AAA.CrdSc Flashcards

1
Q

define credit score

A

an insurance score using attributes found in a credit report

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2
Q

define insurance score

A

numerical score assigned to an insurance risk based on a risk’s underlying characteristics

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3
Q

what are credit scores used for

A
  • uw criterion
  • rating variables
  • assignment to tiers (RSP or FARM)
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4
Q

2 arguments in supporting of using credit score

A

1) statistically significant:
- high cs individuals have lower claim costs so it improves segmentation and afforability
2) good rating variable: easy to calculate, objective, verifiable

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5
Q

3 arguments against using credit score

A
  • unfairly discriminatory: poor families, recent immigrants
  • privacy concerns: too invasive
  • accuracy: credit bureau errors or identity theft may cause inaccurate credit data
  • high cs insureds: often pay small claims out of pocket so their true costs may be understated
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6
Q

regulators’ concerns in economic crisis

A

1) on aggregate premium
- an unwarranted increase: a new rating variable alone should not increase aggregate premium
2) on individual premium
- a distributional shift (when economic crisis causes every insured’s score to worsen) that does not reflect true cost differences

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7
Q

actuary’s response to regulator’s concerns over credit score use after economic crisis

A

1) for aggregate premium:
- insurers use insurance scores to determine appropriate rate relationships between risk classes, not overall premium needed
- apply OBF to reverse aggregate change
2) for individual premium:
- stop using cs (at least temporarily)
- redo classification analysis after economy has stabilized

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8
Q

S2016Q3
provide support in favour of using the number of dental visits in the past 12 months as a insurance rating criterion

A
  • number of dental visits is statistically significant and predictive of claim costs
  • easy to calculate, objective, verifiable
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9
Q

S2016Q3
regulator approves to use number of dental visits as a rating variable. 5 years later, a study recognizes that increase in dental fees has led to 10% reduction to annual dental visits. Defend the regulator’s decision to maintain this rating variable.

A
  • The number of visits is reduced across the driving population, therefore when calculating the rate differential using new data, the relative proportion will not change.
  • Total aggregate premium will not change because of the reduction. Actuary will regularly review data available and make sure rating calculation is updated accordingly
  • OBF will be used to adjust the overall premium level if necessary
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10
Q

S2016Q3
The privacy commissioner rules that number of dental visits in the past 12 months constitutes personal information and requires informed customer consent. Identify 2 elements that should be included in the consent request to the customer.

A
  • what personal information will be collected
  • the circumstances under which personal information may be disclosed to other parties
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11
Q

F2017Q2
insurer believes recent improvements in economic conditions reduce the need to segregate by credit because “most phs are now in a good economic situation”.
Fully discuss the appropriateness of using credit based insurance scores for risk differentiation

A
  • credit score is statistically significant to the expected loss, it is easy to obtain/verify and hard to manipulate by insured.
  • even if credit scores at the aggregate level are on the rise and high for most phs, the relative risk difference between two credit scores will not change.
  • this will not lead to overall increase in premium, but rather a better distribution among risks and avoid subsidization between low and high risks.
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12
Q

F2017Q2
insurer believes recent improvements in economic conditions reduce the need to segregate by credit because “most phs are now in a good economic situation”.
discuss the need to review cs consent forms for all phs, citing an outcome from a landmark decision

A
  • If the company finds that its consent form is deficient, it will likely be required to follow the results of the PIPEDA report. - It will need to update its current consent form, inform all current phs of the new consent form and obtain consent.
  • The insurer will not have to obtain from all historical phs, as this would put strain on the company and broker network.
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13
Q

F2017Q2
insurer believes recent improvements in economic conditions reduce the need to segregate by credit because “most phs are now in a good economic situation”.
Discuss the need to review credit based insurance scores after a change in economic conditions

A
  • a change in economic condition will cause distributional shift in credit scores
  • this will be addressed by pricing actuaries, and they will adjust the rates accordingly
  • cs is not used to set overall premium, just to redistribute it fairly according to expected loss. so the overall premium will not be impacted
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