Economic, Demographic, and Institutional Determinants of Life Insurance Consumption Across Countries
Economic, Demographic, and Institutional Determinants of Life Insurance Consumption Across Countries
Economic, Demographic, and Institutional Determinants of Life Insurance Consumption Across Countries
Life insurance has become an increasingly important component of the financial sector over
the last 40 years by providing a variety of financial services for consumers and becoming a
major source of investment in the capital market. What drives the large variance in life
insurance consumption across countries, however, is still unclear. Using a panel with data
aggregated at different frequencies for 68 countries over the period 1961-2000, this study
finds that economic variables, such as income per capita, inflation and banking sector
development, as well as religious and institutional indicators are the most robust predictors of
the use of life insurance. Education, young dependency ratio, life expectancy, and size of
social security do not appear to be robustly associated with life insurance consumption. Our
results highlight the role that price stability and banking sector development may have if the
savings and investment functions of life insurance are to be fully realized in an economy.
* World Bank, 1818 H St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20433. Ph: (202) 473-3215, e-mail:
Tbeck@worldbank.org. The International Insurance Foundation, 1233 Twentieth St., N.W.,
Washington D.C. 20036: Ph: (202) 296-2424, e-mail: webb@iifdc.org. We are grateful to
Robert Cull, Lisa Gardner, Harold Skipper, Jr., participants at the Finance Forum in the World
Bank, three anonymous referees and the editor of the journal for useful comments and
discussions. All remaining errors are ours. This papers findings, interpretations, and
conclusions are entirely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the
World Bank, its Executive Directors, or the countries they represent, or those of the
International Insurance Foundation.
1. Introduction
Life insurance companies play an increasingly important role within the financial
sector. While during the period 1980-85 total assets of life insurance companies constituted
only 11% of GDP for a sample of 13 countries, for which data are available, they constituted
28% for the period 1995-97 in the same countries. This increased importance is also reflected
in the business volume of life insurers. Whereas life insurance penetration the ratio of
premium volume to GDP was at 1.2% during the period 1961-65, it reached 4.2% in the
period 1996-2000 for a sample of 19 countries, for which data are available. While this
increased importance of life insurance both as provider of financial services and of investment
funds on the capital markets is especially pronounced for developed countries, many
developing countries still experience very low levels of life insurance consumption. However,
even within the group of developing countries, there are striking differences. While South
Africas penetration ratio was 12.7% over the period 1996-2000, Syrias was less than 0.01%.
Given the large variation in the use of life insurance across countries, the question of the
causes of this variation and therefore the determinants of life insurance consumption arises.
Life insurance provides individuals and the economy as a whole with a number of
important financial services. First, life insurance products encourage long-term savings and
the re-investment of substantial sums in private and public sector projects. By leveraging their
role as financial intermediaries, life insurers have become a key source of long-term finance,
encouraging the development of capital markets (Catalan, Impavido and Musalem, 2000;
Impavido and Musalem, 2000).1 Indeed, several studies have found evidence that the
development of the insurance sector is related to economic growth (Ward and Zurbruegg,
2000; Webb, 2000; Soo, 1996). Second, in the face of increasing urbanization, mobility of the
Finally, we introduce a new measure for exploring the role of life insurance in the
economy - its relative weight within individual savings' portfolios. This variable measures the
weight that life insurance premiums have in an economys private savings.
The results of this study are expected to assist policy makers understand what drives
the supply and demand of life insurance. The results may help design strategies for
developing nascent life insurance markets and extending their benefits to a greater number of
countries. The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. Section 2 describes our
measures of life insurance consumption. Section 3 discusses potential determinants of life
insurance consumption. Section 4 presents the empirical results and section 5 concludes.
In addition to the above-mentioned categories of life insurance, life insurers also sell
annuity policies. An annuity is a contractual arrangement whereby, in return for a lump sum
or a series of periodic payments up until the moment of annuitization, the insurer promises to
the insured a series of periodic payments, often up until his/her death. Insurers providing
annuities thus undertake risks associated with supperannuation or longevity of the insured.
As the different measures of life insurance consumption that we will be using in our
empirical analysis aggregate both categories of life insurance policies as well as annuity
policies, we cannot distinguish between the demand and supply of mortality risk coverage,
longevity risk coverage, and savings through life insurance. This aggregation in the data
produces a bias against finding significant relations.3 Significant results between the variables
hypothesized to affect insurance consumption and the amount consumed are therefore likely
to be a sign of the added robustness of these relations.
Life Insurance Penetration is defined as the ratio of premium volume to GDP and
measures the importance of insurance activity relative to the size of the economy. Life
Insurance Penetration, however, is not a perfect measure of consumption since it is the
product of quantity and price. A higher premium volume might therefore reflect a higher
quantity, a higher price or a difference in the mix of mortality, savings and annuity elements
purchased. Lack of competition and costly regulation might increase the price of insurance
without implying a higher level of insurance consumption.
Life Insurance Density, our second indicator of life insurance consumption, is
defined as premiums per capita expressed in constant dollars. It indicates how much each
inhabitant of the country spends on average on insurance in constant dollars.4 Although both
Life Insurance Penetration and Life Insurance Density use gross premiums, there remain
important differences between both measures; Life Insurance Penetration measures life
insurance consumption relative to the size of the economy, while Life Insurance Density
compares life insurance consumption across countries without adjusting for the income level
of the economy. Consumers that purchase life insurance policies to insure their dependents
against mortality risk will potentially buy more coverage and thus a higher face value in richer
countries, since the death benefit has to replace a larger income. We therefore expect Life
Insurance Density to be more income elastic than Life Insurance Penetration.
Since life insurance policies can be regarded as much an insurance product as a
savings product, we can relate the total premiums to private savings rather than income. This
implies a portfolio rather than income approach, treating life insurance policies as one of
several assets investors can choose from. We therefore construct Life Insurance in Private
Savings, which equals total premiums divided by private savings and indicates the share of
private savings that inhabitants of a country invest in life insurance policies.5 Due to data
restrictions, this indicator is only available for the period 1970-95.
Our final measure of life insurance consumption is Life Insurance in Force to GDP.
It equals the sum of the face amounts plus dividend additions of life insurance policies
outstanding as a share of GDP. It is a measure of mortality risk underwritten plus savings
accumulated. Life insurance in force thus contains both the cash value of policies, associated
with the savings component of life insurance policies and the net amount of risk faced by life
insurers. Unlike the other three indicators, Life Insurance in Force to GDP does not include
the price and so measures only quantity. Due to data restrictions, this indicator is only
available for the period 1961-1994.
The mortality risk, savings and annuity components have different weights in the
premium and in the stock measures. For a given structure of the insurance market, the
mortality risk component, as measured by the net amount of risk, has a stronger weight in Life
Insurance in Force to GDP than in the other three measures. In most, but not all countries,
Life Insurance in Force does not include annuities. 6
Table 1 presents summary statistics and correlations for all variables. We observe a
large variation in levels of life insurance consumption across countries. Whereas Syria had a
Life Insurance Penetration of less than 0.01 % of GDP during 1996-2000, South Africas
penetration ratio was 12.7 % during the same period. Syrians spent less than one dollar per
year on life insurance services during 1996-2000, whereas Japanese spent more than 3,200
dollars. Ecuadorians invested less than 1% of total savings in life insurance policies in 199195, while U.K. citizens invested more than 40% during 1986-90. Similarly, Greeces Life
Insurance in Force to GDP constituted less than 0.1% of GDP during 1976-80, whereas
Japans reached nearly 400% of GDP in 1991-95. There are large correlations between all
three measures of life insurance consumption that are significant at the 1% level.
