NCCI 1 Flashcards
Explain the experience period
Number of years of individual experience must balance stability and responsiveness.
NCCI experience plan uses 3 prior years of each insured’s actual loss experience (some exceptions e.g. new business)
Most recent year not used since still in effect when new policy is being quoted.
Which adjustments are made to losses?
NCCI does not develop or trend actual losses or change them to latest benefit levels.
NCCI instead makes adjustments to expected losses to make comparable to historical actual losses.
Explain the eligibility criterion for NCCI experience rating
Eligibility based on insured’s manual premium during experience period.
Experience rating is mandatory once insured meets eligibility requirements.
Need to satisfy 1 of these requirements:
1. Risk’s most recent 2y of experience period has total manual premium of at least amount in column A
2. Risk’s average annual manual premium over entire experience period (3y) is at least amount in column B
Amounts can be found in Rule 2 R5-R9
What special adjustment must be done to NCCI Experience Mod?
Must be rounded to 2 decimals
What is the Loss-Free Mod?
((1-Zp)Ep+(1-Ze)Ee)/E
A = 0
Explain the Weighting Value (W)
Used to limit weight of actual losses
Depends on E(Loss)
Explain the Ballast Value (B)
Provides stability by limiting impact of any single loss
What are R11 - R12?
Limits on actual losses
Explain the D-ratio
Expected primary % of expected losses (similar to ELR)
List 6 types of losses excluded from experience rating
- Claims attributable to Covid-19
- Claims resulting from rescue, recovery and clean-up work at World Trade Center
- Claims directly attributable to Sept 11 attacks
- Non-compensable claims
- Fraudulent claims
- Coal mine disease (black lung) claims
Calculate W for interstate risk
- Multiply each state W by state’s E
- Sum results
- Divide by Tot E
- Round to 2 decimals
Calculate B for interstate risk
- Multiply each state B by state’s E
- Sum results
- Divide by Tot E
- Round to neared whole number
Explain 3 procedures NCCI uses to add stability to model
- Limit/cap losses that enter into experience rating
Capped because they are bad luck and should not be allowed to swing mod past a certain point. - Split losses between primary and excess
Since primary losses are more stable, they receive more credibility.
For very rare and catastrophic claims that are essentially all XS loss, frequency is not controllable so split is not appropriate. - Give greater weight to actual experience for larger risks
The larger the risk, the more stable their expected losses are.
If actual experience for small risks was given same weight as for larger risks, mods for small risks would be erratic. - Introduce Ballast Value to reduce impact of individual risk experience
- Max/Min Mods
Explain the assumption behind B and K being constant for all risk sizes.
According to law of large numbers, large risks should be more stable than small risks.
Keeping numbers constant gives much more credibility to large risks than small risks.
Critique the theory that B and K should be constant for all risk sizes
WC loss experience does not follow law of large numbers due to the long-tail nature of business
Large insureds have more loss ratio variance due to diversity of operations and exposures