Final Expense Insurance
Final Expense Life Insurance.wmv
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Insurance $199 This e-book raises awareness of insurance as a research context and brings together papers detailing research in this sector that are of relevance to academics and practitioners either in insurance or related sectors. |
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Introductory Stochastic Analysis for Finance and Insurance $135 Incorporates the many tools needed for modeling and pricing in finance and insurance Introductory Stochastic Analysis for Finance and Insurance introduces readers to the topics needed to master and use basic stochastic analysis techniques for mathematical finance. The author presents the theories of stochastic processes and stochastic calculus and provides the necessary tools for modeling and pricing in finance and insurance. Practical in focus, the book’s emphasis is on application, intuition, and computation, rather than theory. Consequently, the text is of interest to graduate students, researchers, and practitioners interested in these areas. While the text is self-contained, an introductory course in probability theory is beneficial to prospective readers. This book evolved from the author’s experience as an instructor and has been thoroughly classroom-tested. Following an introduction, the author sets forth the fundamental information and tools needed by researchers and practitioners working in the financial and insurance industries: * Overview of Probability Theory * Discrete-Time stochastic processes * Continuous-time stochastic processes * Stochastic calculus: basic topics The final two chapters, Stochastic Calculus: Advanced Topics and Applications in Insurance, are devoted to more advanced topics. Readers learn the Feynman-Kac formula, the Girsanov’s theorem, and complex barrier hitting times distributions. Finally, readers discover how stochastic analysis and principles are applied in practice through two insurance examples: valuation of equity-linked annuities under a stochastic interest rate environment and calculation of reserves for universal life insurance. Throughout the text, figures and tables are used to help simplify complex theory and pro-cesses. An extensive bibliography opens up additional avenues of research to specialized topics. Ideal for upper-level undergraduate and graduate students, this text is recommended for one-semester courses in stochastic finance and calculus. It is also recommended as a study guide for professionals taking Causality Actuarial Society (CAS) and Society of Actuaries (SOA) actuarial examinations. |
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Insurance Intermediation $129 Insurance Intermediation |
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At What Expense? $4.99 We believe it is important to preserve what makes music special, and make it easy to craft listening experiences. At MOG, browse millions songs and play them instantly. Or just turn on radio where you can stop and replay songs. You can also create playlists for any occasion, and even download songs to your mobile. We are dedicated to employing the cleanest but most powerful technology so you can enjoy music as much as ever. |
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Irrigation In The United States $24.86 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:CHAPTER V CROPS The fundamental and final test of all agricultural effort is the relation between cost and returns, and this in turn is based on the crops grown. Irrigation, applied to agriculture, is merely one factor in crop production. Moisture is necessary to the growth of plants, and if it is not supplied in sufficient quantity by nature, the deficiency can be supplied by man. In sections of what is termed the arid region this deficiency is so great that the production of any agricultural crops is impossible without irrigation; in other sections some crops can be produced without it, but their growth is uncertain and stunted, and the range of crops is very limited; while in other sections many crops can be grown with reasonable success without irrigation, and the supplying of water artificially becomes merely an insurance againstdrought or a means of producing larger or better crops than could be grown otherwise. The practice of irrigation, therefore, according to the climate, ranges all the way from an absolute necessity, without which agriculture cannot exist, to a mere means of improvement, like thorough cultivation, fertilization, or crop rotation. In every case, however, the real question is whether the crop returns which are obtained as a result of irrigation are sufficient to justify the expense of providing a water supply in addition to the other expenses of crop production. It will be seen that this is a complicated question, and the answer depends upon a large number of factors—the kind of crops grown, the yields and prices obtained, the cost of land, equipment, seed, and labor, as well as the cost of water. Too often the literature on this subject, especially the advertising literature, deals with the question as if it were a question of yields and |
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Irrigation In The United States $17.43 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:CHAPTER V CROPS The fundamental and final test of all agricultural effort is the relation between cost and returns, and this in turn is based on the crops grown. Irrigation, applied to agriculture, is merely one factor in crop production. Moisture is necessary to the growth of plants, and if it is not supplied in sufficient quantity by nature, the deficiency can be supplied by man. In sections of what is termed the arid region this deficiency is so great that the production of any agricultural crops is impossible without irrigation; in other sections some crops can be produced without it, but their growth is uncertain and stunted, and the range of crops is very limited; while in other sections many crops can be grown with reasonable success without irrigation, and the supplying of water artificially becomes merely an insurance againstdrought or a means of producing larger or better crops than could be grown otherwise. The practice of irrigation, therefore, according to the climate, ranges all the way from an absolute necessity, without which agriculture cannot exist, to a mere means of improvement, like thorough cultivation, fertilization, or crop rotation. In every case, however, the real question is whether the crop returns which are obtained as a result of irrigation are sufficient to justify the expense of providing a water supply in addition to the other expenses of crop production. It will be seen that this is a complicated question, and the answer depends upon a large number of factors—the kind of crops grown, the yields and prices obtained, the cost of land, equipment, seed, and labor, as well as the cost of water. Too often the literature on this subject, especially the advertising literature, deals with the question as if it were a question of yields and |
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Irrigation In The United States; A Discussion Of Its Legal Economic And Financial Aspects $14.14 Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free.This is an OCR edition with typos.Excerpt from book:CHAPTER V CROPS The fundamental and final test of all agricultural effort is the relation between cost and returns, and this in turn is based on the crops grown. Irrigation, applied to agriculture, is merely one factor in crop production. Moisture is necessary to the growth of plants, and if it is not supplied in sufficient quantity by nature, the deficiency can be supplied by man. In sections of what is termed the arid region this deficiency is so great that the production of any agricultural crops is impossible without irrigation; in other sections some crops can be produced without it, but their growth is uncertain and stunted, and the range of crops is very limited; while in other sections many crops can be grown with reasonable success without irrigation, and the supplying of water artificially becomes merely an insurance againstdrought or a means of producing larger or better crops than could be grown otherwise. The practice of irrigation, therefore, according to the climate, ranges all the way from an absolute necessity, without which agriculture cannot exist, to a mere means of improvement, like thorough cultivation, fertilization, or crop rotation. In every case, however, the real question is whether the crop returns which are obtained as a result of irrigation are sufficient to justify the expense of providing a water supply in addition to the other expenses of crop production. It will be seen that this is a complicated question, and the answer depends upon a large number of factors—the kind of crops grown, the yields and prices obtained, the cost of land, equipment, seed, and labor, as well as the cost of water. Too often the literature on this subject, especially the advertising literature, deals with the question as if it were a question of yields and |
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