Meaning And Historical Development Of Insurance

Akopọ

Long before anyone wrote a policy, traders crossing the Sahara and sailors leaving Lagos and Liverpool had already worked out the idea behind insurance: if many people who each face the same danger put a little into a common purse, the purse can rebuild the one who is actually struck. Insurance is simply that ancient bargain, tidied up into a legal contract and priced with mathematics.

In this lesson you will learn what insurance really is and how it moves risk off one person and onto a shared pool, how the industry grew from marine trade and Edward Lloyd's coffee house into the modern market, and how it took root in Nigeria before and after independence. You will meet the laws that govern it, right up to the Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act of 2025, and you will see why a business this important is controlled by statute rather than left to private bargaining.

Awọn Afojusun

  1. Define insurance and explain how it transfers risk from an individual to a pool of contributors
  2. Trace the historical development of insurance from early merchant practice to the modern industry
  3. Outline the growth of insurance in Nigeria before and after independence
  4. Identify the principal Nigerian insurance legislation and state the purpose of each
  5. Explain why insurance is regulated by statute rather than left to private agreement

Akọ̀wé Ẹ̀kọ́

A young tailor in Kaduna saves for four years, fits out a shop, and loses the whole of it to a single night fire. One person, one bad night, and a lifetime of savings gone. Now imagine four hundred tailors across the city, each fearing exactly the same thing, each paying a small sum every year into a common fund. When one shop burns, the fund rebuilds it, and no single member is ruined. That shared fund, run as a business and enforced by law, is insurance. Understand how the fund works and where it came from, and the rest of this subject falls into place, because every principle you will study later exists to keep that fund fair and solvent.

Ìdánwò Ẹ̀kọ́

Oriire fun ipari ẹkọ lori Meaning And Historical Development Of Insurance. Ni bayi ti o ti ṣawari naa awọn imọran bọtini ati awọn imọran, o to akoko lati fi imọ rẹ si idanwo. Ẹka yii nfunni ni ọpọlọpọ awọn adaṣe awọn ibeere ti a ṣe lati fun oye rẹ lokun ati ṣe iranlọwọ fun ọ lati ṣe iwọn oye ohun elo naa.

Iwọ yoo pade adalu awọn iru ibeere, pẹlu awọn ibeere olumulo pupọ, awọn ibeere idahun kukuru, ati awọn ibeere iwe kikọ. Gbogbo ibeere kọọkan ni a ṣe pẹlu iṣaro lati ṣe ayẹwo awọn ẹya oriṣiriṣi ti imọ rẹ ati awọn ogbon ironu pataki.

Lo ise abala yii gege bi anfaani lati mu oye re lori koko-ọrọ naa lagbara ati lati ṣe idanimọ eyikeyi agbegbe ti o le nilo afikun ikẹkọ. Maṣe jẹ ki awọn italaya eyikeyi ti o ba pade da ọ lójú; dipo, wo wọn gẹgẹ bi awọn anfaani fun idagbasoke ati ilọsiwaju.

  1. Insurance transfers the risk of loss from the insured to the: A. Government B. Insurer and its pool of policyholders C. Broker who arranged the cover D. Bank that holds the premium Answer: B
  2. Which class of insurance developed earliest? A. Motor insurance B. Life assurance C. Marine insurance D. Fire insurance Answer: C
  3. In which year did the Royal Exchange Assurance open the first insurance branch in Nigeria, in Lagos? A. 1897 B. 1921 C. 1961 D. 1969 Answer: B
  4. The body that licenses and supervises insurers in Nigeria is the: A. Central Bank of Nigeria B. Nigerian Reinsurance Corporation C. National Insurance Commission D. Securities and Exchange Commission Answer: C
  5. Which statute currently governs the insurance industry in Nigeria? A. The Insurance Companies Act 1961 B. The Insurance Act 2003 C. The Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act 2025 D. The Marine Insurance Act 1906 Answer: C