The consumer maximizes lifetime utility subject to a vector of interest rates and
a vector of prices including insurance premium rates. This framework posits the demand for
life insurance to be a function of wealth, expected income over an individual's lifetime, the
level of interest rates, the cost of life insurance policies (administrative costs), and the
assumed subjective discount rate for current over future consumption.
Lewis (1989) extends this framework by explicitly incorporating the preferences of the
dependents and beneficiaries into the model. Specifically, he derives the demand for life
insurance as a maximization problem of the beneficiaries, the spouse and the offspring of the
life insurance policyholder. Deriving utility maximization by both spouse and offspring
separately and assuming no bequest by the policyholder and an isoelastic utility function,
Lewis shows that total life insurance demand can be written as follows:
(1 lp ) F = max{[
1 lp 1 /
] TC W ,0}
l (1 p )
(1)
where l is the policy loading factor the ratio of the costs of the insurance to its actuarial
value -, p the probability of the primary wage earners death, F the face value of all life
insurance written on the primary wage earners life, a measure of the beneficiaries relative
risk aversion, TC the present value of consumption of each offspring until he/she leaves the
household and of the spouse over his/her predicted remaining life span and W the households
net wealth. Life insurance demand increases with the probability of the primary wage earners
death, the present value of the beneficiaries consumption and the degree of risk aversion.
Life insurance demand decreases with the loading factor and the households wealth.
Life insurance consumption, however, is not only driven by consumer demand. There
are important supply-side factors which affect the availability and price of life insurance.
Insurance companies need both the human and information resources to effectively measure
the pricing and reserving requirements for products as well as adequate investment
opportunities in financial markets. An adequate protection of property rights and an effective
enforcement of contracts also facilitate the investment function of life insurers. These supply
factors are expected to affect the costs of life insurance products, and might therefore be
represented by the policy-loading factor in the above-described Lewis model.
While there have been attempts to model the relation between the supply and demand
of life insurance separately, data limitations have restricted the empirical testing of these
hypotheses.8 The available data do not allow us to distinguish between supply and demand.
Furthermore, premium data do not allow us to observe the actual amount of insurance
coverage purchased, as they are a combined measure of price and level of coverage. Unless
the price is constant across countries, which is unlikely, assuming that the premium is
equivalent to the amount of coverage would introduce a source of noise in our estimations.
On the other hand, using the variable often used to proxy price (premiums over life insurance
in force) requires one to make a troublesome assumption, namely, that the mix of policies
remains constant across countries and time.9
Price, however, is undoubtedly an important determinant in the consumption of life
insurance, and leaving it out may subject the empirical testing to omitted variable bias. We
address this problem in two ways. First, we assume that the price is a function of several
10
relation between life insurance consumption and the level of education. We use the average
years of schooling in the population over 25 and the gross secondary enrollment rate.
The religious inclination of a population may affect its risk aversion and its attitude
towards the institutional arrangements of insurance.16 Religious opposition against life
insurance, while stronger in European countries before the 19th century, still persists in several
Islamic countries today.17 Followers of Islam have traditionally been known to disapprove of
life insurance because it is considered a hedge against the will of Allah.18 Unsurprisingly,
Browne and Kim (1993), and Meng (1994), find a dummy variable for Islamic countries to be
negatively correlated with life insurance demand. This study employs a broader measure of
religious inclination by including Protestantism, Catholicism and a composite of other
religions, defined as the ratio of adherents of one religion over the entire population. While
we expect the Muslim share of the population to be negatively related to life insurance
demand, we do not have prior expectations about the signs on the other religion variables.
Economies with a higher share of urban to total population are expected to have higher
levels of life insurance consumption. The concentration of consumers in a geographic area
simplifies the distribution of life insurance products, as costs related to marketing, premium
collection, underwriting and claim handling are reduced. A higher share of urban population
is also correlated with less reliance on informal insurance agreements and therefore may
induce a higher demand for formal insurance products.
3.3. Economic Variables
Life insurance consumption should rise with the level of income, for several reasons.
First, an individuals consumption and human capital typically increase along with income,
creating a greater demand for insurance (mortality coverage) to safeguard the income
11
potential of the insured and the expected consumption of his/her dependents.19 Second, life
insurance may be a luxury good, inasmuch as increasing income may explain an increasing
ability to direct a higher share of income towards retirement and investment-related life
insurance products. Finally, the overhead costs associated with administrating and marketing
insurance can make larger size policies less expensive per dollar of insurance in force, which
lowers the price of life insurance policies. Campbell (1980), Lewis (1989), Beenstock,
Dickinson, Khajuria (1986), Truett and Truett (1990), Browne and Kim (1993), and
Outreville (1996) have all shown that the use of life insurance is positively related to income,
using both aggregate national account data and individual household data. We use real GDP
per capita as well as an indicator of permanent income, calculated as the predicted value from
a regression of the log of each countrys real GDP per capita on a time trend. Insurance
against mortality risk and consumption-saving decisions are related to permanent income or
income over the life cycle rather than current income.
Theory suggests an ambiguous relation between life insurance and an economys
private savings rate. If agents save a larger share of their income, they might or might not be
willing to increase savings in life insurance policies. We use the share of private savings in
Gross National Disposable Income (GNDI).
We expect inflation and its volatility to have a negative relationship with life insurance
consumption. As life insurance savings products typically provide monetary benefits over the
long term, monetary uncertainty has a substantial negative impact on these products expected
returns. Inflation can also have a disruptive effect on the life insurance industry when interest
rate cycles spur disintermediation.20 These dynamics make inflation an additional
encumbrance to the product pricing decisions of life insurers, thus possibly reducing supply in
12
times of high inflation.21 In addition to the inflation rate and its standard deviation, we also
test for a relation between life insurance consumption and the real interest rate, defined as
the difference between the nominal interest rate and inflation. Theory predicts a positive
relation; a higher real interest rate increases life insurers investment returns and so
profitability, in turn offering improved profitability of financial relative to real investments for
potential purchasers of life insurance policies.
We expect banking sector development to be positively correlated with life insurance
consumption.22 Well-functioning banks may increase the confidence consumers have in other
financial institutions, e.g. life insurers. They also provide life insurers with an efficient
payment system. The efficient development of the entire financial system - as might be
reflected in the absence of interest rate ceilings and other distortionary policies is thought to
help life insurers invest more efficiently. However, a vibrant insurance sector might also
foster the development of the banking sector, so that a positive relation between the two
variables cannot necessarily be interpreted as evidence for causality. Outreville (1996) finds a
significantly positive relationship between financial development and life insurance
penetration. We use the total claims of deposit money banks on domestic nonfinancial sectors
as share of GDP as indicator of banking sector development.
We expect the size of a countrys social security system to be negatively correlated
with the demand for life insurance products. Kim (1988) and Meng (1994) postulate that
social security displaces private insurance. If a greater amount of retirement savings is being
channeled through the government, or if the public sector provides substantial benefits to
families of prematurely deceased wage earners, then there should be less demand for life
13
insurance products.23 This study uses the share of public expenditures on social security and
welfare as a share of GDP as an indicator of the size of the social security system.
