Lecture Notes 2 - University of Illinois at Urbana

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Transcript Lecture Notes 2 - University of Illinois at Urbana

Math 479 / 568
Casualty Actuarial Mathematics
Fall 2014
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Professor Rick Gorvett
Session 2:
Risks and Risk Theory
August 28, 2014
What Did We Discuss Last Time?
• What an actuary is, in words and numbers
• What actuaries have traditionally done
• What actuaries are doing, and starting to do,
these days
• What the P/C insurance market looks like
Today’s Agenda
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Vocabulary
Actuarial science vs. finance
Elements of an insurable risk
Risk management functions, objectives, and
techniques
Contract law
Insurance contract provisions
Types of insurance coverages (summaries provided
for your information)
Adverse selection
Risk theory and insurer solvency
Vocabulary
We First Must Learn to Quack
Vocabulary is sometimes troublesome in practice.
E.g, here are two words with multiple meanings
• “Risk”: sometimes used to mean
– Uncertainty
– An entity exhibiting uncertainty (e.g., policyholder)
• “Loss”: sometimes used to mean
– An event causing damage or injury
– A policyholder claim
– A dollar amount associated with damage or injury
Some Foundational Vocabulary
• Risk: uncertainty concerning loss (occurrence,
amount)
• Objective risk: variation of actual relative to
expected loss
– Law of Large Numbers: as the number of
exposures increases, loss experience can be
predicted more accurately
• Subjective risk: perception of risk or
uncertainty – i.e., by an individual observer
Some Foundational Vocabulary (cont.)
“Risk is synonymous with uncertainty – lack of knowledge.”
- Irving Fisher, The Theory of Interest, 1930
“But Uncertainty must be taken in a sense radically distinct from
the familiar notion of Risk, from which it has never been
properly separated.”
- Frank Knight, Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit, 1921
“The term‘risk,’ as loosely used in everyday speech and in
economic discussion, really covers two things which,
functionally at least, in their causal relations to the phenomena
of economic organization, are categorically different…. The
essential fact is that ‘risk’ means in some cases a quantity
susceptible of measurement, while at other times it is
something distinctly not of this character…. It will appear that
a measurable uncertainty, or ‘risk’ proper, as we shall use the
term, is so far different from an unmeasurable one that it is not
in effect an uncertainty at all. We shall accordingly restrict the
term ‘uncertainty’ to cases of the non-quantit(at)ive type.”
- Knight, ibid
Some Foundational Vocabulary (cont.)
• Chance of loss: probability of a specified
event occurring
– Probabilities can be objective or subjective
– A different concept than “risk”
• Peril: a cause of loss
– E.g., fire, earthquake, windstorm,…
– For example, an insurance policy may cover losses
from “all perils” (except those specifically
excluded) or “named perils”
Some Foundational Vocabulary (cont.)
• Hazard: a physical or “emotional” condition
that increases (or even creates) the chance of
loss (frequency and/or severity)
Physical hazard: e.g., icy roads, defective
wiring
Moral hazard: dishonesty or character
defects that increase loss frequency or severity
Morale hazard: carelessness or indifference
to loss because of existence of insurance
Some Foundational Vocabulary (cont.)
• Pure risk: involves only the possibilities of
loss or no loss
– No possibility of gain
– Often one can protect against pure risks through
insurance or another risk financing mechanism
• Speculative risk: involves the possibilities of
loss, no loss, or gain
– E.g., gambling
– Generally, not considered insurable
Types of Pure Risks – Often Insurable
• Personal risks: risks that directly affect an
individual
– E.g., death, sickness, unemployment
• Property risks: risks involving damage to or
theft of property
– E.g., direct loss, indirect loss
• Liability risks: risks involving bodily injury or
property damage to another person
– Generally no upper limit; legal defense costs
Actuarial Science
versus
Finance
Bühlmann’s Classification
Actuaries are of three kinds
• Actuaries of the first kind: life
– Deterministic calculations
• Actuaries of the second kind: casualty
– Probabilistic methods
• Actuaries of the third kind: financial
– Stochastic processes
Actuaries vs. Financial Economists
Similarities
• Technical, quantitative skills
• Risk considerations
• Specialized vocabulary
• Address monetary issues
Actuaries vs. Financial Economists
Traditional Differences
• Approach to risk
• Approach to interest rates
• Approach to profitability
• Bases of valuation
Insurance vs. Finance
Risk
Insurance
• Pure risk
– Loss or no loss
– No gain
• Law of large numbers
– More exposures ==>
more accurate
predictions
Finance
• Speculative risk
– Loss or no loss or
gain/profit
• Portfolio risk
– Diversification potential
Insurable
Risks
Requirements of an Insurable Risk
• Large number of exposure units
– Preferably, very similar
– Allows for law of large numbers
• Accidental loss
– Outside control of insured
– Moral hazard issues
– Randomness ==> law of large numbers
Requirements of an Insurable Risk
(cont.)
