Today's insurance regulation in the United States is at a crossroads:
while some segments of the insurance industry are moving away from a
state-based approach toward regulation, others favor a greater role for
the federal government--despite the opposition from other stakeholders.
Written by leading scholars in risk management, this book addresses some
of the most important questions facing the future of state and federal
regulation of the insurance industry. Examining not only the impetus
behind various reform proposals, but also the historical development of
insurance regulation in the United States, it discusses alternative
regulatory frameworks used in the United States and in the European
Union and, thereby, increases the options that reformers may wish to
consider.