RM2_Practice_Question_Set4_Solution
RM2_Practice_Question_Set4_Solution
Solution:
(i) Basic chain ladder assumptions
• There is a consistent delay pattern in the payment of claims between accident years.
• There is enough experience to date in the most recent accident years to allow development of that
experience to estimate outstanding claims.
• For each accident year, the amount of claims paid, in real terms, in each development year, is a
constant proportion of the total claims, in real terms, from that accident year.
• For each accident year, both the number and average amount of claims relating to each development
year are constant proportions of the totals from that accident year.
1
• The first accident year is fully run off.
• Inflation is allowed for explicitly and we assume that both the past and future inflation assumptions
are correct.
(iv) BF assumptions
• Claims in each development year are a constant proportion (in monetary terms) of total claims in
each accident year.
• Inflation is not allowed for explicitly, rather it is allowed for implicitly as a weighted average of past
inflation.
2. The table below shows cumulative claims (not adjusted for inflation) from a portfolio of insurance policies
for 4 accident years.
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2014 2,047 3,141 3,209 3,310
2015 2,471 3,712 3,810
2016 2,388 3,750
2017 2,580
It may be assumed that payments are made in the middle of a calendar year. In addition, the discount rate
is assumed to be 4% per annum.
It is estimated that the inflation rate applicable to these data has been 5% per annum over the relevant period.
Use the inflation adjusted chain ladder method to estimate the total outstanding payments, up to the end of
Development Year 3, for Accident Year 2017 in mid-2017 prices.
Solution:
First we disaccumulate the amounts. This gives the following table:
Incremental Claim
Payments - Nominal
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2014 2,047 1,094 68 101
2015 2,471 1,241 98
2016 2,388 1,362
2017 2,580
2
Now we convert to 2017 prices, using a past inflation rate of 5%:
Incremental Claim
Payments - Real
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2014 2,369.6584 1,206.135 71.4 101
2015 2,724.2775 1,303.05 98
2016 2,507.40 1,362
2017 2,580
Cumulative Claim
Payments - Real
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2014 2,369.6584 3,575.7934 3,647.1934 3,748.1934
2015 2,724.2775 4,027.3275 4,125.3275
2016 2,507.40 3,869.4
2017 2,580
Projected Claim
Payments - Real
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2014
2015 114.24
2016 86.21 109.24
2017 1,313.93 86.76 110.24
3
Now we discount the claim payments at a rate of 4% p.a.:
Hence, before the discounting, the total amount of outstanding payments for 2017 at mid-2017 prices is:
After the discounting, the total amount of outstanding payments for 2017 at mid-2017 prices is:
Note that this question asked us to find the outstanding amount in 2017 prices. If we had been asked to
find the outstanding amount in nominal (actual) prices, we would have had to apply one further stage -
adjusting for future inflation.
3. The table below shows the claim payments made by a general insurer in each year for a particular type of
insurance.
Claim Payments
Made during
Year ($’000s)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2012 10 50 50 30
2013 50 70 30
2014 40 30
2015 90
(i) What was the total amount paid during the 2015 calendar year?
(ii) Calculate the development factors from development years 1 to 2 for each of the 2012 and 2013 accident
years.
(iii) Given three reasons why it may not be appropriate to use the basic chain ladder method to project the
claim payments for this portfolio, using figures from the table to support your comments.
Solution:
(i) The payments made during 2015 correspond to the figures in the longest diagonal, which total:
90 + 30 + 30 + 30 = 180
4
So the total amount paid during 2015 was $180,000.
(ii) The development factor for Accident Year 2012, Development Year 2 is:
10 + 50 + 50 110
= = 1.83̇
10 + 50 60
The development factor for Accident Year 2013, Development Year 2 is:
50 + 70 + 30 150
= = 1.25
50 + 70 120
(iii) Reason why the basic chain ladder method may not be appropriate here include:
2. The development ratios do not appear to be constant for each origin year. This is illustrated by
the ratios calculated in part (ii).
3. The total payment amounts are relatively small (e.g. a total of $180,000 paid in 2015). There may
not be enough policies for the statistical model to apply, since the figures may be dominated by the
random errors eij .
