Optimal Capital Utilization by Financial Firms: Evidence from the Property-Liability Insurance Industry

Posted: 19 Jun 2003

See all articles by J David Cummins

J David Cummins

Temple University - Risk Management & Insurance & Actuarial Science

Abstract

Capitalization levels in the property-liability insurance industry have increased dramatically in recent years - the capital-to-assets ratio rose from 25% in 1989 to 35% by 1999. This paper investigates the use of capital by insurers to provide evidence on whether the capital increase represents a legitimate response to changing market conditions or a true inefficiency that leads to performance penalties for insurers. We estimate "best practice" technical, cost, and revenue frontiers for a sample of insurers over the period 1993-1998, using data envelopment analysis, a non-parametric technique. The results indicate that most insurers significantly over-utilized equity capital during the sample period. Regression analysis provides evidence that capital over-utilization primarily represents an inefficiency for which insurers incur significant revenue penalties.

Keywords: Data envelopment analysis, capital structure, efficiency, property-liability insurance, organizational form

Suggested Citation

Cummins, J. David, Optimal Capital Utilization by Financial Firms: Evidence from the Property-Liability Insurance Industry. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=382880

J. David Cummins (Contact Author)

Temple University - Risk Management & Insurance & Actuarial Science ( email )

Fox School of Business and Management
1801 Liacouras Walk.
Philadelphia, PA 19122
United States
215-204-8468 (Phone)
215-204-4712 (Fax)

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