The expected correlation of the income distribution of a country with life insurance
consumption is ambiguous. Beenstock, Dickinson, Khajuria (1986) reason that wealthy
sections of the population do not need insurance protection while poorer sections have a
limited demand because they operate under income budget constraints.24 A more equal
income distribution with a larger middle class might therefore result in a higher demand for
life insurance. On the other hand, while the middle-class may have the greatest demand for
life insurance savings products, there may be a minimum level of income at which these
policies become affordable. Accordingly, a large middle class in a poor country may result in
less individuals being able to purchase life insurance than a less equal distribution with a
larger and/or wealthier upper class. The resulting relation of income distribution with life
insurance consumption is thus ambiguous. Beenstock, Dickinson, Khajuria (1986) find a
negative relation between the Gini coefficient and Life Insurance Penetration.
We also test for a relation of life insurance consumption with the Human Development
Indicator (HDI), as constructed by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
Specifically, this indicator indicates the relative distance of a countrys value between
minimum and maximum values in life expectancy, education (both literacy and gross
enrollment) and income (GDP per capita), averaged over the three areas. Values are therefore
bounded between zero and one. However, given that we expect an ambiguous relation of life
expectancy with life insurance, we do not necessarily expect a robust relation of the HDI with
our measures of life insurance consumption. Outreville (1996) does not find a significant
14
relation of the HDI with life insurance consumption, while Outreville (1999) shows that the
HDI is positively correlated with measures of financial development.
3.4. Institutional Determinants
The tenability of a vibrant life insurance market depends to a large extent on the
institutional framework and political stability of a country. If fraud is common in claim
reporting, then the insurance mechanism will become prohibitively costly for a large part of
the population. The inability to appeal the breach of life insurance contracts by insurers
reduces the value of an insurance contract to consumers and may deter them from committing
large sums of money into these products. The lack of property protection and contract
enforcement impedes life insurers' ability to invest efficiently and control the price of their
products. Finally, the lack of political stability shortens the economic horizon of both
potential buyers and suppliers of life insurance products, dampening the development of a
healthy life insurance market.
To measure these institutional and political factors, we use three different indicators.
Rule of Law measures the degree to which citizens of a country are able to use the legal
system to mediate disputes and enforce contracts. We use the average number of Revolutions
and Coups to indicate political stability of a country. Institutional Development is the average
of six indicators that measure voice and accountability, political stability, government
effectiveness, regulatory quality, rule of law and control of corruption. While Rule of Law
(1982-2000) and Revolutions and Coups (1961-1990) are available over longer time periods,
Institutional Development is only available for one point in time (1998), so that we will use it
only in the cross-country estimations.
15
16
4. Empirical Results
The correlation analysis in section 3 has shown significant correlations of life insurance
consumption with many of the determinants postulated by theory, but also between many of
these determinants. We therefore conduct multivariate regression analysis to assess, which
determinants robustly predict life insurance consumption, even after controlling for other
potential effects. The baseline regression contains real per capita GDP, young and old
dependency ratios, average years of schooling, life expectancy, inflation rate and banking
sector development.25 In subsequent regressions we include a larger set of potential
determinants of life insurance consumption.
4.1. Panel Analysis, 1961-2000
Our main results are based on an unbalanced panel of 68 countries, with data averaged
over eight 5-year periods. 26 Using a panel allows us to (i) exploit both cross-country and
time-series variation in the data, and (ii) control for differences across countries and over time
that are not accounted for by any of the explanatory variables. 27 We will therefore control for
both fixed country and time-specific effects in our regression and estimate the regression with
either a fixed or a random effects model.28 We average data over five years, since several of
our explanatory variables are only available at a five-year frequency and others might be
subject to short-tem business-cycle induced fluctuations.29
The results in Table 3 show that the variation of Life Insurance Penetration across
countries can be explained by variation in income level, old dependency ratio, inflation and
banking sector development. These four variables show significant coefficients in our
baseline regression and in most of our robustness tests. Schooling, life expectancy, and the
young dependency ratio are not robust predictors of life insurance consumption.
17
The results of our baseline regression in column 1 indicate that a 10% increase in real
per capita income increases Life Insurance Penetration by 5.7%, thus confirming that life
insurance is a luxury good. When we include Revolutions and Coups and the Private Savings
Rate, however, the coefficient on income level turns insignificant, which is due to the smaller
sample when including either of the two variables.30 When we replace GDP per capita with
permanent income the predicted value from regressing each countrys time series of GDP
per capita on a time trend the results are confirmed (column 9).
We find a positive relation between the old dependency ratio and Life Insurance
Penetration. The coefficient size indicates that a 10% increase in the share of old population
relative to the working population increases life insurance penetration by 12%. This suggests
a higher demand for savings and annuity products as the population grows older.
Price stability is an important predictor of life insurance consumption. The coefficient
on the inflation rate is significantly negative in all specifications. The effect of a stable
macroeconomic environment is also economically large. If Brazil - country with one of the
highest five-year average inflation rates in our sample - had achieved an average inflation rate
over the period 1991-95 of the sample median 7% instead of the actual 212%, Life Insurance
Penetration might have been 0.87% of GDP instead of 0.29%.31 Replacing the inflation rate
with the anticipated inflation rate the average between current and next-years inflation rate
confirms the results (column 6).32 Inflation volatility does not explain any variation in life
insurance penetration across countries, while the real interest rate is positively related with
Life Insurance Penetration, when controlling for inflation (columns 7 and 8).
Banking sector development is positively correlated with Life Insurance Penetration.
The coefficient on the indicator of banking sector development is significantly positive in all
18
specifications. As discussed above, the positive coefficient does not imply a causal impact of
banking sector development on life insurance penetration. It shows that countries with welldeveloped banks also have higher levels of life insurance consumption. In our cross-country
analysis, below, we will try to control for reverse causation and simultaneity bias.
Variation in the share of young population or in life expectancy cannot explain
variation in Life Insurance Penetration across countries, confirming the hypothesis of
offsetting effects of the young dependency ratio (life expectancy) on gross premiums, a
positive (negative) effect on mortality risk and a negative (positive) effect on the saving and
annuity components.33 Neither average years of schooling nor secondary enrollment enter
significantly at the 5% level in any of the regressions.
Turning to our additional explanatory variables, we find a positive relation between
the private savings rate and life insurance penetration. Urbanization (column 2), Gini
coefficient (column 3), Social Security (column 4), Revolutions and Coups (column 5), the
Human Development Indicator (column 11), and Rule of Law (column 12) cannot explain
cross-country variation in life insurance penetration.34 The last column presents the baseline
regression with the sample limited to developing countries. Only inflation and banking sector
development continue to enter significantly at the 1% level, while income per capita enters
significantly and positively at the 10% level. The old dependency ratio cannot explain
variation in Life Insurance Penetration across developing countries.