4. The basic chain ladder does not explicitly model inflation but assumes that a weighted average
of past inflation will apply in the future. If inflation for calendar years 2012 to 2015 has varied
significantly, a chain ladder calculation will not give reliable results. The figures in the table are
too erratic (e.g. the values in Development Year 0 vary from $10,000 to $90,000) to judge whether
this is the case.
4. The tables below show the cumulative cost of incurred claims and the number of claims reported each year for
a certain cohort of insurance policies. The claims are assumed to be fully run-off at the end of Development
Year 2.
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
0 288 634 893
1 465 980
2 773
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
0 110 85 55
1 167 113
2 285
Given that the discounting rate is 4% p.a., and the total amount paid in claims to date, relating to accident
years 0, 1 and 2, is $2,750, calculate the outstanding claims reserve using the PPCI method.
5
Solution:
(a) Method I: This is the method discussed in the course.
Based on the cumulative numbers of claims reported, we estimate the development factors and fill the
lower triangle:
Development Year
0:1 1:2
Mj∗ 1.715 1.282
Claim Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
0 288 346 259
1 465 515
2 773
Then we calculate the PPCIs (assume the average PPCIs are the selected “representative” PPCIs):
Projected Payments
per Claim Incurred
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
0
1 1.0360
2 1.4093 1.0360
6
Projected Claim Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
0
1 372
2 883 649
Discounted Projected
Claim Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
0
1 365
2 866 612
Hence, with the incremental past data and the discounted projection results, the total expected ultimate
loss will be 4,489. Moreover, since the claims paid to date are 2,750, the outstanding claims reserve is
1,739.
(b) Method II: This is another way to do the PPCI method for your information.
First we need the cumulative numbers of claims reported:
We now divide the cumulative cost by the cumulative claim numbers to get the average cost per claim:
Assuming that Accident Year 0 is fully run off, we divide the numbers in the top row by 3.572 to get the
percentages 73.297%, 91.021%, 100%.
So the ultimate average cost per claim figure for Accident Year 1 is:
3.5
= 3.84525
0.91021
We can now calculate the percentage figures for Accident Year 1 as 72.412%, 91.021%.
7
For accident Year 2, we take the average of the two previous figures for Development Year 0:
1
× (72.412 + 73.297) = 72.855%
2
Using the same approach for the claim number figures, we get:
These give ultimate claim number values of 250, 358.974 and 629.685.
So after the 4% p.a. discounting adjustment, the estimated total expected ultimate loss will be:
Since the claims paid to date are 2,750, the outstanding claims reserve is 1,706.88.
5. The following table shows cumulative incurred claims data, by year of accident and reporting development,
for a portfolio of domestic household insurance policies:
Cumulative
Incurred Claims
($’000s)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2011 829 917 978 1,020
2012 926 987 1,053
2013 997 1,098
2014 1,021
The corresponding cumulative number of reported claims, by year of accident and reporting development, are
as follows:
8
Cumulative
Number of
Reported Claims
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2011 63 68 70 74
2012 65 69 72
2013 71 76
2014 70
Use the average cost per claim method with simple average grossing up factors to calculate an estimate of the
outstanding claim amount for these policies for claims arising during these accident years. The claims paid to
date are $3,640,000. In addition, the discount rate is assumed to be 4% per annum. State any assumptions
used.
Solution:
(a) Method I: This is the method discussed in the course.
First estimate the development factors:
Development Year
0:1 1:2 2:3
Mj∗ 1.070 1.036 1.057
Calculate the PPCIs (assume the average PPCIs are the selected “representative” PPCIs):
9
Payments per Claim Incurred
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2011 11,202.70 1,189.19 824.32 567.57
2012 12,165.92 801.43 867.12
2013 11,972.37 1,212.85
2014 12,436.54
Discounted Projected
Claim Payments ($’000s)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2011
2012 42.36
2013 69.06 44.56
2014 85.96 65.46 42.24
Hence, with the incremental past data and the discounted projection results, the ultimate claim incurred
amount from accident years 2011 to 2014 is 4,541.64. The claim paid to date (from accident years 2011
to 2014) amount to 3,640, resulting in a total outstanding claim amount of 901.64, i.e. $901,640.
