The insurance forum
1.4 hrs read
Rate this book:
About This Book
What can one person do when a powerful industry censors the person's views? That is the question Joseph M. Belth tries to answer in this memoir about his publication of an independent monthly periodical called The Insurance Forum. He started the periodical with the January 1974 issue after he had experienced 31 incidents of censorship over a period of eight years. The censorship was the work of trade press periodicals, professional journals, professional organizations, insurance companies, and others who wanted to prevent him from expressing his views. He ended the Forum when he published the December 2013 issue after 40 consecutive years of publication. This memoir reveals the inside story of Belth's victories, partial victories, and defeats. His memoir explains why and how the Forum began and describes significant events that occurred during the four decades of operation, including those relating to life insurance, annuities, company operations, and regulation. Belth also describes his adolescent years and education prior to joining the faculty of Indiana University in 1962, and his long association with the University. -- From book jacket.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Joseph M. Belth
A report on life insurance
Participating life insurance s
Participating life insurance sold by stock companies
The A.L. Williams replacement
The A.L. Williams replacement empire
The Insurance Forum, 1984-1988
The Insurance Forum, 1984-1988
The retail price structure in
The retail price structure in American life insurance
Viatical transactions: The fri
Viatical transactions: The frightening secondary market for life insurance policies