Loss control activities


 

Home
Site Map
Add Term
Search
About Us
Contributors

Loss control activities

Actions that an insured person or company takes at the instigation of an insurance company in order to prevent accidents or losses.



Loss control activities

Similar Matches

DUP Activities

DUP Activities

Directly Unproductive Profit-Seeking Activities


Ultra vires activities

Ultra vires activities

Corporate actions and operations that are not sanctioned by corporate charter, sometimes leading to shareholder lawsuits.


Grandfathered activities

Grandfathered activities

Nonbank activities, some of which would normally not be permissible for bank holding companies and foregin banks in the United States, but which were acquired or engaged in before a particular date. Such activities may be continued under the "grandfather" clauses of the Bank Holding Company Act and the International Banking Act.


Permissiable nonbank activities

Permissiable nonbank activities

Financial activities closely related to banking that may be engaged in by bank holding companies (BHCs), either directly or through nonbank subsidiaries. For example, a BHC might own finance companies or engage in mortgage banking. The Federal Reserve Board determines which activities are closely related to banking. Before making such activities permissible, the Board must determine that performance of the activities by bank holding companies is in the public interest.


Directly Unproductive Profit-Seeking Activities

Directly Unproductive Profit-Seeking Activities

Activities that have no direct productive purpose (neither increasing consumer utility nor contributing to production of a good or service that would increase utility) and are motivated by the desire to make profit, typically from market distortions created by government policies. Examples are rent seeking and revenue seeking. Term coined by Bhagwati (1982).


Further Suggestions

activities of daily living
Short run operating activities


 
All rights Reserved. Do not copy without permission.