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Tontine

A Tontine is an investment vehicle which is an odd mixture of group annuity, group life insurance, and lottery.

The tontine is named after Lorenzo de Tonti, the father of explorer Henri de Tonti who invented the scheme in France in 1653.

Each investor pays a sum into the tontine. The funds are invested and each investor receives dividends. When an investor dies his or her share is divided amongst all the other investors. This process continues until only one investor survives who receives all of the remaining funds.

The tontine was very popular in France, Britain, and the United States. The tontine was used to fund public buildings and other public works projects. Often these buildings or works contained the word "tontine" in their name.

Tontines have been banned in Britain and the United States due to the potential incentive for investors to kill one another in order to increase their shares in the scheme. But there are underground organizations in the US where people still use the tontine. Due to this the tontine has often been the plot device for mysteries and detective stories.

A tontine is the premise for The Wrong Box, a novel by Robert Louis Stevenson, made into a movie by Bryan Forbes in 1966 starring Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Ralph Richardson, Michael Caine and Tony Hancock.

In data processing 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.




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