Chapter 19: Methods of calculating the risk premium Flashcards
Burning cost
The ACTUAL COST OF CLAIMS during a past period of years
expressed as an annual rate per unit of exposure
Burning cost premium (BCP) calculation
BCP = (ΣClaims) / Total exposed to risk
Effective burning cost
The burning cost using unadjusted data.
(Since claims should usually be increased to allow for past inflation, an IBNR)
2 Criticisms of the burning costs premium applied to figures without adjustments
- we IGNORE TRENDS such as claims inflation
- by taking current exposure (often premiums) and comparing this with current undeveloped claims, we will UNDERSTATE THE ULTIMATE POSITION.
BURNING COST:
3 Basic elements of the risk premium per unit of exposure
- average COST PER CLAIM
- CLAIM FREQUENCY per policy
- average UNIT OF EXPOSURE per policy
BURNING COST:
Data requirements for calculating risk premium
We need POLICY DATA to calculate the overall exposure or the split within each risk group.
We also need CLAIMS DATA.
BURNING COST:
3 data items needed for each policy
- DATES on cover
- all RATING FACTOR and EXPOSURE MEASURE details
- details of premiums charged,
4 Advantages of the burning cost approach
- simplicity
- needs relatively little data
- quicker than other methods to perform
- allows for experience of individual risk or portfolios
4 Disadvantages of a burning cost approach
- harder to spot trends so it provides less understanding of changes impacting the individual risks
- adjusting past data is hard
- adjusting for changes in cover, deductibles and so on may be hard as we often lack individual claims data
- it can be a very crude approach
Frequency-severity approach
We assess the expected loss cost for a particular insurance structure by:
- estimating the distribution of expected CLAIM FREQUENCIES
- and DISTRIBUTION OF SEVERITIES for that structure
and combining the results.
Key assumption of the frequency-severity approach
That the loss frequency and severity distributions are not correlated.
4 causes of frequency trends
Changes in:
- accident frequency
- the propensity to make claims and other changes in the social and economic environment
- legislation
- the structure of the risk
FREQUENCY-SEVERITY:
For each historical policy year, frequency of losses is calculated as
frequency
= ultimate number of losses /
exposure measure
4 drivers of severity trends
- economic inflation
- changes in court awards and legislation
- economic conditions
- changes to the structure of the risk`
FREQUENCY-SEVERITY:
For each historical policy year, average severity of losses is calculated as,
average severity =
ultimate cost of losses /
ultimate number of losses
8 Possible drivers of FREQUENCY trends for employers’ liability insurance
- increasing compensation culture
- propensity of no-win-no-fee arrangements
- growth of claims management companies
- changes in health and safety regulations
- court decisions
- changes in economic conditions
- emergence of latent claims
- changes in policy terms, conditions, excesses, limits, etc
7 Possible drivers of SEVERITY trends for employers’ liability insurance
- salary inflation
- court decisions / inflation
- medical advantages / medical inflation
- inflation of legal costs
- legislative changes
- interest rate changes
- changes in policy terms, conditions, excesses limits
FREQUENCY-SEVERITY:
3 Methods to develop individual loss amounts to ultimate (for IBNER)
- We could apply an incurred development factor to each individual loss
- (More realistically) we could develop only open claims using “case estimate” development factors.
- We could use stochastic development methods to allow for the variation that may occur in individual loss amounts around each of their expected values.
Aggregate deductible
The maximum amount that the insured can retain within their deductible when all losses are aggregated.
Non-ranking deductibles
The non-ranking component of a deductible does NOT contribute towards aggregate deductible.
Ranking deductible
The ranking component of a deductible does contribute towards an insured’s aggregate deductible.
Trailing deductible
The amount that is retained by the insured for each individual loss once the aggregate deductible has been fully eroded.