Experience Rating (Fisher) Flashcards
Define experience rating
Relates insured’s premium for current term to their own loss experience from prior terms.
Insured’s actual loss experience is credibility weighted with expected losses to produce a modification factor that is applied to manual premium to get modified premiums.
How do you interpret the modification factor
If mod < 1 = credit mod
If mod > 1 = debit mod
Debit mod implies risk has worse than average experience compared to other risks in same class.
It gives NO indication on good or bad risks, only indicate how compare to class.
Mod > 1 may be due to poor class fit or pure chance.
List 4 differences that would be identified with experience rating
- Compensation
- Variation in pants and premises
- Operating processes
- Materials involved
- Management
- Employee morale
- Claims consciousness
- Relation to community
Explain why experience rating is particularly well suited for Commercial Lines
Company management has great deal of control over company practices
Discuss the relationship between credibility of individual risk experience and strength of classification plan
Credibility of individual risk experience increases with greater variance between loss experience of risks within classification.
Experience rating is more powerful when classification plan does not sufficiently explain variance in loss experience between risks
When classification plan is very strong, experience rating will be less important
Experience rating only adds value when there is a lot of variance unexplained by rating variables (accounts for VHM within class)
Sophisticated class plan has more homogeneous classes (vs simple class plan) so experience rating has less impact
List 3 advantages of experience rating
- Accounts for differences between risks in class
- Accounts for variables that are difficult to quantify
- Further refinement of classification beyond manual rates (further tailored to loss potential)
Describe 3 goals of experience rating
- Greater risk equity (main goal)
Degree of charge based on past experience should be degree to which it is predictive of future losses (not an attempt to charge back for past losses) - Safety incentive
By charging insureds a higher premium for prior losses, insureds have a financial incentive for loss control.
Need to be balanced with first objective since, in isolation, would charge for all prior losses, while first goal would only charge for non-random prior losses that are predictive of future loss potential. - Enhance market competition
More companies will be willing to sell insurance since experience rating helps guarantee equal profit potential on all risks after application of experience mod.
Describe the 3 types of credibility
- Classical (aka limited fluctuation)
Determine full cred standard using std normal distribution based on given prob that observed experience will be within some % of true mean - Buhlmann (aka greatest accuracy or least square)
Involves analysis of variance - Bayesian
Update prior hypotheses with new experience
Experience rating uses which type of credibility?
Buhlmann
Credibility is the most important consideration in designing rating plan
Z = E / (E+K)
E = Expected Losses
K = EVPV / VHM
Explain EVPV
Expected Value of Process Variance
Purely random variance resulting from loss process being stochastic.
If EVPV increases, K increases so Z decreases
Explain VHM
Variance of Hypothetical Mean
Variation from expected experience due to risk being different than others in its class.
If VHM increases, K decreases so Z increases
State 3 conditions Z should satisfy
- included between 0 and 1
- Derivative with respect to E positive
(Z increases as E increases, ie red does not decrease as risk size increases) - Derivative of Z/E with respect to E negative
(Z/E decreases as E increases, ie % charge for loss decreases as risk size increases)
If k is constant, all 3 conditions automatically satisfied and Z strictly smaller than 1
Calculate Mod for no-split plan
No split = no subdivision of losses
Mod = (ZA + (1-Z)E)/E = 1 + Z(A-E)/E = (A+K)/(E+K)
ISO GL Experience rating plan uses this
Explain split plan
Under split plan, actual and expected losses are split between primary and excess.
Primary amount reflects claim frequency and receives most weight in experience rating calculation
Excess amount reflects severity
Works better when parameter risk (cc uncertainty driven by many small med-only and TT claims for WC) can be separated from process risk (severity volatile driven by few but very influential major PP, PT and F claims)
Calculate Mod under Split Plan
Mod = 1 + Zp(Ap-Ep)/E + Ze(Ae-Ee)/E = 1 + (Ap-Ep)/(E+Kp) + (Ae-Ee)/(E+Ke)
Zp = E/(E+Kp)
Ze = E/(E+Ke)