Hazards

Bayani Gaba-gaba

Two traders in the same market insure identical shops for the same sum, yet one pays a far higher premium than the other, and one is quietly refused cover altogether. The difference is not the risk they carry but the hazard they bring to it: the conditions, and the conduct, that make a fire or a theft more likely to happen and more costly when it does.

In this lesson you will learn exactly what a hazard is and how it differs from a peril and from a risk, meet the three hazards every examiner expects you to know apart (physical, moral and the easily confused morale), see how each one pushes up the frequency or the severity of a loss, and follow how an underwriter hunts for hazard on a proposal form and decides what to do about it.

Manufura

  1. Define a hazard and explain how it differs from a peril and from a risk
  2. Identify and describe physical, moral and morale hazards
  3. Explain how each type of hazard increases the likelihood or severity of a loss
  4. Describe how insurers detect and control hazard when underwriting a proposal

Takardar Darasi

Two provision shops sit side by side in a market in Aba. Both are worth ₦5,000,000, both are insured against fire, both pay the same declared value. Yet the underwriter charges the first owner a modest premium and the second a much steeper one, and later declines to renew the second policy at all. Nothing about the buildings has changed. What the underwriter has spotted is hazard: the first shop is wired properly and run by a careful owner, while the second stores drums of petrol at the back and is run by a man who has already had two suspicious fires. Read the hazard correctly and you can read almost every underwriting decision in the market.

Nazarin Darasi

Barka da kammala darasi akan Hazards. Yanzu da kuka bincika mahimman raayoyi da raayoyi, lokaci yayi da zaku gwada ilimin ku. Wannan sashe yana ba da ayyuka iri-iri Tambayoyin da aka tsara don ƙarfafa fahimtar ku da kuma taimaka muku auna fahimtar ku game da kayan.

Za ka gamu da haɗe-haɗen nau'ikan tambayoyi, ciki har da tambayoyin zaɓi da yawa, tambayoyin gajeren amsa, da tambayoyin rubutu. Kowace tambaya an ƙirƙira ta da kyau don auna fannoni daban-daban na iliminka da ƙwarewar tunani mai zurfi.

Yi wannan ɓangaren na kimantawa a matsayin wata dama don ƙarfafa fahimtarka kan batun kuma don gano duk wani yanki da kake buƙatar ƙarin karatu. Kada ka yanke ƙauna da duk wani ƙalubale da ka fuskanta; maimakon haka, ka kallesu a matsayin damar haɓaka da ingantawa.

  1. A hazard is best described as: A. The actual cause of a loss B. The uncertainty that a loss will occur C. A condition that increases the frequency or severity of a loss D. The amount payable when a loss occurs Answer: C
  2. Which of the following is a peril rather than a hazard? A. Defective electrical wiring B. Flood C. Storing petrol indoors D. A watchman who sleeps on duty Answer: B
  3. A trader secretly sets fire to unsold stock in order to claim on the policy. This is an example of: A. Physical hazard B. Morale hazard C. Legal hazard D. Moral hazard Answer: D
  4. A driver stops locking his car because he knows it is fully insured. This carelessness is an example of: A. Moral hazard B. Morale hazard C. Physical hazard D. A peril Answer: B
  5. A risk carries a 4% chance of a loss, and each loss averages 2,000,000 naira. The expected loss is: A. 8,000 naira B. 80,000 naira C. 500,000 naira D. 800,000 naira Answer: B

Tambayoyin Da Suka Wuce

Kana ka na mamaki yadda tambayoyin baya na wannan batu suke? Ga wasu tambayoyi da suka shafi Hazards daga shekarun baya.

Tambaya 1 Rahoto

(a) Explain the following terms used in insurance.
(i) peril
(ii) hazard.
(iii) disclosure.

(b) Differentiate . between the following classes of risks: (i) pure and speculative risks; particular and fundamental risks; (iii) static and dynamic risks.