Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
481395 European Journal of Operational Research 2012 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper employs cross-frontier analysis, an innovative tool based on data envelopment analysis, to provide new insight into the relationship between organization and efficiency in international insurance markets. We are the first to empirically test the expense preference hypothesis and the efficient structure hypothesis in a large cross-country study. For this purpose, we consider 23,807 firm-years for 21 countries from northern America and the European Union—a dataset not previously analyzed in this context. We find evidence for the efficient structure hypothesis in selected market segments, but we find no evidence for the expense preference hypothesis. Our results provide insight into the competitiveness of stock and mutual insurers from different countries. At the country level, the results can be used to compare different insurance markets. Our findings are especially interesting for the strategic management of insurance companies as well as for regulators and boards of national insurance associations.

► We provide new insight into the relationship between organization and efficiency. ► We compare the efficiency of stocks and mutuals in international insurance markets. ► We find evidence for the efficient structure hypothesis in selected market segments. ► We find no evidence for the expense preference hypothesis. ► Mutual insurers are thus not less cost efficient than stock insurers.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
Authors
, ,