(b) Method II: This is another way to do the PPCI method.
Dividing each cell in the first table by the corresponding cell in the second table gives the cumulative
average incurred cost per claim, by year of accident and reporting development:
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Payments per Claim Incurred
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2011 13.1587 13.4853 13.9714 13.7838
2012 14.2462 14.3043 14.6250
2013 14.0423 14.4474
2014 14.5857
Completing the ultimate cumulative number of claims reported table and the ultimate cumulative average
incurred cost per claim table using the chain ladder technique with simple grossing up factors gives:
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Projected Payments per
Claim Incurred ($’000s)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2011
2012 14.429
2013 14.669
2014 15.093
Therefore, with the incremental past data and the discounted projection results, the estimated ultimate
claims incurred amount from accident years 2011 to 2014 is:
1, 020 + 76.114 × 14.429 × 1.04−0.5 + 83.267 × 14.669 × 1.04−1.5 + 82.095 × 15.093 × 1.04−2.5 = 4, 372
The claim paid to date (from accident years 2011 to 2014) amount to 3,640, resulting in a total outstand-
ing claim amount of 732, i.e. $732,000.
Assumptions:
• For each accident year, both the number and average amount of claims relating to each development
year are constant proportions of the totals from that accident year.
• The first accident year is fully run off.
• Inflation is allowed for explicitly and we assume that both the past and future inflation assumptions
are correct.
6. Using the claim payment triangle given in the lecture notes and a discount rate of 4% p.a., apply the IACL
method so as to obtain an estimate of the total outstanding claims amount.
The inflation rates for claims costs in consecutive years are as follows.
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Years 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06
Rate (%) 6 6 8 8
Solution:
Inflate:
Accumulate:
Development Year
0:1 1:2 2:3 3:4
Mj∗ 1.73 1.53 1.09 1.03
Disaccumulate:
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Projected Claim Payments ($’000)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3 4
2002
2003 84.64
2004 287.57 89.99
2005 1,177.40 315.84 98.84
2006 858.70 1,072.83 287.79 90.06
Inflate:
Discount:
7. Consider the following run-off triangle which shows the (inflation-adjusted) amounts, in units of $10,000, that
were paid for industrial accidents by the Rand Insurance Corporation in the years prior to 1 January 1994.
Projected No. of
Development Year Claims Reported
Accident Year 0 1 2 in Accident Year
1991 6.3 5.8 2.0 340
1992 8.6 9.1 466
1993 24.0 872
For example, $91,000 was paid in 1993 for accidents that occurred in 1992.
14
Use the PPCI method to estimate the total amount that is yet to be paid by Rand for all accidents which
occurred in 1992 and 1993. Assume an annual claims inflation rate of 20% from 1993 to 1994 and 10% from
1994 to 1995, and a discount rate of 17%.
Solution:
Calculate the PPCIs:
Assume that the average PPCIs are representative and fill in the lower triangle:
Projected Payments
per Claim Incurred
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
1991
1992 58.82
1993 182.93 58.82
Projected Claim
Payments ($’0,000s)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
1991
1992 2.74
1993 15.95 5.13
Discounted Projected
Claim Payments ($’0,000s)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
1991
1992 3.04
1993 17.70 5.35
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8. The table below shows the numbers of household insurance claims reported in each development year.
Claims Reported
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
1989 17,500 5,000 2,250 750
1990 21,000 6,200 2,750
1991 18,800 5,500
1992 21,300
Use the basic chain ladder method to estimate the total ultimate number of claims arising from accidents
occurring between 1 January 1989 and 31 December 1992.
Solution:
Accumulate the results:
Development Year
0:1 1:2 2:3
Mj∗ 1.291 1.101 1.030
After using the average development ratios as the selected development ratios, we fill the lower triangle:
25, 500 + 30, 857.58 + 27, 555.11 + 31, 192.67 = 115, 105.36 ≈ 115, 105.
9. An insurance company has paid the following claim amounts (in $’000s):
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Development Year
Accident Year 1 2 3 4 5
1 2,800 1,400 987 322 57
2 3,260 2,004 1,017 421
3 3,854 1,978 857
4 3,722 2,114
5 4,627
The earned premium in each year is 6,727 for Accident Year 1, 8,289 for Accident Year 2, 9,627 for Accident
Year 3, 9,928 for Accident Year 4 and 10,004 for Accident Year 5. In addition, the discount rate is assumed
to be 4% per annum.