• Losses are determinable and measurable
– Definite as to cause, place, time, and amount
• Losses not catastrophic
– Not a large proportion of exposure units
– Pooling wouldn’t work
– Underwriting tools -- e.g.:
• Geographic spread
• Reinsurance
Requirements of an Insurable Risk
(cont.)
• Calculable chance of loss
– Frequency
– Severity
• Economically feasible premium
– Affordable
– Small relative to policy limit
Requirements of an Insurable Risk
(cont.)
• Which of the following are insurable risks?
If not, why not?
– War
– Unemployment
– Catastrophic meteor strike
– Jobs re-training program
Key Types of Insurable Risks
• Property
– Direct property damage
– Loss of use
– Business interruption
• Liability
– Damage / injury to others
• From ownership (e.g., of car, home, business)
• From personal activities
• From professional activities
• Life
– Protect family
– Protect business
• Health
Types of Insurance
• Private
– Life and health
– Property-casualty
• Lines of business
• Reinsurance
• Government
– Social
• Social security
• Unemployment
– Other
• FDIC
Fire
Inland marine
Ocean marine
Personal auto
Commercial auto
Homeowners
Commercial multi-peril
Commercial liability
Workers compensation ….
Insurance
and
Risk Management
Functions of Insurance
• Risk-bearing and risk-pooling
– Transfer risks to insurer (for premium)
– Insurer diversifies by pooling
• Financial intermediation
– Issue debt contracts, and invest funds
– Compensation through yield spreads
– Economic value from market imperfections
Benefits of Insurance to Society
•
•
•
•
•
Indemnification
“Good night’s sleep”
Investment funds
Loss prevention
Enhancement of credit
Costs of Insurance to Society
(the “dark side”)
• Cost of doing business
– Expenses
• Fraud
• Inflated claims
Methods Of Handling Risks
• Insurance is only one way of addressing risk
• Methods of managing risk:
– Avoid the risk in the first place
– Control the frequency or severity of loss
• Loss prevention; loss reduction
– Retain the risk
• Active vs. passive retention
– Transfer the risk via non-insurance mechanisms
• Contractual transfer; hedging
– Transfer the risk via insurance mechanisms
Risk Management:
Steps in the Process
• Determine the corporation’s objectives
• Identify the risk exposures
• Quantify the exposures
• Assess the impact
• Examine financial risk management tools
• Select appropriate risk management approach
• Implement and monitor program
Risk Management Objectives
• Pre-loss objectives
– Economy
– Reduction of worry / anxiety
• I.e., get a “good night’s sleep”
– Meet externally imposed obligations /
requirements
– Social responsibility
Risk Management Objectives (cont.)
• Post-loss objectives
–
–
–
–
–
Survival of the organization
Uninterrupted operations
Earnings stability
Continued growth
Social responsibility
Risk Management Objectives (cont.)
• Issues and conflicts
– Relationship of objectives to general corporate
goals and objectives
– Relationship to financial theory
• Value maximization
– Conflicts between the objectives themselves
Risk Management Techniques
Risk Control
Reduce frequency and / or severity
of potential losses
• Avoidance
– Never take on the exposure in the first place
– Abandon the exposure if already have it
• Loss control
– Change characteristics of the exposure
– Attempt to reduce both frequency and severity
• Separation
• Combination (pooling)
Risk Management Techniques (cont.)
Risk Financing
Post-loss funding
• Retention
– For non-serious, highly-predictable losses
– What should retention level be?
– How should losses be paid?
