Insurance History
The idea of insurance is as old as civilization itself. In any community, the practice was to help a family visited by adversity (e.g. fire, death of a breadwinner) by way of cash or in kind, with the purpose of alleviating or helping compensate the loss. Such assistance ("passing the hat") is essentially the concept of insurance. 1
- Insurance in the Philippines In its present form, insurance was first introduced in the Philippines in March 1829, when Lloyd's of London appointed Stracham, Murray & Co., Inc., as its local representative. Around ten years later, Russel and Sturgis was appointed by the Union Insurance Society of Canton to act as their insurance agents in Manila. Business was limited to non-life insurance. It was only in 1898 that life insurance was introduced in the Philippines, when Sun Life Assurance of Canada began doing business.
The first domestic non-life insurance company was the Yek Tong Lin Fire & Marine Insurance Company (now Philippine First Insurance Company) established in June 8, 1906. In 1910, the first domestic life insurance company, the Insular Life Assurance Company, Ltd., was organized.
To date, the insurance business in the Philippines has made great strides, and credit could be given to the various organizations that have dedicated time, effort, and resources, to uplift the standards of the insurance industry. These associations include the Insurance and Surety Association of the Philippines (ISAP), the Philippine Life Insurance Association (PLIA), the Philippine Insurance Rating Association (PIRA), and the Insurance Institute for Asia and the Pacific, among many others.
References:
- Jordan, Delfin. Introduction to Basic Non-Life Insurance. Basic Non-Life Insurance Course. Insurance Institute for Asia and the Pacific, page 1.
- Brusk, Edward, Donald T. Clark, and Ralph W. Bidy editors. The World Business. New York: Simon Schuster, 1962, Vol. II, page 959.
- Jordan, Delfin, op cit, page 2.
- Ibid, page 10.
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