Apply the Bornhuetter-Ferguson method to estimate the amount of claims yet to be paid, stating any as-
sumptions that you make.
Solution:
We need the cumulative claims data:
Next we calculate the expected end of year figures (the initial ultimate liability):
• 2: 6, 858.4 × 1 − 1
1.010347 = 70.2
17
• 3: 7, 965.5 × 1 − 1
1.010347×1.064789 = 561.3
• 4: 8, 214.5 × 1 − 1
1.010347×1.064789×1.187042 = 1, 782
• 5: 8, 277.4 × 1 − 1
1.010347×1.064789×1.187042×1.549721 = 4, 094.9
Given that these are claims paid (rather than incurred), we don’t need to calculate the revised ultimate
liability to get the reserve. We can just total up the emerging liabilities (with 4% p.a. discounting
adjustment) and obtain the estimation amount of $6,262,000.
• The future claim development pattern will follow the pattern experienced for the more developed
accident years.
• Claims in each development year are a constant proportion (in monetary terms) of total claims in
each accident year.
• Inflation is not allowed for explicitly, rather it is allowed for implicitly as a weighted average of past
inflation.
10. The table below shows the cumulative cost of incurred claims (in $’000s). The claims are assumed to be fully
run-off at the end of Development Year 2.
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
2011 2,670 3,290 4,310
2012 2,850 3,420
2013 3,030
The ultimate loss ratio has been estimated at 80% and the total amount of claims paid to date is $5,720,000.
In addition, the discount rate is assumed to be 4% per annum. Calculate the outstanding claims reserve using
the Bornhuetter-Ferguson method.
Solution:
First wee calculate the expected end of year figures (the initial ultimate liability):
18
• 2011: 0.8 × 5, 390 = 4, 312
• 2011: 4, 312 × (1 − 11 ) = 0
• 2012: 4, 480 × (1 − 1
1.310030 ) = 1, 060.2
• 2013: 4, 824 × (1 − 1
1.215580×1.310030 ) = 1, 794.7
So after 4% p.a. discounting adjustment (for both past and future), the ultimate liabilities for each year
are:
Therefore the outstanding claims reserve is 13, 516.40 − 5, 720 = 7, 796.40, i.e. $7,796,400.
11. You have been asked to estimate the outstanding claims liability of a general insurer’s workers’ compensation
portfolio as at 31 December 1996 and have been provided with the following initial information:
Total Number of
Claims Reported
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2003 1,500 300 100 50
2004 1,600 300 100
2005 1,600 350
2006 1,500
19
Projected Total Number
of Claims
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2003
2004 53
2005 105 54
2006 303 97 50
Total (Inflation-adjusted)
Claims Payments ($’000)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2003 6,000 4,000 2,500 1,500
2004 7,000 4,000 2,000
2005 8,000 3,500
2006 8,000
Perform a payments per claim incurred analysis on total claim payments to estimate the outstanding claim
liability as at the end of the 2006 accident year. Assume a discount rate of 5% p.a., future inflation at 3.5%
p.a., and note that no further payments are made beyond development year 3. You may use the average
PPCIs as the selected “representative” PPCIs.
Solution:
Total incurred claims:
[Note: values are multiplied by 1000 since original payments table was in $’000]
Fill in the lower triangle:
20
Projected Payments per Claim Incurred
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2003
2004 769.23
2005 1,128.12 769.23
2006 1,886.40 1,128.12 769.23
12. Apply the inflation-adjusted Bornhuetter-Ferguson method to the claim payments triangle given in question
4 and thus estimate the insurer’s outstanding claims. You may use the future inflation and discounting
assumptions given in question 4 and assume that the “average” development ratios were selected as the
representative chain ladder development factors. You have also been given the following information:
Solution:
SAME QUESTION AS TUTORIAL 8 Q2. SO PLEASE IGNORE THIS QUESTION.
