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The Coexistence of Multiple Distribution Systems for Financial Services: The Case of Property‐Liability Insurance
256
Citations
28
References
1997
Year
Agent TheoryInsurance DistributionMarket DesignIndustrial OrganizationProperty-liability InsuranceRisk ManagementFinancial ServicesManagementEconomic AnalysisInsuranceEconomicsLiability (Financial Accounting)AccountingLiability ManagementProduct LiabilityProperty‐liability InsuranceOptimal ContractingFinanceMultiple Distribution SystemsDirect WritersPrivate InsuranceInsurance MarketsIndependent-agency InsurersInsurance LawBusinessInsurance FraudMicroeconomics
Property‑liability insurance is distributed through a direct‑writer system, where agents represent one insurer, and an independent‑agency system, where agents represent several insurers, and independent‑agency insurers have higher costs than direct writers, and the market‑imperfections hypothesis attributes the coexistence of the two types of insurers to impediments to competition, while the product‑quality hypothesis holds that independent‑agency insurers provide higher‑quality services. The authors measure cost efficiency and profit efficiency for property‑liability insurers. They find strong support for the product‑quality hypothesis, implying that independent‑agency insurers produce higher‑quality outputs and are compensated by higher revenues. © 1997 University of Chicago Press.
Property-liability insurance is distributed through a direct-writer system, where agents represent one insurer, and an independent-agency system, where agents represent several insurers. Independent-agency insurers have higher costs than direct writers. The market-imperfections hypothesis attributes the coexistence of the two types of insurers to impediments to competition, while the product-quality hypothesis holds that independent-agency insurers provide higher-quality services. The authors measure cost efficiency and profit efficiency for property-liability insurers and find strong support for the product-quality hypothesis, implying that independent-agency insurers produce higher-quality outputs and are compensated by higher revenues. Copyright 1997 by University of Chicago Press.
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