Every one of us can, if he will, express his life&#8217;s material desires in a statement of a few words. 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