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13. The table below shows the amounts paid, in thousands of dollars, for car accident claims by the Bellco Insur-
ance Company for accident years 1994, 1995 and 1996, developed up to the end of 1996.
(For example, $83,000 was paid in 1996 for car accidents that occurred in 1994.)
It may be assumed that no claims take longer than two years to finalise.
(a) Assume a discount rate of 7% and suppose that claims inflation rates are as given in the following table:
Apply the inflation adjusted chain ladder method so as to obtain an estimate of the total ultimate claims
amount (in current values) arising from accidents that occurred in 1996.
(b) Suppose that for accident year 1995, $250,000 of premiums were earned. Assume a loss ratio of 92%.
Use the inflation-adjusted Bornhuetter-Ferguson method to estimate the outstanding claims amount arising
from accidents in 1995.
Solution:
(a) Adjust all figures to 1996 money:
Next accumulate:
22
Development Year
0:1 1:2
Mj∗ 1.4584 1.1006
Projected Cumulative
Claim Payments ($’000)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
1994
1995 527.18
1996 172.09 189.40
Then disaccumulate:
Projected Claim
Payments ($’000)
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2
1994
1995 48.18
1996 54.09 17.31
After discounting and summing up the results (for 1996 only), we get:
(b) Using the chain ladder factors from part (a), the cumulative chain ladder factors and IBNR factors
are:
0:1 1:2
Factor 1.45836 1.10059
Cumulative Factor 1.60506 1.10059
IBNR Factor 0.3770 0.0914
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14. Given the following data, estimate the claims outstanding as at 31/12/2000 using:
Projected
Accident Year
Claim Reported
1996 40
1997 50
1998 19
1999 38
2000 17
Assume an inflation rate of 10% p.a. and a discount rate of 7% p.a. Furthermore, you may assume that the
“average” chain ladder factors and the average PPCIs are representative, where applicable.
Solution:
(a) Calculate the development factors:
Development Year
0:1 1:2 2:3 3:4
Mj∗ 1.378 1.247 1.083 1.001
Disaccumulate:
24
Projected Claim Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3 4
1996
1997 81
1998 4,156 76
1999 11,798 4,948 91
2000 7,423 6,691 2,806 52
(b) Disaccumulate:
Calculate PPCIs:
25
Projected Payments per Claim Incurred
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3 4
1996
1997 2
1998 87 2
1999 316 87 2
2000 377 316 87 2
(c) Note: the selected development factors are the same as those used in (a).
Calculate Cumulative Chain Ladder Factors and IBNR Factors:
Development Year
0:1 1:2 2:3 3:4
Mj∗ 1.378 1.247 1.083 1.001
Xj 1.865 1.353 1.085 1.001
Fj 0.464 0.261 0.078 0.001
26
Spread estimates across future development years:
15. The cumulative claims paid each year under a certain cohort of insurance policies are recorded in the table
below, for accident years 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013.
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,457 4,196 4,969 5,010
2011 2,648 4,715 5,561
2012 3,084 5,315
2013 3,341
(i) Calculate the development factors under the basic chain ladder technique and state the assumptions un-
derlying the use of this method.
(ii) The rate of claims inflation over these years, measured over the 12 months to the middle of each year, is
given in the table below.
2011 2.1%
2012 10.5%
2013 3.2%
Calculate the development factors under the inflation-adjusted chain ladder technique and state the assump-
tions underlying the use of this method.
(iii) Based on the development factors calculated in parts (i) and (ii), calculate the fitted values under these
two models and comment on how these compare with the actual values.
27
Solution:
(i) BCL development factors and assumptions
4,196+4,715+5,315
M1 = 2,457+2,648+3,084 = 1.737208
4,969+5,561
M2 = 4,196+4,715 = 1.181686
5,010
M3 = 4,969 = 1.008251
• There is a consistent delay pattern in the payment of claims between accident years.
• There is enough experience to date in the most recent accident years to allow development of that
experience to estimate outstanding claims.
• Claims in each development year are a constant proportion (in monetary terms) of total claims in
each accident year.
• Inflation is not allowed for explicitly, rather it is allowed for implicitly as a weighted average of past
inflation.
