• 제목/요약/키워드: French insurance market

검색결과 2건 처리시간 0.084초

한국 보험산업 글로벌화에 따른 보험판매방식의 다각화와 보험인력 전문화에 관한 연구 -프랑스 보험산업과의 비교를 중심으로- (Korean insurance market globalization and specialization of distribution agents -comparative study with French insurance market-)

  • 여희정
    • 경영과정보연구
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    • 제26권
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    • pp.261-291
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    • 2008
  • The EU holds about 50% of exports and imports in the world trade of services. The insurance markets have undergone a significant consolidation in solvency rule, cross-border registration, and standardized accounts. In the EU-Korea FTA negotiations the EU is interested in mutual certification of qualifications as well as market liberalization of law, finance and distribution and so forth. When the negotiation with respect to the mutual certification of qualifications comes to a settlement, the two countries will drive it in service areas. Korea should examine european certification regulations and improve domestic insurance-related institutions. France is the focal country of the EU. The paper provides a comparative study of insurance markets and agents in France and Korea. The paper argues that Korea should initiate institutional changes and be transformed into an insurance service exporting country for the specialized insurance agents to move to EU countries.

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The Influence of Credit Scores on Dividend Policy: Evidence from the Korean Market

  • KIM, Taekyu;KIM, Injoong
    • The Journal of Asian Finance, Economics and Business
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    • 제7권2호
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    • pp.33-42
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    • 2020
  • The paper investigates the mechanism through which corporate credit ratings affect dividend payments by decomposing the mean difference of dividends into a part that is explained by the determinants of dividends and a residual part that is contributed by the pure credit group effect, in the framework of the traditional dividend model of Fama and French (2001). Historically, better credit rated firms have shown consistently higher propensity to pay dividends especially during the economic crisis period. According to the counter-factual decomposition technique of Jann (2008), better rated firms are more responsive to the firm characteristics that have positive impact on dividends and poor rated firms are more responsive to the negative dividend predictors. As a result, good (bad) credit ratings make corporate managers become more bold (timid) in their dividend payments and they tend to pay more (less) dividends than what their firm characteristics prescribe. The degree of information asymmetry increases for the poor group firms during crisis periods and they attempt to reserve more cash in preparation for future investments. The decomposition results suggest that the credit group effect can potentially exceed the effect of firm characteristics because firms of different credit ratings can respond to the very same firm characteristics in a different manner.