scholarly journals When is utilitarian welfare higher under insurance risk pooling?

Author(s):  
Indradeb Chatterjee ◽  
Angus S. Macdonald ◽  
Pradip Tapadar ◽  
R. Guy Thomas
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Indradeb Chatterjee ◽  
Angus S. Macdonald ◽  
Pradip Tapadar ◽  
R. Guy Thomas
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Robert M. Veatch ◽  
Amy Haddad ◽  
E. J. Last

This chapter begins with a description of the various reasons for the accelerating costs of prescription drugs in the United States. It then discusses benefits and burdens of drug therapy within public and private insurance programs. Insurance risk pooling is examined in light of the requirement in the Affordable Care Act to buy health insurance and the consequences when people decide not to buy insurance. Disagreements between the personal beliefs of the owners of a privately held company and the Affordable Care Act’s requirement to cover contraceptives through employee insurance plans are discussed. The chapter also addresses co-pay coupons that encourage patients to ask for expensive, brand-name drugs and the increasing costs of specialty or biotechnology pharmaceuticals, highlighting the problems insurers face in their efforts to manage costs. Finally, the common problems of high-cost drugs that have marginal impact and off-label uses of drugs are examined.


Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 982
Author(s):  
Yujuan Huang ◽  
Jing Li ◽  
Hengyu Liu ◽  
Wenguang Yu

This paper considers the estimation of ruin probability in an insurance risk model with stochastic premium income. We first show that the ruin probability can be approximated by the complex Fourier series (CFS) expansion method. Then, we construct a nonparametric estimator of the ruin probability and analyze its convergence. Numerical examples are also provided to show the efficiency of our method when the sample size is finite.


Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 1350
Author(s):  
Galina Horáková ◽  
František Slaninka ◽  
Zsolt Simonka

The aim of the paper is to propose, and give an example of, a strategy for managing insurance risk in continuous time to protect a portfolio of non-life insurance contracts against unwelcome surplus fluctuations. The strategy combines the characteristics of the ruin probability and the values VaR and CVaR. It also proposes an approach for reducing the required initial reserves by means of capital injections when the surplus is tending towards negative values, which, if used, would protect a portfolio of insurance contracts against unwelcome fluctuations of that surplus. The proposed approach enables the insurer to analyse the surplus by developing a number of scenarios for the progress of the surplus for a given reinsurance protection over a particular time period. It allows one to observe the differences in the reduction of risk obtained with different types of reinsurance chains. In addition, one can compare the differences with the results obtained, using optimally chosen parameters for each type of proportional reinsurance making up the reinsurance chain.


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