First we need to disaccumulate the figures to obtain incremental figures. If we do this we obtain the
following results:
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,457 1,739 773 41
2011 2,648 2,067 846
2012 3,084 2,231
2013 3,341
We now inflate the incremental figures to get real values (in mid-2013 terms):
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,860.70 1,983.09 797.74 41
2011 3,019.67 2,133.14 846
2012 3,182.69 2,231
2013 3,341
28
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,860.70 4,843.79 5,641.53 5,682.53
2011 3,019.67 5,152.81 5,998.81
2012 3,182.69 5,413.69
2013 3,341
4,843.79+5,152.81+5,413.69
M1 = 2,860.70+3,019.67+3,182.69 = 1.700340
5,641.53+5,998.81
M2 = 4,843.79+5,152.81 = 1.164429
5,682.53
M3 = 5,641.53 = 1.007268
• For each accident year, the amount of claims paid, in real terms, in each development year, is a
constant proportion of the total claims, in real terms, from that accident year.
• Inflation is allowed for explicitly and we assume that both the past and future inflation assumptions
are correct.
We now use the development factors to find the fitted claim amounts for past years. Using the development
factors for the basic chain ladder method we get:
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,457 4,268.32 5,043.81 5,085.43
2011 2,648 4,600.13 5,435.90
2012 3,084 5,357.52
2013 3,341
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,457 1,811.32 775.79 41.62
2011 2,648 1,952.13 835.78
2012 3,084 2,273.55
2013 3,341
If we compare the fitted and the actual incremental payments, we get the following:
29
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
Fitted 2010 2,457 1,811.32 775.79 41.62
Actual 2010 2,457 1,739 773 41
A-F – -72.32 -2.49 -0.62
We can now repeat the process with the inflation-adjusted chain ladder method. Using the inflation
adjusted development factors on the real data amounts for Development Year 0, we get:
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2010 2,860.70 4,864.17 5,663.98 5,705.15
2011 3,019.67 5,134.47 5,978.73
2012 3,182.69 5,411.65
2013 3,341
If we now disaccumulated and compare with the actual incremental (real) values:
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
Fitted 2010 2,860.70 2,033.47 799.81 41.16
Actual 2010 2,860.70 1,983.09 797.74 41
A-F – -20.38 -2.08 -0.16
30
Development Year (Cont...)
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
Fitted 2012 3,182.69 2,228.96
Actual 2012 3,182.69 2,231
A-F – 2.04
The inflation adjusted method appears to fit the original data better, given that the residuals are smaller
in this case. However, there are not many categories of data, and it is not clear whether either method
will provide satisfactory results in the future.
16. Consider the following run-off triangle involving numbers of insurance claims of a certain type that have been
settled in previous years by a certain insurance company. In addition, the discount rate is assumed to be 4%
per annum.
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
1998 26 14 7 2
1999 35 20 12
2000 15 10
2001 22
Use the basic chain ladder method (with the “average” chain ladder ratios selected as the development factors)
to estimate the number of claims arising from accidents in 2001 that will be settled in 2003.
Solution:
Accumulate figures:
Development Year
0:1 1:2 2:3
Mj∗ 1.579 1.200 1.043
31
Project cumulative claim payments:
Hence, the estimated number of claims arising from accidents in 2001 that will be settled in 2003 is
41.684 − 34.737 = 6.947. After 4% p.a. discounting adjustment, the estimate turns out to be 6.550.
17. A colleague of yours has just performed a series of PPCI analyses of general insurance claims data. In the
process of performing these analyses she produced the following tables of inflation-adjusted PPCIs.
Portfolio I
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
2000 250 615 490 190 100 65 10
2001 263 630 500 200 100 50
2002 241 617 510 210 85
2003 500 325 290 260
2004 532 302 275
2005 495 335
2006 552
Portfolio II
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
2000 260 615 490 190 100 79 50
2001 270 630 500 200 100 81
2002 280 650 510 260 90
2003 490 580 270 200
2004 760 280 220
2005 920 240
2006 1,050
Portfolio III
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
2000 260 615 490 190 100 80 50
2001 270 630 500 200 100 75
2002 280 650 510 260 90
2003 290 580 505 200
2004 250 620 500
2005 275 645
2006 295
32
For each of the portfolios, calculate the all-year average PPCI for each development year and the (most recent)
3-year average PPCI for each development year.