•
•
•
•
No advance funding
Earmarked accounts
Captive insurers
Risk retention groups
Risk Management Techniques (cont.)
Risk financing (cont.)
• Non-insurance transfers
– Contracts
– Leases
– Hold-harmless agreements
• Insurance
–
–
–
–
Voluntary vs. mandatory
Deductibles
Issues:
Excess insurance
- Price
Selection of insurer
- Service
- Solidity
Contract Law
and
Insurance Contracts
Requirements Of A Contract
• Offer
• Acceptance
• Consideration
• Legally competent parties
• Legal purpose
Insurance Contracts – Special
Characteristics
• Aleatory contract
– Contractual exchange may be unequal in value
– Contingent on the occurrence / non-occurrence
of a specific event
• Unilateral contract
– A legally enforceable promise is made by just
one party
• Conditional contract
– There are qualifications on the insurer’s promise
Insurance Contracts – Special
Characteristics (cont.)
• Personal contract
– Contract is between the insurer and insured
– Property/casualty policies generally cannot be
“assigned” to others (although life policies can)
• Contract of adhesion
– Contract is generally written by just one of the
parties (the insurer)
– Thus, any ambiguities in the contract are
generally resolved against the insurer
Other Insurance Concepts
• Indemnity
– Restore insured to (financial) condition before
the loss
– Purpose of “indemnity” principle:
• Do not allow the insured to profit
• Reduce moral hazard
– Actual Cash Value (ACV)
– Exceptions:
• Valued policies
• Replacement cost coverage
• Life insurance
Other Insurance Concepts (cont.)
• Insurable interest
– Insured has an “insurable interest” if suffers in
event of a loss
– Life insurance: required at contract inception
– P/C insurance: required at time of loss
• Subrogation
– The insured’s right to recover against another
(responsible) party is transferred to the insurer
Elements of an Insurance Contract
• (Application)
– Applicant requests and offers to buy coverage
– Insurer accepts or rejects the request
• (Binder)
– Temporary agreement providing coverage
• Declarations
– Identifies the insured and critical information
– Describes coverage in broad terms
Elements of an Insurance Contract
(cont.)
• Definitions
• Insuring agreement(s)
– Summarizes major promises agreed to
– Named-perils: only specifically named perils
are covered by the policy
– All-risks: policy covers any losses unless from a
peril which is specifically excluded
Elements of an Insurance Contract
(cont.)
• Exclusions and exceptions
– Reasons for exclusions:
• Perils are uninsurable (refer back to requirements of
an insurable risk)
• Avoid duplication of coverage
• Coverage is not typically needed
• Conditions
– Identifies the duties of the insured
Elements of an Insurance Contract
(cont.)
• Miscellaneous
– Relationships among insurer / insured / third
parties
– E.g., cancellation, subrogation
• Endorsements (P/C) and riders (life)
– Change the provisions of the original policy
Deductibles
• Insured retains “first” part of loss
• Purposes of deductibles:
– Eliminate small claims
– Reduce premiums
– Reduce moral / morale hazard
• Types of deductibles:
–
–
–
–
Straight
Aggregate
Franchise
Disappearing
• Versus self-insured retentions (SIRs)
Coinsurance
• In health insurance: insured and insurer split
responsibility for losses on a percentage
basis (e.g., 20 / 80)
• In property insurance: gives insured an
incentive to insure property for at least a
certain amount
– “Insurance-to-value”
– If insufficient coverage is purchased, insured
must share in the loss
Liability
• Criminal law
• Wrongs against society
• Breach of contract
• Torts – wrongs against others
– Intentional
• Assault, battery, trespass, slander
– Absolute / strict
• Liability imposed regardless of negligence / fault
• Manufacturing explosives, owning dangerous animals
– Negligence
• Failure to exercise a legal standard of care
Elements of Negligence
• A legal duty to act (or not act) in a way that
protects others from harm
• Breach of that duty
• Damage or injury to the one owed the duty
• Causal relationship (“proximate cause”)
between the breach and the injury
Types of Damages
• Special damages
– “Economic” damages
– Clearly determined and measured
• Medical expenses
• Property damage
• Loss of earnings
• General damages
– Cannot be specifically measured
• Pain and suffering
• Loss of companionship
• Punitive damages
– Intended to punish or deter
Defenses Against Negligence
• Assumption of risk
• Contributory negligence
• Comparative negligence
• Last clear chance
• Sovereign immunity
Insurance
Coverages
Quick Summaries of Some Coverages
• Personal
–
–
–
–
Auto (liab & phys dam)
HO (liab & property)
Inland marine
Umbrella
• Government
– Federal flood insurance
– FAIR plans
– Fed. crop insurance
• Commercial
–
–
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–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
General liability
Business income
Commercial multi-peril