Table 4 present results with the other indicators of life insurance across countries as
dependent variables. For each indicator we present two baseline regressions, one for the
whole sample and one restricted to developing countries. Life Insurance Density increases
with higher income per capita, a higher old dependency ratio, a lower inflation rate and better
19
developed banks (column 1). Once we restrict the sample to developing countries, however,
only banking sector development enters significantly. We note that the income elasticity of
Life Insurance Density is higher than for Life Insurance Penetration, as expected.35
Life Insurance in Private Savings increases with a higher old dependency ratio, lower
inflation, and better developed banks (column 3). Interestingly, the share of savings in life
insurance policies decreases with a higher saving rate. Considering this result jointly with the
positive coefficient (0.359) on the savings rate in the regression of Life Insurance Penetration
(Table 3, column 13) suggests that while private agents invest some of their additional savings
in life insurance policies, overall there is a shift away from life insurance policies to other
savings instruments in private agents portfolio. GDP per capita does not explain the share of
savings in life insurance policies. Turning to the sample of developing countries, only
banking sector development (positively) and the private savings rate (negatively) can explain
variation in the share of life insurance policies in private savings across developing countries.
Life Insurance in Force to GDP increases with higher income per capita, lower
inflation, lower old dependency ratio and better developed banks. While the results on GDP
per capita, inflation and banking sector development confirm the results using Life Insurance
Penetration and Density, the results of the old dependency ratio are certainly surprising. The
relatively stronger weight of the mortality risk component and the exclusion of annuities in
Life Insurance in Force to GDP compared to the other three measures might explain the
opposite sign.36 Only the results for income per capita and inflation are confirmed in the
sample restricted to developing countries.
4.2. Annual Panel, 1961-2000
Table 5 presents results for a panel of annual observations. Using annual instead of 5year averages allows us to (i) maximize the information we have available and (ii) test the
20
sensitivity of our panel analysis to the frequency of the data.37 As in the 5-year panel, Life
Insurance Penetration increases with per capita income, the old dependency ratio, better
developed banks and decreases with inflation. Interestingly, in the annual sample we also
find a negative relation between the young dependency ratio and Life Insurance Penetration
indicating that countries with a higher share of young population have lower levels of life
insurance consumption.38 As in the 5-year panel, anticipated inflation has a negative relation
with Life Insurance Penetration (column 3), while the real interest rate, permanent income,
and the private savings rate (column 2, 4 and 5) enter positively. Neither schooling nor life
expectancy shows a robust relation with Life Insurance Penetration. Only income per capita,
inflation and banking sector development explain variation in life insurance penetration across
developing countries in the annual sample. Overall, the annual sample thus confirms the
findings from the 5-year panel regressions.
4.3. Cross-country Analysis, 1980-2000
Table 6 presents results from cross-country regressions where we average data over
the period 1980 to 2000 for all countries in our sample. While cross-country analysis does not
allow us to control for omitted variables, as in the panel analysis, we can test the relation of
life insurance across countries and several time-invariant variables and use instrumentalvariable regressions to control for biases induced by simultaneity and reverse causation. As
mentioned above, these biases might especially arise for educational attainment and banking
sector development.
Countries with higher levels of economic and financial development, a more educated
population, lower inflation and lower life expectancy have higher Life Insurance Penetration.
Further, the old dependency ratio enters negatively and significantly at the 10% level.39
21
While the results on income per capita, inflation and banking sector development confirm the
results from our panel analysis, the results on life expectancy, schooling and old dependency
ratio differ from the previous results. Restricting the sample to developing countries confirms
the results only for life expectancy, inflation, schooling and the old dependency ratio, but not
for income per capita and banking sector development. The young dependency ratio, the
private savings rate and Revolutions and Coups do not enter significantly in the regressions
(columns 3 and 5). A larger share of Muslim population decreases Life Insurance Penetration,
while a better institutional environment increases it (columns 4 and 6).
Econometric, sampling and frequency differences might explain the differences
between panel and cross-country results. The panel estimations allow us to control for
country-specific effects, which the OLS regressions do not.40 Economic and demographic
factors might have different relations with life insurance consumption across countries than
within countries over time.
Our cross-country results have shown a positive relation between schooling and
banking sector development and life insurance consumption. These results, however, do not
allow us to make any inference concerning a causal relation between education and banking,
on the one side, and the development of the life insurance sector, on the other side. We
therefore present two Instrumental Variable (IV) regressions, where we extract the exogenous
components of banking sector development and schooling to control for reverse causation and
simultaneity bias in the empirical relation between these variables and life insurance.
Specifically, we use dummy variables indicating the origin of a countrys legal system and a
variable Good crops - proxying for agricultural endowments conducive to a large middle
class and institutional development.41 Legal origin and agricultural endowments are both
22
exogenous variables and are highly correlated with banking sector development and schooling
as confirmed by the first stage regressions.42 We use the Hansen test of overidentifying
restrictions (OIR) to examine whether there is any impact of legal origin and endowments on
Life Insurance Penetration beyond their impact through banking sector development,
schooling or the other explanatory variables. In column 7 we instrument only for banking
sector development and in column 8 for both banking sector development and schooling.
While banking sector development enters significantly and positively, even after
instrumenting, schooling turns insignificant in column 8 where we instrument for it. The test
of overidentifying restrictions is not rejected in either case, confirming the adequacy of our
instruments.43 These results indicate that the relation between banking sector development
and life insurance is not due to reverse causation and simultaneity bias, while the significant
relation between education and life insurance is most likely a spurious one.
Overall, the cross-country results confirm the importance of income per capita,
monetary stability and banking sector development in predicting life insurance across
countries. We find evidence for the importance of religion and institutional development for
life insurance. Finally, the demographic variables show a different relation with life insurance
in the cross-section than in the panel.
5. Concluding Remarks
This paper analyzed the determinants of life insurance consumption in a panel of 68
countries over the period 1961-2000, using four different indicators of life insurance
consumption. Our main results are based on a panel of eight non-overlapping 5-year periods.
23
We test for the sensitivity of the results with a panel of annual observations and a crosscountry sample.
Our panel estimations show that countries with higher income levels, both current and
permanent income, lower inflation and better developed banks have higher levels of life
insurance consumption. A higher ratio of old to working population increases Life Insurance
Penetration and Density, while it decreases Life Insurance in Force to GDP, perhaps
reflecting the different weights of mortality risk, savings and annuity components. A higher
private savings rate and a higher real interest rate are also associated with higher levels of life
insurance consumption. The young dependency ratio, life expectancy and schooling are not
strongly associated with life insurance consumption across countries.
The share of life insurance premiums in private savings is best predicted by the old
dependency ratio, inflation, banking sector development and the private savings rate, but not
by income per capita. The results suggest that the more aged the population and the lower the
inflation, the more individuals will select life insurance over other forms of savings. The
coefficient estimates on the private savings rate in the regressions of Life Insurance
Penetration and Life Insurance in Private Savings indicate that additional private savings are
partly invested in life insurance policies, but that the overall share of life insurance in private
agents portfolios decreases as they save more. While restricting the sample to developing
countries turns many of the results less significant, macroeconomic stability and well
developed banks continue to predict life insurance across developing countries.
The cross-country estimations confirm some of the panel results, while contradicting
others. Most notably, we find a positive relation between schooling and life insurance, which
is not robust, however, to controlling for biases induced by reverse causation and
24
simultaneity. The positive impact of banking sector development on life insurance, on the
other hand, is robust to controlling for these biases by instrumenting with legal origin and
endowments. This evidence suggests that, in addition to the positive effect that life insurance
may have on the banking system, banking sector development facilitates the development of
life insurance and its contractual savings function. This does not contradict the positive
impact of life insurance on capital market development, found by other authors. While an
efficient banking system might help develop the life insurance sector by offering payment
services and raising confidence in financial services, life insurance and other forms of
contractual savings might foster the development of capital markets through their demand for
long-term financial investments.