Solution:
The results are shown in the following tables:
Portfolio I
Development Year
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Average (All) 405 471 413 215 95 58 10
Average (3) 526 321 358 223 95 - -
Average (1) 552 335 275 260 85 50 10
Portfolio II
Development Year
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Average (All) 576 499 398 213 97 80 50
Average (3) 910 367 333 220 97 - -
Average (1) 1050 240 220 200 90 81 50
Portfolio III
Development Year
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Average (All) 274 623 501 213 97 78 50
Average (3) 273 615 505 220 97 - -
Average (1) 295 645 500 200 90 75 50
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The past inflation rates are:
Year Inflation Rate
2018 5.1%
2019 7.3%
2020 5.4%
The discount rate is 4% pa and the future inflation rate is constant at 5% pa.
(a) Calculate the claim development factors, Mj∗ .
(b) Calculate the values of x, y and z.
(c) Calculate the values of a, b and c.
Solution:
(a) With the historical claim payments you need to inflate the 2020 accident year payment (no inflation
required). The projected payments for the 2020 accident year should be deflated and discounted.
From these, we can calculate cumulative projected payments. The resulting projected payments are
1 2 3
2020 100.6 122.8 134.4
Given the cumulative projected payments, the development factors are the ratio of the consecutive
years’ cumulative claims.
0:1 1:2 2:3
Mj∗ 1.7867 1.2209 1.0947
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19. [RM2 2021 Final Exam Q5]
The tables below show the cumulative claim payments made in each development year for a portfolio of
General Insurance policies.
Claims Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2018 101 40 4 28
2019 100 61 4
2020 120 10
2021 136
You can assume that claims are fully run-off after 3 years. Assume the discount rate is 5%. The premiums
received for each year from 2018 to 2021 are 195, 200, 190 and 196 respectively.
(a) Calculate the reserve required at the end of 2021 using the basic chain ladder method.
(b) Calculate the reserve required at the end of 2021 using the Bornhuetter-Ferguson method.
(c) An actuary is considering modelling the future claims assuming that individual development factors are
lognormally distributed with the following parameters:
Development Year
Parameter 0:1 1:2 2:3
µ 0.192352 0.045259 0.001427
σ 0.032148 0.055606 0.056853
If the individual development factors are lognormally distributed, show that the cumulative development
factor (to calculate the ultimate claims) is also lognormally distributed.
(d) Calculate a 99% upper confidence limit for the outstanding claims relating to the 2021 accident year.
(You don’t need to spread it across the different development years or discount them.)
Solution:
(a) First, accumulate and calculate ratios:
Claims Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2018
2019 31.09
2020 3.36 23.95
2021 45.89 4.51 32.11
35
0:1 1:2 2:3
Mj∗ 1.345794 1.02649 1.193103
Xj 1.648206 1.224709 1.193103
Fj 0.39328 0.183479 0.16185
Calculate OSi
Claims Payments
Development Year
Accident Year 0 1 2 3
2018
2019 28.03
2020 3.56 25.36
2021 35.60 3.50 24.91
log (Rj,j+1 , Rj+1,j+2 ) = log (Rj,j+1 ) + log (Rj+1,j+2 ) ∼ N µi + µi+1 , σi2 + σi+1
2
That is the product of lognormally distributed variables is also distributed lognormally (through the
additive property of normally distributed random variables). From this property, the cumulative de-
velopment factor, which is a product of individual development factors should also have a lognormal
distribution.
(d) The cumulative development factor (to ultimate) for AY2023 is lognormally distributed with param-
eters: µ = 0.239038, σ = 0.085778.
Hence, a 99% upper confidence limit for the cumulative development factor is
eµ+σ×2.3263 = 1.5505.
So, an upper 99% confidence limit for outstanding claims is 210.8699 − 136 = 74.8699.
36
You are an analyst for a general insurance company assessing an insurance portfolio. You are required to
assess the reserves required for the portfolio. You are provided with the claim payments triangle and past
inflation experience in the attached spreadsheet – Q20 (Practice_Set4).xlsx. You can assume that future
claim inflation is 6% pa. The discount rate is 4.5% pa.