Businessowners
Workers compensation
Commercial auto
Professional liability
Boiler & machinery
Marine (ocean & inland)
Title
Umbrella
Personal Auto
• Liability coverage
– BI: bodily injury
– PD: property damage
– Split versus combined single limits (CSL)
• Medical payments coverage
• Uninsured / underinsured motorists coverage
• Physical damage (coverage for damage to
“your” auto)
– Collision
– Comprehensive (other than collision)
Homeowners
• Various policy forms – e.g.,
– HO-3: special form (very common)
– HO-4: contents (for renters)
– HO-6: condominium owners
• Section I: property coverages
–
–
–
–
Dwelling
Other structures
Personal property
Loss of use
• Section II: liability coverages
– Personal liability
– Medical payments to others
HO-3 policy form
Personal Inland Marine
• Protection for property subject to movement
• Can tailor coverage to specific nature of
property
• Can get higher limits than in HO policy
• Generally, coverage is worldwide
• Personal Articles Floater (PAF)
– E.g., can cover jewelry, furs, silverware, golf
equipment, fine arts, stamp / coin collections
• Scheduled Personal Property Endorsement
Personal Umbrella
• Protection against catastrophic lawsuit or
judgment
• Typically, $ 1-10 million liability limits
• Two coverages:
– Excess liability insurance: applies on top of (in
addition to) underlying coverage (e.g., auto and HO)
– Other coverage: covers certain losses not covered
by underlying policies (after deductible or selfinsured retention)
• E.g., personal injury: libel, slander,…
Federal Property Insurance Programs
• Certain types of perils are difficult for
private insurance companies to insure – at
least at affordable premiums
• Examples:
– Flood insurance in flood zones
– Property insurance in riot-prone areas
– Crop insurance
• For each of these, the government got into
the insurance business
Federal Flood Insurance
• Problems in flood-prone areas
– Potentially catastrophic loss
– Adverse selection
• 1968 National Flood Insurance Act
– Provide insurance in flood zones
– At subsidized rates
• 1983 Write-Your-Own Program
– Private insurers write the business
– Backed up by federal government
FAIR Plans
• FAIR: Fair Access to Insurance Requirements
• Property insurance: difficulties due to urban
riots
• 1968 Urban Property and Reinsurance Act
• Make property insurance available to urban
property owners unable to obtain coverage in
normal markets
• 31 states
• Pool / syndicate
– Operated by private insurers
– Private insurers share in program loss experience
Federal Crop Insurance
• Losses to crops – e.g., hail, wind, drought,
excessive rain, plant disease
• Catastrophic crop insurance:
– Guarantees 50% of average yield
– Indemnified at 60% of expected market price
• Multiple-peril crop insurance
– 65% or 75% yield guarantee
– Can elect up to 100% of expected market price
General Liability
• Exposures
– Premises and operations
• Premises: ownership and maintenance
• Operations: on or off premises
– Products and completed operations liability
– Contractual liability
– Directors and officers liability
Commercial General Liability (CGL)
Loss Dates
• Occurrence policy
– Covers losses occurring during the policy period
– Regardless of when claim is “made” (reported)
• Claims-made policy
– Covers claims reported during policy period
– Provided that the loss occurred after the
“retroactive date”
– “Tail” coverage
Business Income Insurance
• Also called “business interruption” insurance
• Covers loss of “business income” and “extra
expenses” that result from physical damage
to covered property
• “Business income”: pre-tax profit or loss
that would have been earned, plus continuing
normal operating expenses
• “Extra expenses”: would not have been
incurred without the loss – e.g., cost of
temporary relocation, rent of substitute
equipment
Commercial Multi-Peril (CMP)
• Also called “commercial package policy” (CPP)
• Package policy: combination of two or more
coverages into a single policy
• Some advantages of a package policy:
– Convenience
– Reduce potential gaps in protection
– Don’t need to deal with multiple insurers – a e.g.,
determining which insurer provides coverage in a
given situation
– Potentially lower premiums (vs. purchasing
coverages separately)
Businessowners Policy
• Appropriate for small- to medium-sized
businesses: stores, office buildings,
apartment buildings
• Package policy
– Building
– Business personal property
– Business income and extra expense
– Business liability
Workers Compensation & Employers
Liability (WC & EL)
• Part One: Workers compensation insurance
– Legal obligation for employers to provide
benefits to injured (on-the-job) employees
– Work-related injury or occupational disease
– No “policy limit”
– Statutory benefits per WC law in each state
• Part Two: Employers liability insurance
– For work-related injury/disease not compensated
under state WC law
WC & EL (cont.)
