Insurance policies work by taking premiums from  customers in exchange for baring the risk of certain costly events  occurring. For example, if there is one fire in your town each month,  everyone could just sit tight and hope their house doesn’t burn down  next, or could pitch in and pay an insurance premium each month and this  is then used to rebuild the house that burns down. Very simply this is  how insurance works. It is a method of spreading a risk over a far wider  area, so that it will not be as devastating as if it was concentrated  solely on the person who experiences the loss. 
 Exclusion Clauses
  There are a few problems with this however and they attract much  criticism. One criticism is that by taking on the risk for people,  insurance makes people take greater risks than they otherwise would. For  example, if you know your home contents are insured against burglary,  then you may not be as careful about locking the doors and windows every  time you leave the house. Or if your bike is insured, you may not  bother to lock it as much as if it wasn’t insured. In the insurance  industry, this problem is known as the moral hazard. 
Insurance  companies protect themselves against this by inserting exclusion  clauses into their contracts, which remove their obligation to pay out  if the insured performs or fails to perform certain stated actions. They  might for instance require that you fit smoke detectors, or use good  locks on your doors, or other things that will reduce the risk of the  insured against event occurring. 
Too Complex
There  are also certain risks that you are not allowed to insure against in  most countries. This is first of all because it would be too difficult  for the insurance companies to quantify, but mostly it’s because they  are risks that governments want the person at risk to bare himself or  herself. They generally apply to multinational companies.
There  is also the criticism that insurance policies are far too complex for  the vast majority of consumers to understand. It is simply unreasonable  to expect the customer to understand lengthy documents that have been  drafted by not one, but usually teams of specialised lawyers. This can  lead to consumers being misled or buying insurance policies on  unfavourable terms. To get around this, most countries regulate the  content of insurance contracts to ensure that they remain fair to  consumers.
There is also the option of using the services of an insurance broker to shop the market for you
 
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