(a) Calculate the total reserves that need to be held for this portfolio under the Basic Chain Ladder method.
State any assumptions you make.
(b) Calculate the total reserves that need to be held for this portfolio under the Inflation Adjusted Chain
Ladder method. State any assumptions you make.
(c) Discuss, with appropriate numerical illustration, which of the two methods would you recommend be
used for setting reserves for this portfolio.
(b) See worksheet ‘part b’. The total outstanding reserves is $2,839,645.
IACL method assumptions:
• For each accident year, the amount of claims paid, in real terms, in each development year,
is a constant proportion of the total claims, in real terms, from that accident year.
• The first accident year is fully run off.
• Inflation is allowed for explicitly and we assume that both the past and future inflation as-
sumptions are correct.
(c) See worksheet ‘part c’. Based on the actual-fitted method, both the methods fit the data equally
well (or poorly) with a few of the cells giving ’large’ errors (>30).
Based on the mean square error method (square root of the sum of the square differences), the two
methods give very similar MSE (BCL = 126.53; IACL - 126.69). Hence, either of the two methods
could be recommended for use.
37
• At the end of 2019, case estimates for outstanding payments arising from accidents occurring in 2019
totaled $2,000,000.
• The ultimate loss ratio has been estimated to be 90% for all accident years
(a) Calculate the outstanding claims reserve at the end of 2019 using the inflation-adjusted PPCI method.
State any assumptions you make.
(b) Discuss the appropriateness of the average PPCIs calculated in (a) above as representative of future claims
behaviour for this portfolio. If not, suggest more appropriate representative PPCI for each development
year, and the new reserve required. Justify your answer.
(c) Using the Bornhuetter-Ferguson method, estimate the inflation-adjusted amount of claims that will be
paid in 2022 relating to accidents that have already occurred.
22. Mack suggests a test of Calendar Year Effects based on classifying the development factors in each development
year as high or low, relative to the other values in the same DY. A value of fi,j that is higher than the median
value for DY j is labelled L (for large); a value below the median is labelled S (small). Values on the median
are disregarded. We then consider the frequency of L and S development factors across each anti-diagonal.
If there is no calendar year effect, roughly half of the development factors in each calendar year should be
large, and half small, and the numbers should be binomially distributed, with probability parameter 0.5. Let
Sk denote the number of ‘S’ labels in calendar year k, and let Lk denote the number of ‘L’ labels in calendar
year k. We exclude calendar year 0 which has only one value. We test the null hypothesis, that calendar
years are independent, by considering the distribution of the smaller of Sk and Lk each year. This is not
binomially distributed under the null hypothesis, but its mean and variance can be derived from the binomial
distribution. The test procedure is as follows:
1. For k = 1, 2, . . . , I − 1, find Sk , Lk , nk = Sk + Lk , and mk = ⌊(nk − 1) /2⌋. Under the null hypothesis of
no calendar year effect, both Lk and Sk have a bin (nk , 0.5) distribution.
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2. Let Zk = min (Sk , Lk ) for k = 1, 2, . . . , I − 1. Using the binomial distribution, it can be shown that
nk nk − 1 nk
E [Zk ] = − and
2 mk 2nk
nk (nk − 1) nk − 1 nk (nk − 1) 2
Var [Zk ] = − + E [Zk ] − E [Zk ]
4 mk 2nk
PI−1
3. The test statistic is Z = k=1 Zk . We assume that, approximately,
I−1
X I−1
X
Z ∼ N (E[Z], Var[Z]) where E[Z] = E [Zk ] and Var[Z] = Var [Zk ]
k=1 k=1
Development Year j
AY i 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
0 L L S L S L ∗ L ∗
1 L L S S S S L S
2 L L ∗ L ∗ L S
3 S L L L L S
4 S S L S L
5 S S S S
6 L S L
7 ∗ S
8 S
We review each anti-diagonal, starting from the second, to assess the S-L distribution
by calendar
year.
A
|14−12.6875|
summary of the results is given in the table below. The p-value for the test is p = 2 1 − Φ √
3.6621
=
0.4928, indicating that there is no significant evidence of a calendar year effect in this data.
39