General Insurance Premium Rating — The Way Forward. Summary of the Recommendations of the General Insurance Premium Rating Working Party (GRIP)

2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 637-644
Author(s):  
J. D. Anderson ◽  
C. G. Bolton ◽  
G. L. Callan ◽  
M. Cross ◽  
S. K. Howard ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe General Insurance Premium Rating Issues Working Party (GRIP) was established by the General Insurance Board of the Faculty and Institute of Actuaries in 2005 to review actuarial involvement in premium rating issues, pricing being one of the key areas in which actuaries work.GRIP published a full report in January 2007, which is available at www.actuaries.org.uk/grip. This short paper summarises the recommendations of that full report. Further background, discussion and the rationale for these recommendations are set out in more detail in the full report.

2007 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 645-661 ◽  

INTRODUCTION TO THE DISCUSSIONIn the following discussion, whenever reference is made to ‘the paper’, this is the paper Anderson et al. (2007), which is the full paper produced by the General Insurance Premium Rating Working Party (GRIP), and which is being discussed here. The full reference on how to access the paper is given at the end of the Summary Paper, which appears immediately before this discussion.


2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-599 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Jones ◽  
P. J. Copeman ◽  
E. R. Gibson ◽  
N. J. S. Line ◽  
J. A. Lowe ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTReserving is important to our profession as it is a core activity for actuaries. The members of the General Insurance Reserving Issues Taskforce (GRIT) have been considering how actuaries can improve the way in which we do reserving in general insurance. We gathered our thoughts and recommendations together in a Consultation Paper which has been discussed widely in the profession. We are very grateful to everyone who shared their views and comments with us, particularly those who gave us written feedback. We have considered carefully all the feedback which we received and adapted our final report in response to this.Given the scope and importance of our remit, it is perhaps not surprising that this is not a short paper. We hope that Section 1 provides a reasonable summary.Generally, our view is that there are many things on which our profession should focus. However, it is also important to remind ourselves of the positive items of feedback which we heard from our stakeholders. In addition to many suggestions for things to do better, we consistently heard the message that actuaries play an extremely valuable role in general insurance.This is a major testimony to the progress which the actuarial profession has made in recent years in its ability to contribute to the general insurance industry. Perhaps it is because of this progress that now is an appropriate time for us, as a profession, to take a hard look at what we do in reserving, and ask ourselves whether there are any things which we could do differently. We hope that GRIT's report will facilitate this debate.GRIT's recommendations fall under the following key themes:— Providing more transparency to our reserving methods and helping our stakeholders have more insight into the key reserving assumptions and decisions.— Providing more information on uncertainty in our reserve estimates. In particular, we recommend that actuaries provide a quantitative indication of the range of outcomes for future claim payments, and that our profession defines a common vocabulary for communicating uncertainty.— Understanding better the business we are reserving. We suggest a range of analyses and activities for doing this.— Applying our standard actuarial reserving methods more consistently. We identify a list of specific areas where we believe that there is scope for improvement. Also, we believe that the actuarial training syllabus should be extended, and this leads to consideration of whether a more specialised general insurance actuarial qualification is needed.— Understanding the implications of the underwriting cycle, which, we believe, influences the behaviour of claims development in a way that our reserving models do not currently capture. We suggest what we believe may be the foundations of a potentially more cycle proof methodology, but this is an area which we believe will require much more research.— Helping actuaries understand how behaviour can affect the reserve estimation process, particularly in the face of uncertainty. We make various suggestions in this area, including helping actuaries manage pressure from third parties.We are convinced that, for our profession to implement these suggestions, it will require a concerted change management strategy and set of actions to embed changes into the way in which actuaries work. We believe that this will include:— increasing the level of debate and research in the profession on claims reserving;— a broader communication programme with the general insurance industry, covering, amongst other things, uncertainty and data quality;— a sub-group of the GI Board with a specific focus on reserving, responsible for implementing GRIT's recommendations and dealing with new issues as they arise; and— our profession resolving the conflicting pressures which will arise out of the extra work required for reserving by the GRIT recommendations.There is one specific item where we have not made a recommendation. It has been suggested to us that many of the standard reserving methods in common use, such as the chain ladder, are not sophisticated, and that more sophisticated mathematical and statistical methods should be a priority. We do not agree with this. Whereas, in the longer term, this might be an important issue for our profession, we believe that the current focus for actuaries should be in the areas set out in this paper, such as understanding the business better.GRIT believes that the issues which we have identified are important for the future of our profession and the contribution which we can make to the general insurance industry.


