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Americans can insure just about anything. Drivers are required to get automobile insurance, renters and homeowners insure against theft and damage, and businesses must protect themselves from lawsuits. This is just skimming the surface; the Insurance Information Institute reported that $1.1 trillion in premiums were paid to insurance companies in 2014 to insure everything from properties to pets. To handle the demand, the industry employed about 2.5 million people to set premiums, sell plans, evaluate claims and perform other essential functions. This guide gives readers information about careers within the insurance subsector along with related degree information, corresponding salaries and job outlook.




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When an insured person needs to make a claim — perhaps due to a car accident, home theft or earthquake damage — the insurance company must assess the damage and compensate the insured person. To do this, an adjuster conducts interviews, inspects the scene and gathers other information to get a clear sense of what happened. This information is reported to a claims examiner (see below). The adjuster then makes a specific offer to the claimant for how much the company will pay. If this amount is rejected, the adjuster works with company lawyers to back up the company’s position. However, some adjusters are hired directly by claimants; their goal is to get larger offers than those offered by insurance companies.

Many insurance careers require only a high school diploma for entry, while higher-level workers will hold a master’s degree. The range in academic qualifications needed means there is a corresponding range of salaries available in the subsector. 

The upward growth trends are not industry-wide. For example, property and casualty insurers, who have seen fewer regulatory and legal shakeups, shed 56,000 jobs between 2005 and 2014, as insurance underwriters lost out on jobs to computer automation. 

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