Dictionary Definition
tontine
Noun
1 a form of life insurance whereby on the death
or default of a participant his share is distributed to the
remaining members [syn: tontine
insurance]
2 an annuity scheme wherein participants share
certain benefits and on the death of any participant his benefits
are redistributed among the remaining participants; can run for a
fixed period of time or until the death of all but one
participant
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Extensive Definition
- In cryptography, a tontine is a secret sharing algorithm which allows n people to share secret data, such that any k of them can reconstruct it by combining their keys.
- For the Australian pillow manufacturer, see Tontine Group.
The scheme is named after Neapolitan banker
Lorenzo de
Tonti, who is generally credited with inventing it in France in 1653. Some sources
claim that similar schemes already existed in Italy, but there is
no dispute that the popularity of the form was due to Tonti.
The basic concept is simple. Each investor pays a
sum into the tontine. The funds are invested and each investor
receives dividends. As
each investor dies, his or her share is divided amongst the
surviving investors. This process continues until only one investor
survives. Originally, the last surviving subscriber received only
the dividends: the capital reverted to the state upon his or her
death and was used to fund public works
projects, which often contained the word "tontine" in their name.
In a later variation, the capital would devolve upon the last
survivor, effectively dissolving the trust, and it is this version
that has often been the plot device for mysteries and detective
stories.
While once very popular in France, Britain, and the
United
States, tontines have been banned in Britain and the United
States due to the incentive for investors to kill one another,
thereby increasing their shares. Geneva, in Switzerland, was known
for its active market in tontines in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Nevertheless, there are underground organizations in the US that
still use the tontine, and ownership of a business or property by
joint tenancy with right of survivorship has much the same
effect.
Tontines were the first government
bonds issued anywhere in the world, and the British government
first issued tontines in 1693 to fund a war
against France. However, tontines soon caused problems for their
issuing governments, as they would increasingly underestimate the
longevity of the
population. At first, tontine holders included men and women of all
ages. However, by the mid-18th century, investors had caught on how
to play the system, and it became increasingly common to buy
tontines for young children, especially for girls around the age of
5 (since girls lived longer than boys, and by which age they were
less at risk of infant mortality). This created the possibility to
produce great returns for the holders, but it proved to be quite
costly for the governments (not unlike modern day "pay-as-you-go"
pension schemes). As a result, the tontine scheme was eventually
abandoned, and as of the mid-1850s, the tontines had been replaced
by other investment vehicles such as "penny
policies", a predecessor to the 20th
century invention of the pension scheme.
A tontine also may refer to a bottle of liquor a
group of individuals keeps for the last of the group to drink when
the others have passed away. A reverse tontine may refer to a
bottle of liquor kept by a group of individuals to drink when the
first of its members passes away. The Alpine Professional Tennis
Tour has two such tontines.
Tontines in fiction
Tontines have often appeared in fiction, usually,
but not always, as a motive for murder.
- In The Wrong Box, a novel by Robert Louis Stevenson, the object is to conceal the death of one of the last two investors.
- A more innocuous tontine was the subject of a M*A*S*H episode "Old Soldiers". Colonel Potter, the last survivor of his World War I unit, inherits a bottle of brandy (the last from a cache the unit found), which he shares with some of the 4077th M*A*S*H characters to venerate his old friends.
- In an episode of The Simpsons, Grampa and Mr. Burns enter into a tontine during World War II, involving a treasure of antique paintings stolen from a German castle. When the two of them become the only surviving members, they compete for the rights to the prize. Eventually they both lose once the US State Department interferes and takes the paintings back to the German baron (and stereotypical Eurotrash) who is the rightful owner.
- A tontine is also used as a plot device in the novel Seventy Seven Clocks by Christopher Fowler, and in one of the Dr. Syn books.
- P.G. Wodehouse used a similar idea in his novel Something Fishy (titled The Butler Did It in the U.S.). In Wodehouse's version, the money did not go to the last survivor, but to the last son of the investors who remained unmarried.
- The plot of the Agatha Christie murder mystery 4.50 From Paddington, with Miss Marple, is based on a tontine will.
- The French writer Alain-René Lesage wrote a play called La Tontine in 1709.
- The Wild Wild West, the 1967 TV series, season 2 episode 16 is titled: The Night of the Tottering Tontine. In a Ten Little Indians-style plot, James West and Artemus Gordon, assigned to protect a prominent professor, are trapped as a tontine collapses at a seaside mansion during a storm.
- The 2001 comedy film Tomcats features a similar arrangement, where several young men put money into a fund to be paid to the last unmarried man among them. The comic interest stems from the efforts of one of the last two to get the other one married.
- The Being of Sound Mind episode of Diagnosis Murder uses a tontine as the motivation for multiple murders.
- Thomas B. Costain, a popular writer in the 1950s, wrote The Tontine around 1955. This novel, set in the 19th century, gives a good overview of how a tontine works or worked in history.
- In an episode of Barney Miller, which aired 7 January 1982, an old man attempts suicide to allow his cousin to become the survivor of a tontine.
- Tontine is the name of a reality TV game show based on the premise of a tontine: competitors contribute to a common fund, which is awarded to the person who remains in the competition the longest.
External links
tontine in German: Tontine
tontine in Spanish: Tontina
tontine in French: Tontine
tontine in Swedish: Tontine