Life Annuities

1995 ◽  
pp. 35-47
Author(s):  
Hans U. Gerber
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Joelle H. Fong ◽  
Jackie Li

Abstract This paper examines the impact of uncertainties in the future trends of mortality on annuity values in Singapore's compulsory purchase market. We document persistent population mortality improvement trends over the past few decades, which underscores the importance of longevity risk in this market. Using the money's worth framework, we find that the life annuities delivered expected payouts valued at 1.019–1.185 (0.973–1.170) per dollar of annuity premium for males (females). Even in a low mortality improvement scenario, the annuities provide an expected value exceeding 0.950. This suggests that participants in the national annuity pool have access to attractively priced annuities, regardless of sex, product, and premium invested.


Author(s):  
De Morgan

In most branches of mathematics, the actual use of fundamental processes in the form which the first definitions suggest, is often supplanted, either by processes of greater skill, or by the use of pure reasoning. In the subject of which this paper treats, there has not been much attempt to connect formulæ by reasoning. The actual exhibition of successive annual results has been the only method extensively employed; and it throws the required total result into a series of terms: this series is either algebraically summed, or calculated term by term for insertion in a table.The present paper is intended to show that this summation of algebraical series may be dispensed with, at least in questions of annuities certain : and also that common points of principle, which the ordinary methods leave altogether out of sight, will reduce many questions of life annuities to an absolute coincidence of form with the corresponding questions of ordinary annuities.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
David C. Bowie

Abstract This note derives analytic expressions for annuities based on a class of parametric mortality “laws” (the so-called Makeham–Beard family) that includes a logistic form that models a decelerating increase in mortality rates at the higher ages. Such models have been shown to provide a better fit to pensioner and annuitant mortality data than those that include an exponential increase. The expressions derived for evaluating single life and joint life annuities for the Makeham–Beard family of mortality laws use the Gauss hypergeometric function and Appell function of the first kind, respectively.


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