01 Principles Of Insurance Objectives Contents — Ic
Finally, a strange case came in. A warehouse caught fire, but inside, a man’s insured rowboat was found smashed, not burned. The man claimed the fire was the cause.
Disaster struck. The Golden Breeze hit a reef and sank. Mr. Elian rushed back, distraught. “My silk was worth 10,000 gold coins! Pay me!”
“Because of ,” Kael explained to Mira, “he must tell us everything. If he hides the stains, the contract is void.” They adjusted the policy to cover only the sound silk. This was the Objective : to promote fairness and transparency.
“Exactly. And if another insurer had covered part of the ship, we’d use – splitting the loss fairly between us.” The Objectives : to hold the guilty party accountable and prevent the insured from collecting multiple payments. Ic 01 Principles Of Insurance Objectives Contents
A week later, a rival merchant, Lady Sephra, tried to insure The Golden Breeze as well. Mira was confused. “Why not?” she asked. “More premiums for us?”
In the bustling coastal city of Veridien, young Mira landed her dream job as an apprentice at "The Indemnity," the oldest and most respected insurance house in the realm. Her first task, however, was daunting. Her mentor, a gruff but kind master named Old Kael, handed her a dusty tome titled .
“Proximate Cause,” Kael declared. “Not the nearest in time, but the nearest in efficiency .” They learned that the fire caused a panic, a horse kicked the rowboat, and it shattered before the flames reached it. The was the panic (uninsured), not the fire (insured). The Objective : to find the true, dominant cause of the loss, not just the last event. Finally, a strange case came in
Mira nodded. “The ship might sink, or pirates might strike.”
“Forget the glittering towers of finance,” Kael grumbled. “If you don’t master this, you’ll build a house on sand.”
Kael shook his head. “Does Lady Sephra own the silk? Does she owe money on the ship?” Disaster struck
“Then she has no ,” Kael said. “If the ship sank, she would gain money, not lose it. That would turn insurance into gambling, not protection.” The Objective here was to prevent moral hazard and ensure insurance is used only for indemnification, not speculation.
She was ready. The principles weren’t a puzzle to solve. They were a promise to keep.
Mr. Elian went pale. “Two hundred bolts are slightly water-stained.”