In summary, income per capita, inflation and banking sector development are the most
robust predictors of life insurance consumption across countries and over time. Further,
religious and institutional differences can explain some of the variation in life insurance
consumption across countries. There is no robust link from schooling and the demographic
variables to life insurance consumption. Finally, we note that although life insurance is a
luxury good, there is no relation between income distribution and life insurance consumption.
While rising income per capita plays a role in driving its consumption, it does not appear that
income distribution does.
The results of this paper constitute a thorough review of existing hypotheses regarding
the demand and supply of life insurance consumption. They also have implications for policy
makers. Both monetary stability and banking sector development have positive effects on
economic development and growth independent of their positive effect on the development of
the insurance sector. Price stability and banking sector development, moreover, may be
25
fundamental to the growth of savings and investments through life insurance, particularly in a
developing economy.
26
For the economic and social importance of life insurance, especially in developing countries, see also
Browne and Kim (1993) use data for 45 countries for the year 1987, and Outreville (1996) for 48 countries for
the year 1986. Truett and Truett (1990) produce estimates for two countries, the U.S. and Mexico, over the
period 1960 to 1982, and Beenstock, Dickinson, and Khajuria (1986) for 10 Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries over the period 1970-1981.
3
We also calculate an alternative measure of life insurance density, using international real dollars. Specifically,
instead of applying exchange rates, the local currency premiums are multiplied with the Purchasing Power Parity
(PPP) conversion factor, which is defined as the number of units of a countrys currency required to buy the
same amount of goods and services in the domestic market as one U.S. dollar would buy in the U.S. Using PPP
conversion factors is preferable to using exchange rates, since the latter are distorted by differences in exchange
rate regimes. Furthermore, PPP conversion factors take into account that the price of nontraded goods relative to
traded goods increases with the income level of economies. Since the death benefit of life insurance policies has
to cover the typical household expenditures in both traded and nontraded goods, using exchange rates biases the
insurance density of developing countries downward. However, since data on the PPP conversion factor are only
available for the period 1975-2000, the insurance densities in international real dollars are constrained to this
period. We run all our regressions using this alternative indicator of life insurance density, without significant
differences, so that we report only results with the general measure available over a longer time period.
5
According to the UN National Accounts, life insurance premiums that imply claims of policy holders on
insurance companies technical reserves are treated as savings, while insurers costs and profits are part of
consumption. See United Nations Statistics Division (1993).
6
For an excellent overview of the potential determinants of the demand and supply of life insurance products,
27
Browne and Kim (1993) use such a price variable, but note the bias introduced by different composition of the
11
12
13
This would be reflected by a lower in Eq. (1). However, as pointed out by Browne, Chung and Frees (2000)
quoting unpublished work by Outreville and Szpiro, risk aversion might also be negatively correlated with
education.
14
15
We are grateful to one of the referees for pointing this out. A similar debate on the role of education has taken
place in the empirical growth literature; see Bils and Klenow (2000).
16
17
Zelizer (1979) discusses the role that religions have in creating a cultural opposition to life insurance.
18
The advent of Takaful insurance a scholar approved insurance, licensed and marketed in countries with
Muslim population - in the last decade, however, has increased the acceptance of life insurance amongst some
Islamic populations. For further information see, http://www.insurance.com.my/zone_takaful/introduction.htm.
19
20
Fixed interest rates and loan options imbedded in some life insurance policies, for example, spurred
disintermediation in the U.S. life insurance market during the inflationary 1970's and 1980s.
21
Cargill and Troxel (1979) discuss the various impacts that inflation can have on the market for life insurance.
22
Outreville (1992) also proposes a relationship between financial development and insurance markets.
23
24
The possibility of declining risk aversion with greater wealth, and the replacement of life insurance coverage
with surplus assets in an individual's portfolio is expected to reduce the demand for life insurance among the
wealthy.
25
We include the dependent and several independent variables in logs, so that the coefficients can be interpreted
as elasticities.
28
26
Table A3 lists the countries in the sample. The number of countries varies across the different life insurance
The latter can be variables that are not included in our estimation since they are not varying over time or other
underlying country characteristics that are not captured in any of our variables. Among these omitted variables
might be the regulation of the insurance sector, taxation, and the price variable, for which we use proxy variables
such as the supply determinants described above, but do not have any direct measure.
28
We test for the appropriateness of the fixed or random effects model with the Hausman test. Under the null
hypothesis that random- and fixed effects estimates are not statistically different, both estimators are consistent,
but the fixed effects model is inefficient. Under the alternative hypothesis that both estimates are statistically
different only the fixed-effects model gives consistent coefficients. We use the fixed effects model when the null
hypothesis is rejected at the 10% level, and the random-effects model otherwise.
29
Specifically, average years of schooling is available only at a five-year frequency and life expectancy, the
share of the urban population and the Gini coefficient are not available on a yearly frequency for most countries.
Further, the inflation rate and banking sector development might be subject to short-term business-cycle induced
fluctuations.
30
We re-run the regressions without the Private Savings Rate or Revolutions and Coups, but restricting the
sample accordingly. In neither case does income per capita enter significantly.
31
This result matches the findings by Babbel (1981) that even the demand for inflation-indexed life insurance
Following Browne and Kim (1993), we also used the average of current and previous year inflation, since
consumers inflation expectations might be determined by previous inflation experience. The results do not
change.
33
Since the young and old dependency ratios and life expectancy are highly correlated with each other, this
result might be driven by multicollinearity. We therefore test the robustness of the results by including only one
of the three variables at a time. The results do not change.
34
We also tried two alternative indicators of institutional development, Corruption and Bureaucratic Quality,
also from ICRG. Neither of the two enters significantly in the regressions.
35
36
This might also explain the negative sign on life expectancy. When we consider regressions with only the old
or the young dependency ratio or life expectancy, only the old dependency ratio and life expectancy enter
negatively and significantly at the 5% level.
37
Since schooling data are only available on a 5-year frequency, we repeat the values for the intermediate years
As in the 5-year panel, we include the young and old dependency ratios and life expectancy separately,
As in the 5-year panel, we control for mulitcollinarity by including only one of the following regressors at a
time: old dependency ratio, young dependency ratio and life expectancy. While life expectancy continues to
enter significantly and negatively, neither of the two dependency ratios enters significantly.
40
Most developing countries do not have life insurance data before 1978, so that the unbalanced panel
regressions might be biased towards developed countries. We therefore re-ran all regressions of the 5-year panel,
limiting the sample to the period 1981-2000. The results do not change significantly.
41
Beck, Demirguc-Kunt and Levine (2003), among many others, show that legal origin explains variation in
financial development across countries. Easterly and Levine (2003) show that Good crops is a good predictor of
institutional development.
42
Legal origin and endowment explain 43% of the variation in schooling and banking sector development.
43
We also ran a IV regression where we only instrumented schooling. The OIR test, however, is rejected.
