时间安排:
2018年3月5日-3月6日(周一周二),3月8日-3月9日(周四周五),下午1:30-5:00
The main objective of this mini-course is to study advanced actuarial models in non-life insurance and to introduce some claims reserving methods which are relevant to actuarial practice. The contents covered by this mini-course are the following.
Distribution of aggregate claims
· Collective risk model
· Calculation of aggregate claims distribution
· Individual risk model versus collective risk model
Incurred But Not Reported (IBNR) techniques
· Chain-ladder method
· Bornhuetter-Ferguson method
· Bayesian models
· Distributional models
Bonus-Malus systems
· Models for claim counts
· Construction of an optimal BMS
· Bonus-Malus scales
· Other topics (severity, hunger for bonus)
Claim surplus process (optional)
· Discrete time risk models
· Continuous time risk models
References:
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Loss Models, 4th Edition, 2012, by S.A. Klugman, H.H. Panjer and G.E. Willmot, Wiley.
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An introduction to Mathematical Risk Theory, 1979, by H.U. Gerber, S.S. Huebner Foundation for Insurance, U. of Pennsylvania.
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Modern Actuarial Risk Theory, 2001, by R. Kass, M. Goovaerts, J. Dhaene and M. Denuit, Kluwer Academic Publishers.
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Stochastic claims reserving methods in insurance, 2008, by M.V. Wüthrich and M. Merz, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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Bonus-Malus Systems in Automobile Insurance, 1995, by J. Lemaire, Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Insurance Risk and Ruin, 2005, by D.C.M. Dickson, Cambridge University Press.