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William Chapman Group

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Pet Insurance Market: Size, Share & Trends Analysis By 2032

The global pet insurance market is witnessing strong expansion, underpinned by growing pet ownership, rising veterinary costs, and increasing consumer awareness of pet welfare. In 2024, the market was valued in the tens of billions of USD; through the forecast period, it is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in the range of 15‑18%, reaching upwards of USD 40‑50+ billion by the early 2030s.

Market Segmentation & Share Highlights:

  • Coverage types such as accident & illness dominate, capturing the majority of premium revenues. Owners favour plans that cover not only emergencies but chronic or hereditary conditions.

  • Among animal types, dogs continue to account for the largest share, given their higher frequency of veterinary interventions; however, cats and “other pets” (exotics, small mammals, etc.) are registering faster growth rates.

  • As for distribution channels, direct sales (online platforms, insurer websites) and “embedded insurance” (via pet‑supplies retailers, veterinary clinics, etc.) are gaining ground rapidly. Brokers and agency models still play roles, especially for more complex policies.


Regional Trends: Europe holds a leading share globally as pet insurance is more established there; North America similarly has strong penetration. Asia‑Pacific is forecasted to be the fastest‑growing region, driven by rising incomes, growing middle classes, and urban pet ownership.


Business Implications :Insurers and insurtechs can benefit by investing in digital platforms, flexible plan designs (especially lifetime and wellness‑add‑ons), and by improving customer education in under‑penetrated markets. Strategic partnerships with veterinarians and retailers can amplify reach. Also, innovations in claims processing, data analytics, and customization will be key differentiators.

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GREEN ON GREEN

              Trilogy of Novels

       

           Available on Amazon and Kindle 

The Green on Green Trilogy was a on-off developing project, over about 20 years..

The core of the story is built on my being drafted and sent, unwillingly, to the Vietnam War. After coming back, I spent 4 months in Ft. Hood, Texas, waiting to get out of the Army, to go straight back to UCLA for the fall quarter of 1968. All told my military "career" was about 22 months.  Already, I'd been to UCLA 3 years, but as a physics major. On return all things changed towards being a writer, primarily aimed at novels. The Vietnam subject was certainly on my list, but I figured I'd wait a few years to let a broader perspective set in.

Consider that the war as well as the anti-war movement were at a peak about that time. For all that has been said and written about the treatment of veterans of Vietnam, nothing along the line of negative treatment ever happened to me, even though I was right back into a world where the vast majority of people I dealt with were well over onto the anti-war side. In fact, I found this group far more emphatic towards what a veteran had gone through than the pro-war folks, especially when care for the vets was an issue. For awhile I thought this was ironic, but soon realized it wasn't an irony at all.

                    Part 1   DEPARTURE    

         (see Departure page for more detailed description).

 

The story begins with the protagonist, Michael Landers, due to report to Oakland Repo Depot to be shipped over to Vietnam. He hated everything about the process. Although very much against the war, he'd managed to get drafted and couldn't justify as being to special for the process, so went with it though declaring from day 1 that he'd go to prison before he'd go to Vietnam, which he considered an unjust, unconstitutional and against what he thought the United States stood for.

 

He'd already been through basic training and jungle warfare school so he was infantry. Spending a few days saying goodbye to family and friends, mostly surfers, he arrives in Oakland, In a stalling move he shows up as assigned but on LSD. This enters him into a several months Odyssey into the Army bureaucracy, as well as interacting with soldiers in similar dilemmas. Along the way take side trips through all the drama of the Bay Area right then: the San Francisco Summer of Love, the frenetic anti-war demonstrations at Berkeley University. His best friend from early years, Katrin. though a model student and innocnent ends up a fugitive from the FBI. 

 

 

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