Author(s):  
István-Attila Tárkányi

"The Contemporary Reception of Lajos Csiky’s Voluminous Works. Lajos Csiky (1852–1925) was a late 19th and early 20th-century professor of practical theology at the Theological Academy of Debrecen. His works have not yet been researched accordingly. In the first part of this short paper, we would like to present the socio-theological context in which the renowned theologian spent his creative years, focusing especially on the debate of the day between liberal and orthodox theology. In the second part, we would like to reflect on the way his major theological works were received by his contemporaries during a span of more than four decades of academic activity. Keywords: Lajos Csiky, 19th-century theological debates in Hungary, practical theology, Ferenc Balogh, Imre Révész, Mór Ballagi "


2007 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Emms

A model for general insurance pricing is developed which represents a stochastic generalisation of the discrete model proposed by Taylor (1986). This model determines the insurance premium based both on the breakeven premium and the competing premiums offered by the rest of the insurance market. The optimal premium is determined using stochastic optimal control theory for two objective functions in order to examine how the optimal premium strategy changes with the insurer’s objective. Each of these problems can be formulated in terms of a multi-dimensional Bellman equation.In the first problem the optimal insurance premium is calculated when the insurer maximises its expected terminal wealth. In the second, the premium is found if the insurer maximises the expected total discounted utility of wealth where the utility function is nonlinear in the wealth. The solution to both these problems is built-up from simpler optimisation problems. For the terminal wealth problem with constant loss-ratio the optimal premium strategy can be found analytically. For the total wealth problem the optimal relative premium is found to increase with the insurer’s risk aversion which leads to reduced market exposure and lower overall wealth generation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 187-189
Author(s):  
G. E. Lyons

The paper is based on a Report produced by a working party of the General Insurance Study Group for the General Insurance Seminar held at Bristol in November, 1983. The terms of reference of the working party were: (i) To review and summarize the published papers on the valuation of outstanding claims. (ii) To classify the methods described, and comment on the assumptions implied by each method. (iii) To discuss the problem of estimating the degree of uncertainty associated with the valuation of outstanding claims, disregarding the uncertainty resulting from the effects of inflation and (insofar as this may be taken into account in the valuation) investment income. The first part of the paper is concerned with terms of reference (i) and (ii), explaining how the paper could be used as part of the loss reserving process and describing the format and presentation of the summaries which are shown in three Appendices.


1999 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 743-755
Author(s):  
Reuven Yaron

Our colleague, Professor Ze'ev Falk died on the eve of Rosh Hashana 5759, at the age of 75. His scholarly interests ranged widely; he was expert, inter alia, on the law of the interim period, between Bible and Talmud. Concerning later periods, his attention was given primarily to the law of marriage and divorce. He was a deeply religious man, yet free from any trace of complacency. When, as happens, he was unhappy with the way halakha went, he was wont to speak out and search for solutions. That the custodians of halakha would not tend to heed his suggestions, need not surprise. As a rule, they are reluctant to take notice of question-marks and solutions originating from without; and in their strict sense Falk was an outsider. But this was their problem rather than his.This short paper is presented here in eius memoriam, as a token of friendship and respect. It would have been within the sphere of his interest.May he rest in peace.


1982 ◽  
Vol 45 (7) ◽  
pp. 226-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moya Willson

Early in 1981 the College of Occupational Therapists assembled a working party of four people, Leigh Atkinson, Averil Stewart, Carol Underwood and myself. The remarks which follow are therefore not personal opinions but the result of four people working in tune with each other.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 112-123
Author(s):  
Rika Fitriani ◽  
Gunardi Gunardi

One type of general insurance is motor vehicle insurance. Premium pricing of general insurance can be calculated by some methods. In this study, Bayes method will be used. The distribution of claim frequency is Poisson distribution and the distribution of claim severity is Exponential distribution. The premium is calculated by multiplying the expectation of claim frequency and the expectation of claim severity. Based on the historical data analysis using the Bayes method, the highest pure premium of motor vehicle insurance in Indonesia is Hino brand and the lowest pure premium is Honda brand. The result of this premium pricing can be used as a reference for the insurance companies to manage their motor vehicle insurance reserves.


Author(s):  
H. C. Sorby

In the following short paper I propose to describe what I have lately done in improving the method of studying the optical characters of the minerals which I treated at greater length in my address last year at annual meeting at Plymouth.It is a curious example of how a method may be invented, and then lost sight of, that the determination of the index of refraction in the way there described was proposed by a French savant upwards of a hundred years ago. I have not yet consulted the original publication, but I very strongly suspect that the proposal was more theoretical than practical, and that with the instruments then at disposal the results were found to be so inexact that the whole system became obsolete and practically forgotten.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document