Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Context of
Actuarial Work
- What?
- External forces influencing the problem
- Actuary,
Client,
Institution
can't
control
- Can change
over time
- E.g.
- life office valuation
- Data
- Policyholder data
- Policy
details
(t&c,
declared
bonuses)
- Asset data
- Valuation model
and assumption
- mortality
rates and
changes
- interest
rates
(past
and
present)
- inflation
rates
(past and
present)
- valuation
regulations
- develop new
life assurance
product
- company information
- strategic
plan &
existing
product
portfolio
- distribution
methods
(direct sales,
broker, etc)
- ability to
raise capital
- competitive
advantages
- ability to
mitigate the
risks of the
product
- context to develop
- mortality,
interest,
inflation
rates
- competitors and
competing
products
- taxation
- marketing
regulations
- income and
wealth of
potential
policyholders
- valuing
defined
benefit
pension
scheme
- pension
shceme
- membership
data
- assets data
- scheme rules
defining all of the
benefits
- models
and
assumption
- interest rates
- inflation rates
- decrement rates
- mortality
- early leavers
- illness
- Why?
- Way to
understand
the problem
- Use model
that depends
on context
- Assumptions
of context
- interest
rate
- mortality
rate
- surrender
rate
- inflation
- Compare Past
vs present
- See how
assumption
differs and
change
- Simplification
of real world
- e.g. Pension
valuation
- one rate of
interest
- one future
rate of salary
increase
(pension salary
index)
- all
retire
age
65
- Actuarial Control Cycle
- Variable Context
- Allow simple assumption
- Result
different
from
model
projection
- Change
model
assumption
- How it fit
- Know Context
- to Designing the
solution
- monitor result
- check
model
accuracy
- assess effect
of changing
context and
particular
circumstances
of the client
- Not static
- Context change
over time
- Component
- Professionalism
- Code of
conduct
- Practice
standards
- Valuation to
comply practice
standards
- Regulatory
environment
- Laws and
regulations of
the country
- valuation
comply UK
regulation,
Solvency II
- val. report
is checked
by UK FSA
- e.g.
- fin. reporting
- competition
- sales of financial product
- business
conduct at
point of sale
and in force
business
conduct
- content of
insurance
contract
- compulsory
insurance.
e.g. sell
motor
business to
have GI
license
- Supervisory
authorities
- Government
and Judicial
context
- Government
policy
- Policy
propose
new
regulation
- parliament
debate of
possible new
regulation
- experts on
policy
discussions
- impact to
financial
institutions
- Taxation
- interest
allow for
UK tax
- encourage/discourage
investment in product
- affects
- product
design e.g.
max capital
gains vs
div.
- pricing
- valuations
- cash flows
- EBITDA as
performance
measure instead
- expense
analysis
- Low
tax on
ISA
- retirement
contribution
tax free
- Social assistance
and social
insurance
- Means-
testing
- subsidize
insurance very
basic cover
- dependend
state
provision
- e.g. EPF
- Judicial
decisions
- Claims
assumption
allow award
decisions
behavior
- interpretation
of legislation
- judicial attitude
towards
interpreting
Policy wording
- affect
liability
claims
- Physical
environment
- Climate
and
natural
perils
- E.g.
- floods
- drought
- hurricane
- tsunami
- earthquake
- typhoon
- Large
insurance
claim at once
- Expensive
premium in
area-prone
- Govt provide
assistance to
encourage
insurance coverage
- Reinsurance
programme
- CAT model
- Expert inputs
- Pricing
- Pandemics
- E.g.
- SARS
- HIV virus
- H5N1
- H1N1
- Impact
- health
claim rates
- key staff
absences
- Mortality
rates
- defaults by
debtors or
payment
delay
- Asset
price,
index
price
- Man made
disasters
- sometimes
difficult to
quantify
- terrorist, oil
spill, mines,
nuclear
reactor
explosion
- Technological
developments
- impact to claims
expense (low cost
transaction
system vs manual
labor)
- impact
to
claim
rate
- Medical
technology
- new business:
insure phone,
laptop
- Admin/selling
cost
- Economic
and Social
Environment
- Economic
conditions
and trends
- interest
rates and
inflation
assumptions
- recession
affects claim
rates
- Demographic
structure and
trends
- majority
population at
what age?
- affects
pension
liabilities
- Work and
employment
patterns
- retirement
age
- wage
inflation
- mobile work
force:jump to
different job
- M&A and
Rationalisation
- flexibility
in
pension
scheme
- Social
factors
and
trends
- theft rates
affect claim
frequencies
- fraudulent
claim trend
- trends in propensity
of claim based on
geographic area
- legislation
against
discrimination
gender, race and
age
- development of
micro-finance,
micro-insurance,
takaful, islamic
banking and sukuk to
cater lower income
markets and muslim
market
- Industrial and labour
union issues
- E.g. surplus
allocation in a
DB pension
shceme
- union
negotiate
salary-->
affect cost
of employee
benefit
- Industry and business
environment
- Range of
products
and services
offered
- Convergence of
financial
institutions
- Banccasurance
- Product
distribution
and
intermediaries
- Accounting
standards and
practices
- Affect assumption
for published
valuation
- earned
premium
UPR
- Competition
- Industry
associations
- Provide claims
information
- assumptions
benchmark
- Stakeholders
- Corporate culture
- Conservative
business
approach
- Globalisation
- Multinational