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1918 Influenza Pandemic & Life Insurance (1918–1920)

Event Date: 1918–1920 Category: Life Insurance • Mortality Shock • Actuarial Science • Solvency • Public Health

Summary

The 1918 influenza pandemic — often called the “Spanish Flu” — killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide and produced the largest mortality shock in the history of life insurance. Unlike typical influenza, which disproportionately affects the very young and very old, the 1918 strain killed healthy adults aged 20–40 at extraordinary rates. Life insurers faced unprecedented claims, depleted reserves, and the first true test of actuarial mortality tables under extreme stress. The pandemic accelerated the modernization of life‑insurance reserving, strengthened regulatory oversight, and reshaped the industry’s understanding of catastrophic mortality risk.

Internal links: Link “mortality tables” → Rise of Actuarial Science (18th–19th centuries) Link “solvency” → Rise of Reinsurance (early 20th century) Link “public health” → Workers’ Compensation (1911–1920s) Link “pandemic risk” → COVID‑19 & Modern Insurance (2020s)

Background / Context

Before 1918, life insurance was:

Pandemic risk was not a major actuarial consideration. The last major global pandemic (the 1889–1890 “Russian Flu”) had been severe but manageable.

Nothing in the industry’s experience resembled what was about to happen.

1. The Pandemic Arrives — and Defies All Expectations

The 1918 influenza strain was unusual in three ways:

Mortality spikes were staggering:

For life insurers, this was the equivalent of a catastrophic hurricane — but in human lives.

2. Life Insurers Face an Unprecedented Claims Surge

Life insurers experienced:

Some companies saw claims triple their normal levels.

Yet — and this is a crucial historical point — most life insurers survived.

Why?

The pandemic validated the core principles of life‑insurance solvency.

3. Actuarial Science Under Stress

The pandemic exposed weaknesses in mortality modeling:

Actuaries responded by:

The 1918 pandemic became a foundational case study in extreme mortality events.

Sidebar: Why the 1918 Pandemic Was So Deadly for Young Adults

Unlike typical influenza, the 1918 strain triggered:

Healthy adults with strong immune systems were paradoxically at higher risk.

For life insurers, this meant:

This is why the pandemic produced such severe financial strain.

4. Regulatory and Legal Developments

The pandemic accelerated:

It also influenced:

The pandemic demonstrated that mortality risk is both an actuarial and a public‑health issue.

5. Market and Industry Impact

The pandemic reshaped the life‑insurance industry:

It also reinforced the importance of:

The industry emerged stronger — but permanently changed.

Claims Impact

The pandemic produced:

It also highlighted the need for:

Why It Mattered (Plain English)

The 1918 influenza pandemic taught insurers that:

It was the greatest mortality shock in modern history — and the moment life insurance proved its value.

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