30
References
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31
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32
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33
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United States. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
34
Mean
1.69
264.51
7.64
56.25
9,463
55.14
12.52
68.17
5.76
14.37
47.29
37.41
60.26
12.13
26.44
14.31
9,450
67.71
20.54
0.17
0.75
4.13
6.94
0.48
41.04
13.12
14.64
0.26
0.45
0.12
0.09
0.07
1.15
35
Median
1.03
68.88
4.64
29.85
4,393
50.64
9.64
70.71
5.60
7.32
38.62
34.89
61.00
9.57
1.80
7.41
4,329
69.51
20.95
0.00
0.77
4.00
2.79
0.54
29.80
0.55
2.60
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
1.06
Standard
Deviation
1.97
442.45
8.24
60.69
10,090
23.02
6.44
8.07
2.72
25.63
32.65
9.61
21.63
8.98
260.74
25.52
10,172
29.58
5.93
0.34
0.13
1.53
16.50
0.78
40.03
29.28
25.26
0.44
0.50
0.32
0.28
0.26
0.32
Maximum
12.69
3,275.39
44.90
398.43
45,061
107.26
27.65
80.48
12.18
222.33
180.88
61.88
100.00
38.26
3,686.98
232.85
51,429
152.84
37.45
2.60
0.93
6.00
169.73
-1.33
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0.65
Minimum Observations
0.00
322
0.14
322
0.00
203
0.09
216
193
451
21.41
451
4.50
451
41.63
451
0.63
451
-0.10
451
5.41
451
20.46
221
8.11
451
0.46
343
-46.13
402
-0.03
451
176
451
7.67
399
2.81
264
0.00
312
0.35
304
1.00
245
0.21
451
1.72
69
96.9
69
99.4
69
97.8
69
1
69
1
69
1
69
1
69
1
69
2.44
65
0.7881***
0.9357***
0.7729***
0.5219***
-0.3673***
0.2885***
0.2784***
0.5001***
-0.2594***
0.5031***
Life Insurance
Density
Life Insurance in
Private Savings
Life Insurance in
Force to GDP
GDP per capita
Young dependency
Old dependency
Life expectancy
Schooling
Inflation
Banking sector
development
Life Insurance
Penetration
Panel B: Correlations
0.5866***
0.7434***
0.7481***
-0.4667***
0.4680***
0.4673***
0.5471***
-0.2274***
0.6918***
1.0000
Life
Insurance
Density
0.3916***
0.6444***
0.4241***
-0.3511***
0.3261***
0.2834***
0.5181***
-0.2553***
1.0000
0.4462***
1.0000
0.4870***
-0.3949***
0.2348***
0.4169***
0.5724***
-0.1769***
0.6748***
1.0000
-0.7297***
0.7763***
0.6912***
0.7330***
-0.2022***
Life
Life Insurance Insurance in
Force to
in Private
GDP per
Savings
GDP
capita
36
-0.6150***
1.0000
-0.8278***
-0.8310***
-0.7980***
0.0339
Young
dependency
0.5086****
1.0000
0.7159***
0.7217***
-0.0973**
Old
dependency
0.5622***
1.0000
0.7882***
-0.0424
0.5245***
1.0000
-0.0523
Life
expectancy Schooling
-0.2148***
1.0000
Inflation
Mortality Risk
Component
Annuity
Component
Combined Effect
ambiguous
ambiguous
Life expectancy
ambiguous
Education
-muslim
-muslim
-muslim
-muslim
Urbanization ratio
Income
ambiguous
no effect
ambiguous
ambiguous
Inflation
Inflation volatility
Social Security
Gini coefficient
ambiguous
ambiguous
ambiguous
ambiguous
Rule of Law
Institutional Development
Religion
Economic
Institutional
This table assumes the division of life insurance consumption into the savings, mortality risk and annuity components. The
first column describes the expected effects on the savings component, the second column on the mortality risk component
and the third column on the annuity component. The fourth column presents the combined predicted effect in our regression
analysis.
37
(2.07)**
(1.92)*
(4.62)***
Permanent income
Inflation volatility
Anticipated inflation
Social security
Gini
Urbanization
0.352
development
(0.78)
0.277
(4.62)***
0.353
(5.22)***
(5.18)***
(0.55)
-1.038
(0.23)
-1.028
-0.129
(0.12)
-0.048
(0.22)
(3.89)***
-0.091
-0.168
(3.90)***
(1.02)
1.195
1.196
(1.12)
(2.80)***
-0.326
(2.89)***
-0.357
0.552
0.567
Banking sector
Inflation
Schooling
Life expectancy
Old dependency
Young dependency
-8.372
-7.069
Constant
Whole sample
Fixed effects
Whole sample
Fixed effects
Econometric model
(2)
Sample
(1)
(0.17)
0.002
(4.70)***
0.438
(4.70)***
-1.396
(1.85)*
0.586
(0.52)
-0.900
(2.43)**
0.920
(1.01)
-0.369
(2.82)***
0.770
(0.86)
-6.073
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(3)
(0.50)
0.051
(2.80)***
0.227
(5.50)***
-1.058
(0.87)
0.194
(0.46)
0.356
(2.75)***
1.105
(2.73)***
-0.964
(2.00)**
0.424
(1.47)
-5.662
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(4)
(0.56)
-0.065
(5.11)***
0.422
(3.37)***
-0.827
(0.14)
0.043
(0.22)
0.415
(3.82)***
1.308
(0.22)
-0.079
(0.69)
0.180
(1.06)
-8.011
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(5)
(5.22)***
-1.025
(4.64)***
0.353
(0.26)
-0.054
(0.23)
-0.178
(3.89)***
1.192
(1.11)
-0.354
(2.96)***
0.580
(1.94)*
-7.133
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(6)
38
(1.37)
-0.056
(4.65)***
0.354
(3.15)***
-0.806
(0.14)
-0.029
(0.13)
-0.098
(3.77)***
1.159
(1.27)
-0.405
(2.50)**
0.503
(1.86)*
-6.839
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(7)
(2.78)***
0.302
(4.14)***
0.331
(5.79)***
-1.659
(1.04)
-0.221
(1.01)
-0.779
(3.61)***
1.230
(1.59)
-0.518
(3.54)***
0.699
(1.25)
-4.578
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(8)
0.792
(4.62)***
0.349
(5.36)***
-1.060
(0.47)
-0.097
(0.09)
-0.069
(3.42)***
1.076
(0.84)
-0.270
(2.44)**
-9.357
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(9)
(4.09)***
0.332
(5.26)***
-1.047
(0.15)
-0.115
(3.65)***
1.238
(1.36)
-0.465
(3.24)***
0.668
(2.00)**
-7.895
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(10)
(3.76)***
0.344
(4.85)***
-1.049
(3.96)***
1.757
(1.65)
-0.681
(1.89)*
-5.136
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(11)
(2.38)**
0.268
(4.27)***
-0.984
(0.88)
-0.294
(0.51)
-0.470
(2.23)**
1.471
(1.04)
-0.565
(2.73)***
0.795
(1.38)
-7.085
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(12)
(4.69)***
0.368
(4.98)***
-1.138
(1.64)
0.420
(0.16)
0.212
(3.24)***
1.302
(2.47)**
-0.930
(0.08)
-0.017
(0.64)
-3.715
Fixed effects
Whole sample
(13)
(14)
(3.76)***
0.598
(4.28)***
-1.187
(0.23)
-0.075
(0.94)
-0.963
(0.40)
0.226
(0.06)
0.042
(1.72)*
0.375
(0.41)
-2.380
Random effects
Developing
countries
0.3827
0.001
R-squared overall
0.001
0.3679
0.3086
0.6635
1961-2000
66
322
2.59**
0.001
0.5074
0.4014
0.7275
1961-2000
58
177
3.23***
0.001
0.349
0.2889
0.6808
1966-2000
61
277
1.31
0.001
0.3372
0.2414
0.6387
1961-1990
53
190
3.95***
t-statistics in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% level, respectively
0.6627
0.3234
Time period
R-squared between
1961-2000
