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NYU Stern School of Business
- Viral V. Acharya
- John Biggs
- Ralph S. J. Koijen
- Matthew Richardson
- 2009 – AP – On the Financial Regulation of Insurance Companies, by Viral V. Acharya, John Biggs, Matthew Richardson and Stephen Ryan, NYU Stern School of Business – 47p
- 2010 – AP – Is the Insurance Industry Systemically Risky? – by Viral V Acharya and Matthew Richardson – 24p
- published as Chapter 9 in Regulating Wall Street: The Dodd-Frank Act and the Architecture of Global Finance
- Date-? – AP – Regulating Insurance Companies and the FSOC Designation of SIFIs, by Ralph S. J. Koijen and Matthew P. Richardson – 16p
- 2016 – AP – Financial Intermediaries and Consumer Complaints – 61p
- p2 – The NAIC data contain a rich set of information about these consumer complaints and their outcomes in the adjudication process.
- p6 – Yet, such data is difficult to obtain from the NAIC, hard to interpret, and disappears from the website after three years.
- As widespread large insurance shocks occur infrequently, greater transparency about service quality would, potentially, facilitate consumer ability to evaluate intermediary reputation.
- p7 – There were 6,118 insurers in the U.S. (including territories) in 2014, including 2,583 P-C insurers, 1,752 life-health (L-H) insurers, and 1,783 other insurers and related agencies.4
- Given the objective to gauge the service quality of insurers by using the volume of consumer complaints, our analysis focuses on the P-C insurers.
- Consumer complaints within the L-H industry may correlate only weakly with consumer experience, due to the obvious disconnect between purchasers and beneficiaries of these insurance policies-under life insurance policies claimants typically are not the policy buyer…
- p10 – Regulation of insurers can be broadly classified into two main areas: solvency regulation and market regulation.
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