ABSTRACT
Insurance economics models of statics and comparative statics assume that the process of economic adjustment must inevitably lead to equilibrium. The question of attainability of equilibrium has not been addressed so far. This is the domain of dynamic analysis. In this article, we develop a model of economic growth for the insurance industry. The production function of the insurance industry is based on the assumption that the output, "incurred losses," is a function of "invested assets" and "other labor and nonlabor inputs." The latter grow at the rate n, a proxy of the growth rate of insurance expenses. The assets-inputs ratio, r, characterizes the steady-state growth …