Number of Countries
R-squared within
322
66
Observations
2.67**
Rule of Law
HDI
Secondary enrolment
0.001
0.3822
0.3234
0.6631
1961-2000
66
322
2.75***
39
0.001
0.3876
0.3266
0.6653
1961-2000
66
322
1.89*
0.001
0.366
0.3235
0.6895
1961-2000
64
304
2.45**
0.001
0.3834
0.3328
0.6659
1961-2000
66
322
2.02*
(3.28)***
0.001
0.3889
0.3252
0.6573
1961-2000
65
298
1.76
(0.14)
-0.029
0.058
0.3428
0.3
0.6073
1976-2000
65
266
0.46
(1.51)
2.423
0.001
0.3695
0.3749
0.5723
1981-2000
66
224
1.12
(0.02)
-0.001
0.001
0.3957
0.3791
0.7189
1971-1995
57
205
3.39**
(2.56)**
0.359
0.444
0.1777
0.1219
0.4856
1961-2000
37
141
4.02
Table 4: The Determinants of Life Insurance in a Panel, 1961 - 2000; Alternative Measures of Life Insurance
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Life
Insurance
Density
Developing
countries
(5)
(6)
Sample
Whole sample
Econometric model
Constant
Fixed effects
-13.342
(2.13)**
1.471
(4.41)***
-0.299
(0.55)
1.730
(3.31)***
0.023
(0.02)
-0.169
(0.48)
-0.757
(2.24)**
0.375
(2.89)***
1.17
0.18
3.40**
8.33*
15.05**
6.87
Observations
Number of Countries
Time period
322
66
1961-2000
141
37
1961-2000
203
56
1971-1995
88
28
1971-1995
216
47
1961-1995
75
22
1961-1995
R-squared within
R-squared between
R-squared overall
0.6057
0.7146
0.7211
0.2437
0.3278
0.3141
0.7002
0.1914
0.2878
0.5517
0.0228
0.0756
0.3525
0.4895
0.4256
0.4181
0.3906
0.3437
0.001
0.021
0.0092
0.4985
0.491
0.9615
Life Insurance
Density
t-statistics in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% level, respectively
40
Table 5: The Determinants of Life Insurance Penetration in an Annual Panel, 1961 - 2000
Sample
Econometric model
Constant
GDP per capita
Young dependency
Old dependency
Life expectancy
Schooling
Inflation
Banking sector development
Private Savings Rate
(1)
Whole
sample
(2)
Whole
sample
Random
Fixed effects effects
-3.288
13.928
(1.16)
(3.01)***
0.665
0.088
(4.89)***
(0.72)
-0.586
-0.712
(2.87)***
(2.94)***
0.920
0.506
(4.97)***
(2.40)**
-0.631
-4.056
(1.02)
(3.59)***
-0.068
0.852
(0.45)
(4.49)***
-0.645
-0.687
(4.97)***
(4.38)***
0.062
0.412
(2.29)**
(8.47)***
0.184
(2.47)**
Anticipated inflation
(3)
Whole
sample
(4)
Whole
sample
(5)
Whole
sample
(6)
Developing
countries
Random
Fixed effects Fixed effects Fixed effects effects
-5.831
-1.828
-6.478
-3.694
(2.19)**
(0.62)
(2.21)**
(0.80)
0.517
0.689
0.394
(3.92)***
(4.96)***
(2.15)**
-0.401
-0.713
-0.474
0.069
(2.09)**
(3.32)***
(2.32)**
(0.13)
1.137
0.901
0.689
0.121
(6.55)***
(4.38)***
(3.53)***
(0.25)
-0.406
-0.890
-0.601
-0.688
(0.68)
(1.37)
(0.99)
(0.81)
0.010
-0.156
-0.141
-0.154
(0.07)
(0.97)
(0.94)
(0.56)
-0.788
-0.686
-0.708
(4.41)***
(5.32)***
(3.88)***
0.405
0.083
0.060
0.727
(9.55)***
(2.74)***
(2.20)**
(6.87)***
-0.834
(6.13)***
0.172
(2.07)**
Permanent income
1.034
(5.91)***
2.03***
80.21***
2.01***
1.73***
1.47**
20.34
Observations
Number of Countries
Time period
836
66
1961-2000
463
55
1970-1995
779
66
1961-2000
782
63
1961-2000
836
66
1961-2000
288
37
1961-2000
R-squared within
R-squared between
R-squared overall
0.6166
0.3106
0.3767
0.6716
0.4882
0.5245
0.6589
0.3396
0.4027
0.6151
0.3072
0.3523
0.6221
0.3292
0.3916
0.4383
0.1289
0.1945
0.001
0.1384
0.001
0.001
0.001
0.9758
t-statistics in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% level, respectively
41
Observations
R-squared
Institutional Development
Protestant
Catholic
Muslim
Inflation
Schooling
Life expectancy
Old dependency
Young dependency
Sample
Econometric model
Constant
66
0.70
Whole sample
OLS
39.729
(2.98)***
0.595
(3.45)***
-0.980
(1.00)
-0.665
(1.68)*
-10.618
(4.40)***
1.824
(5.06)***
-1.830
(4.10)***
0.631
(2.59)**
(1)
37
0.54
Developing
countries
OLS
51.455
(2.24)**
0.621
(1.68)
-2.237
(1.00)
-1.487
(1.79)*
-11.576
(3.51)***
1.904
(2.92)***
-2.003
(2.11)**
0.298
(0.69)
(2)
58
0.74
Whole sample
OLS
32.775
(3.08)***
0.342
(1.63)
-0.397
(0.41)
0.188
(0.39)
-10.113
(5.68)***
2.118
(4.98)***
-2.183
(2.73)***
0.234
(0.60)
1.284
(1.37)
(3)
66
0.78
42
-0.018
(2.60)**
-0.002
(0.59)
-0.009
(1.42)
Whole sample
OLS
32.466
(2.83)***
0.660
(4.48)***
-0.274
(0.39)
-0.374
(1.00)
-9.543
(3.97)***
1.137
(2.35)**
-2.102
(5.06)***
0.750
(3.67)***
(4)
63
0.70
0.508
(1.39)
Whole sample
OLS
41.322
(2.97)***
0.616
(3.52)***
-1.349
(1.19)
-0.775
(1.84)*
-10.599
(4.36)***
1.705
(4.45)***
-1.756
(3.39)***
0.622
(2.44)**
(5)
0.729
(2.22)**
66
0.72
Whole sample
OLS
41.991
(3.17)***
0.396
(2.63)**
-0.806
(0.85)
-0.759
(1.84)*
-10.853
(4.61)***
1.554
(3.97)***
-1.213
(2.38)**
0.639
(2.51)**
(6)
62
0.61
Whole sample
IV
33.825
(2.74)***
0.560
(2.76)***
-0.190
(0.17)
-0.734
(1.10)
-10.961
(4.48)***
1.871
(3.74)***
-0.371
(0.32)
1.802
(2.44)**
(7)
62
0.51
Whole sample
IV
29.156
(1.97)*
0.628
(2.62)**
-0.192
(0.16)
-0.711
(0.96)
-10.067
(3.45)***
1.021
(0.89)
0.286
(0.19)
2.229
(2.32)**
(8)
0.1793
OIR (p-value)
43
Legal origin
dummies, Good
crops
Instruments:
t-statistics in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% level, respectively
Banking sector
development
Instrumented:
0.2374
Legal origin
dummies, Good
crops
Banking sector
development,
Schooling
Inflation rate
Banking sector development
Urbanization
Gini
Social security
44
Life insurance premiums per capitain real dollars. Calculated as life insurance
premiums multiplied with average period exchange rate, divided by population
and U.S. Consumer Price Index
IFS
WDI
WDI
WDI
WDI
Barro and Lee (1996). Up-date from
web-page
Source
Description
Variable
Dummy variable that takes value one the country's legal system is of British origin La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer
and Vishny (1999)
Dummy variable that takes value one the country's legal system is of French
origin
Dummy variable that takes value one the country's legal system is of Socialist
origin
Dummy variable that takes value one the country's legal system is of German
origin
Dummy variable that takes value one the country's legal system is of Scandinavian La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer
origin
and Vishny (1999)
Inflation volatility
Institutional Development
Catholic
Muslim
Protestant
45
Measure of the extent to which citizens of a county trust the legal system to settle
disputes. It ranges from 6, strong law and order tradition, to 1, weak law and
order tradition.
