Speaker: Jae Youn Ahn
Affiliation: Ewha Womans University
Abstract
The collective risk model is a fundamental framework in insurance ratemaking for modeling aggregate losses by combining claim frequency and claim severity components. A key structural requirement for a stable experience rating system is a monotone ordering property: policyholders with worse past experience should receive a stochastically larger prediction for future losses, and hence a higher premium. Such credibility-type monotonicity is well documented in the insurance literature for univariate outcomes under classical random-effect models. However, extending this principle to the collective risk model is nontrivial because the relevant history is inherently multivariate, involving both claim counts and individual claim amounts. Hence, despite its practical importance, a corresponding credibility-type ordering has not been systematically developed for predictive distributions of aggregate loss. In this paper, we provide an example showing that standard collective risk model specifications can violate basic intuitive monotonicity: adding an additional but sufficiently small claim may decrease the premia, thereby creating perverse incentives for strategic reporting and potentially undermining the integrity of experience rating. Motivated by this pathology, we formalize a credibility order tailored to collective risk models and derive tractable sufficient conditions under which the predictive distribution of aggregate loss is monotone in past experience, ruling out such violations. Numerical studies and an empirical illustration using real insurance data accompany our theoretical results.
About Maths Colloquium
The Mathematics Colloquium is directed at students and academics working in the fields of pure and applied mathematics, and statistics.
We aim to present expository lectures that appeal to our wide audience.
Information for speakers
Information for speakers
Maths colloquia are usually held on Mondays, from 2pm to 3pm, in various locations at St Lucia.
Presentations are 50 minutes, plus five minutes for questions and discussion.
Available facilities include:
- computer
- data projector
- chalkboard or whiteboard
To avoid technical difficulties on the day, please contact us in advance of your presentation to discuss your requirements.
Venue
Room 442