• Some of the objectives of WC
– Sure, prompt, reasonable income -- regardless of fault
– Single remedy  reduce delays and costs
– Encourage employer interest in safety / rehabilitation
• Other issues:
– Who is an “employee”?
– What constitutes “employment”?
Commercial Auto
• Liability coverage
– BI and PD
– Accident caused by ownership / maintenance /
use of covered auto
• Physical damage coverage
• Numerical classifications and symbols
Professional Liability
• Medical malpractice
– Hospital and physicians & surgeons policies
– Policy limits on per-incident and aggregate bases
– Does not cover “general liability exposures”
• Errors and omissions
– Architects and engineers
– Insurance agents and brokers
Boiler & Machinery
• Direct damage from covered cause of loss –
e.g., explosions
• Can also cover indirect loss (business
income and extra expense)
• Emphasis on loss prevention and safety
– Significant service / engineering activities
Ocean Marine
• Protection for goods transported over water
• Significant history – e.g., Lloyd’s of London
• Classes of coverage:
– Hull – physical damage to ship
– Cargo – covers shipper for damage or loss of
goods
– Protection and indemnity (P&I) – liability
– Freight – covers ship owner for loss of earnings
if goods damaged / lost
Inland Marine
• Protection for goods transported on land
• Some classes of coverage:
– Domestic goods in transit
– Property held by bailees
– Mobile equipment and property
– Means of transportation and communication
Title Insurance
• Protection against unknown defects in title
• Characteristics:
– Protects against title defects that occurred prior
to effective date of the policy
– Insurer “assumes” that no losses will occur
– Policy runs indefinitely
– Single premium
– Insured is indemnified in dollars (up to limit)
Commercial Umbrella
• Required underlying coverages
– E.g., CGL, business auto, EL
• Types of losses covered
– BI and PD
– Personal and advertising injury
• Excess liability insurance
– Over underlying coverage, or
– Over self-insured retention (SIR)
A Ratemaking Issue: Adverse Selection
• Examples
–
–
–
–
Flood plain
Health and life insurance
High-risk drivers
Non-insurance: used cars (the “lemons
problem”)
• Solution: underwriting; pricing
Risk Theory
and
Insurer Solvency
Risk Theory
• Typically, risk theory involves the
mathematical specification of the evolution
of an insurer’s financial condition
E.g., U(t) = u + c t – S(t)
• Annual aggregate losses are generally
estimated by specifying two stochastic
processes:
– Frequency (number of claims)
– Severity (size of claim, given there is a claim)
A.M. Best’s Insolvency Study
• June, 1991
• Property / casualty insurers
• 1969-1990
• 372 total insolvencies (302 for which a
primary cause of insolvency could be
determined)
Best’s Insolvency Study (cont.)
• Primary causes of insolvencies
– Deficient loss reserves
28%
– Rapid growth
21
– Alleged fraud
10
– Overstated assets
10
– Significant change in business
9
– Reinsurance failure
7
– Catastrophe losses
6
– Miscellaneous
9
Next Time
• Economics and the insurance market
• References:
– Boor, 1998, “A Macroeconomic View of the
Insurance Marketplace,” CAS Study Note
– Boor, 2004, “The Impact of the Insurance Economic
Cycle on Insurance Pricing,” CAS Study Note