Standard deviation of Inflation
Average value of six indicators measuring voice and accountability, political
stability, regulatory quality, government effectiveness, control of corruption and
rule of law. Each of these indicators, in turn is constructed from a wide array of
survey indicators in the respective area.
Rule of Law
IFS
Kaufman, Kraaay and Lobaton-Zoido
(1999)
ICRG
WDI
Loayza et al. (1999)
Banks (1994)
UNDP (2002)
Secondary enrolment
Private Savings Rate
Revolutions and Coups
Human Development Indicator
IFS
WDI, own calculations
Good crops
46
(1+zmaize+zwheat)/(1+zrice+zsugarcane), where zX equals the share of the land Easterly and Levine (2003)
area that is judged to be suitable by FAO for growing crop X. Maize and Wheat
are considered to be crops that foster a large middle class with egalitarian
institutions in contrast to rice and sugarcane, which tend to produce a powerful
elite and more closed institutions.
Urbanization
Gini
-0.2626***
1.0000
Urbanization
0.2390***
-0.3428*** 1.0000
Social
security
-0.6471*** 0.5010***
1.0000
Real interest
rate
-0.0851
0.2067***
0.0842*
-0.0220
1.0000
0.0917*
-0.0739
0.6610***
Permanent
income
Anticipated
inflation
Permanent
income
-0.2586***
0.2571***
0.5321***
-0.5737*** 0.5831***
0.6096*** -0.0421
-0.2065***
1.0000
Secondary
enrolment
Secondary
enrolment
Private
Savings
Rate
Revolutions
and Coups
HDI
1.0000
0.5475***
-0.6193*** 0.6562***
0.7204*** -0.0461
-0.1225**
0.7617***
1.0000
Private Savings
Rate
0.1902***
-0.2494*** 0.1668***
0.1749*** 0.0799
-0.0136
0.3366***
0.3194***
Revolutions
and Coups
-0.0698
0.1528**
-0.2867*** 0.0756
0.0879
HDI
0.4415***
-0.4772*** 0.7555***
0.6363*** 0.0008
-0.0826
0.7705***
0.8544***
0.2761***
-0.2812***
1.0000
Rule of Law
Inflation
volatility
0.3519***
-0.6012*** 0.5253***
0.6120*** -0.0593
-0.2483***
0.7354***
0.7050***
0.3078***
-0.4591***
0.7611***
-0.0700
0.9002***
-0.1860*** -0.1120**
-0.0398
0.1246**
-0.0535
-0.2570***
-0.2125***
0.2094***
Institutional
Development
0.5232***
-0.6076*** 0.6233***
0.6477*** -0.0813
-0.3256***
0.8112***
0.8363***
0.3307**
-0.2650**
0.8547***
Catholic
-0.2069*
0.2286*
0.0851
0.0348
0.2500**
-0.1082
-0.0890
-0.2702**
0.1945
0.1090
Muslim
-0.3057**
0.0878
-0.2667**
-0.2842** -0.0878
-0.0604
-0.0248
-0.4936***
Protestant
0.3165**
-0.2236*
0.2488**
0.3201*** -0.0950
-0.2097*
0.5781***
0.4440***
-0.0659
-0.1618
0.3531***
0.3364***
0.1623
-0.1080
-0.1716
-0.1887
-0.013
-0.0667
0.2068
0.0077
-0.1031
-0.0302
-0.2524** 0.1937
0.1773
-0.2571***
British legal
origin
French legal
origin
0.0385
0.5876***
1.0000
0.2258*
-0.1192
-0.4565***
0.4044***
Socialist legal
origin
-0.2333*
-0.4044*** -0.1189
0.3565*** -0.0410
0.2621**
-0.2169*
0.0950
0.3284**
-0.0810
0.0844
German legal
origin
0.4518***
-0.2774**
0.1484
0.0397
-0.0575
-0.1917
0.4395***
0.2421**
0.3667***
-0.1227
0.2566**
0.2296*
0.3059**
-0.0553
Scandinavian
legal origin
0.1000
-0.2591**
Good crops
0.1048
-0.6832*** 0.3525***
0.5585*** -0.0373
47
-0.1303
0.4621***
0.3842***
-0.1257
-0.1552
0.3070***
0.0841
0.3076**
0.4809***
0.1646
-0.2639**
0.4157***
Rule of
Law
Inflation Institutional
Volatility Development Catholic
Inflation volatility
-0.2076*** 1.0000
Institutional
Development
Muslim
Protestant
Catholic
-0.1380
Muslim
-0.3333*** -0.1232
-0.4567***
-0.4221*** 1.0000
Protestant
0.4883*** -0.1825
0.4861*'**
-0.1794
German
British
French
Socialist legal
Scandinavian
legal origin legal origin legal origin origin
legal origin
1.0000
0.0492
0.1092
-0.3584*** -0.0229
-0.4847*** 0.1201
-0.4114***
0.1489
0.2712
-0.0528
0.0009
-0.1357
-0.1563
-0.2232*
-0.3271*** 1.0000
0.2573**
-0.1356
0.0470
-0.1902
-0.2787** -0.1118
1.0000
-0.0863 1.0000
0.0441
1.0000
-0.1469
0.2632**
-0.0812
Scandinavian legal
origin
0.3785*** -0.0967
0.3804**
-0.2847** -0.1244
0.8429*** -0.1723
-0.2525** -0.1012
Good crops
0.4268*** 0.0872
0.3737**
-0.0166
0.0545
-0.1789
48
-0.1183
0.0042
Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Brazil
Bulgaria
Cameroon
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Fiji
Finland
France
Germany
Great Britain
Greece
Guatemala
Honduras
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Kenya
Life Insurance
Penetration / Density
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Life Insurance
Life Insurance
in Private Savings in Force to GDP
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
49
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Korea
Malaysia
Mexico
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Pakistan
Panama
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Singapore
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Uruguay
USA
Venezuela
Zimbabwe
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
50
*
*
*
51