100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

New Hampshire Property & Casualty License Exam Questions and Answers Fully Solved

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
9
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
21-04-2025
Written in
2024/2025

New Hampshire Property & Casualty License Exam Questions and Answers Fully Solved Risk pools - Answers Large groups of similar individuals Law of Large Numbers - Answers We can predict fairly accurately what will happen to a large group of similar individuals in a given time period. This allows insurers to calculate their probable losses and to establish premiums Acturaries - Answers Make mathematical predictions about things like how many of the people in any given risk pool will have their home destroyed by a tornado Principle of Indemnity - Answers The principle that insurance policies should provide a benefit no greater than the loss suffered by an insured. Insurable Interest - Answers Any financial interest in life or property such that, if the life or property were lost or harmed, the insured would suffer financially. True or false - Answers With property and casualty insurance polices, insurable interest must be present at the time of the loss. Pure risk - Answers A situation in which there are only the possibilities of loss, there is never the possibility of a profit or financial gain. Speculative risk - Answers a situation in which either profit or loss is possible Which are insurable (pure or speculative risks) - Answers Pure Static risk - Answers Insurable. Do not frequently fluctuate and result from a unchanging environment (flood every 100 years) dynamic risk - Answers Not insurable. Risk associated with change (new and fatal virus) Fundamental risk - Answers Insurable. Affect entire groups of people or property within a society (flood, earthquake) Particular risk - Answers Usually insurable. Affect only the individual person or family and not the entire community or society. (burglary) Peril - Answers A peril is the actual cause of loss Hazard - Answers a hazard is any condition that increases the possibility or severity of a loss Physical Hazards - Answers the material, structural, environmental, operational features of an insured risk that may create or increase the opportunity for injury or damage Moral hazard - Answers a condition that increases the probability that a person will intentionally cause or create a loss. Morale hazard - Answers a condition of inattention to, or disregard for, one's own life, health, property, or behavior that increases the frequency or severity of a loss. risk avoidance - Answers Risk avoidance simply means avoiding the hazard. For example, to avoid the risk of an automobile accident or house fire, a person simply does not purchase a car or house Transfer of Risk - Answers This is the most common and most popular method of handling risk. A person can transfer their risk to an insurance company, in exchange for paying a regular premium to the company. sharing a risk - Answers Even when a risk is transferred to an insurer, it is common to share some of the risk. For example, the deductibles and premiums an insured pays for insurance, are a form of risk sharing. The insured accepts responsibility for a small portion of the risk, while transferring the larger portion of the risk to the insurer assumption of risk - Answers This is also known as risk retention or self-insurance. An individual decides to do what creates a risk (buys a car or home) and retains the uncertainty of loss. If the car is wrecked or the house burns, the individual will replace the car, rebuild the home or do whatever he deems appropriate at his own expense risk reduction of risk control - Answers Risk may be reduced by employing loss prevention methods. For example, installing a sprinkler system in a building, or a person who quits smoking and begins a planned weight loss program. Underwriting - Answers is the process of selecting certain types of risks that have historically produced a profit and rejecting those risks that have historically produced a loss. Sound underwriting practices normally produce a favorable loss ratio for an insurance company. This means the premium collected, minus claims paid and operating expenses, produces a profit for the insurer adverse selection - Answers Adverse selection is the tendency of insureds with a greater-than-average chance of loss to purchase insurance. Spreading the risk - Answers This can be achieved by insuring, during the same underwriting

Show more Read less
Institution
New Hampshire Property & Casualty
Course
New Hampshire Property & Casualty









Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
New Hampshire Property & Casualty
Course
New Hampshire Property & Casualty

Document information

Uploaded on
April 21, 2025
Number of pages
9
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

New Hampshire Property & Casualty License Exam Questions and Answers Fully Solved

Risk pools - Answers Large groups of similar individuals

Law of Large Numbers - Answers We can predict fairly accurately what will happen to a large group of
similar individuals in a given time period. This allows insurers to calculate their probable losses and to
establish premiums

Acturaries - Answers Make mathematical predictions about things like how many of the people in any
given risk pool will have their home destroyed by a tornado

Principle of Indemnity - Answers The principle that insurance policies should provide a benefit no
greater than the loss suffered by an insured.

Insurable Interest - Answers Any financial interest in life or property such that, if the life or property
were lost or harmed, the insured would suffer financially.

True or false - Answers With property and casualty insurance polices, insurable interest must be present
at the time of the loss.

Pure risk - Answers A situation in which there are only the possibilities of loss, there is never the
possibility of a profit or financial gain.

Speculative risk - Answers a situation in which either profit or loss is possible

Which are insurable (pure or speculative risks) - Answers Pure

Static risk - Answers Insurable. Do not frequently fluctuate and result from a unchanging environment
(flood every 100 years)

dynamic risk - Answers Not insurable. Risk associated with change (new and fatal virus)

Fundamental risk - Answers Insurable. Affect entire groups of people or property within a society (flood,
earthquake)

Particular risk - Answers Usually insurable. Affect only the individual person or family and not the entire
community or society. (burglary)

Peril - Answers A peril is the actual cause of loss

Hazard - Answers a hazard is any condition that increases the possibility or severity of a loss

Physical Hazards - Answers the material, structural, environmental, operational features of an insured
risk that may create or increase the opportunity for injury or damage

Moral hazard - Answers a condition that increases the probability that a person will intentionally cause
or create a loss.

, Morale hazard - Answers a condition of inattention to, or disregard for, one's own life, health, property,
or behavior that increases the frequency or severity of a loss.

risk avoidance - Answers Risk avoidance simply means avoiding the hazard. For example, to avoid the
risk of an automobile accident or house fire, a person simply does not purchase a car or house

Transfer of Risk - Answers This is the most common and most popular method of handling risk. A person
can transfer their risk to an insurance company, in exchange for paying a regular

premium to the company.

sharing a risk - Answers Even when a risk is transferred to an insurer, it is common to share

some of the risk. For example, the deductibles and premiums an insured pays for insurance,

are a form of risk sharing. The insured accepts responsibility for a small portion of the risk,

while transferring the larger portion of the risk to the insurer

assumption of risk - Answers This is also known as risk retention or self-insurance. An individual

decides to do what creates a risk (buys a car or home) and retains the uncertainty of loss. If

the car is wrecked or the house burns, the individual will replace the car, rebuild the home

or do whatever he deems appropriate at his own expense

risk reduction of risk control - Answers Risk may be reduced by employing loss prevention

methods. For example, installing a sprinkler system in a building, or a person who quits

smoking and begins a planned weight loss program.

Underwriting - Answers is the process of selecting certain types of risks that have historically produced

a profit and rejecting those risks that have historically produced a loss. Sound underwriting

practices normally produce a favorable loss ratio for an insurance company. This means the

premium collected, minus claims paid and operating expenses, produces a profit for the insurer

adverse selection - Answers Adverse selection is the tendency of insureds with a greater-than-average
chance of loss to

purchase insurance.

Spreading the risk - Answers This can be achieved by insuring, during the same underwriting period,
either a very large number of similar risks, multiple insured locations, or activities with dissimilar risks.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
TutorJosh Chamberlain College Of Nursing
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
342
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
16
Documents
28610
Last sold
2 days ago
Tutor Joshua

Here You will find all Documents and Package Deals Offered By Tutor Joshua.

3.6

53 reviews

5
18
4
14
3
12
2
0
1
9

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions