Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction to life insurance
- 2 Survival models
- 3 Life tables and selection
- 4 Insurance benefits
- 5 Annuities
- 6 Premium calculation
- 7 Policy values
- 8 Multiple state models
- 9 Pension mathematics
- 10 Interest rate risk
- 11 Emerging costs for traditional life insurance
- 12 Emerging costs for equity-linked insurance
- 13 Option pricing
- 14 Embedded options
- A Probability theory
- B Numerical techniques
- C Simulation
- References
- Author index
- Index
Preface
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction to life insurance
- 2 Survival models
- 3 Life tables and selection
- 4 Insurance benefits
- 5 Annuities
- 6 Premium calculation
- 7 Policy values
- 8 Multiple state models
- 9 Pension mathematics
- 10 Interest rate risk
- 11 Emerging costs for traditional life insurance
- 12 Emerging costs for equity-linked insurance
- 13 Option pricing
- 14 Embedded options
- A Probability theory
- B Numerical techniques
- C Simulation
- References
- Author index
- Index
Summary
Life insurance has undergone enormous change in the last two to three decades. New and innovative products have been developed at the same time as we have seen vast increases in computational power. In addition, the field of finance has experienced a revolution in the development of a mathematical theory of options and financial guarantees, first pioneered in the work of Black, Scholes and Merton, and actuaries have come to realize the importance of that work to risk management in actuarial contexts.
Given the changes occurring in the interconnected worlds of finance and life insurance, we believe that this is a good time to recast the mathematics of life contingent risk to be better adapted to the products, science and technology that are relevant to current and future actuaries.
In this book we have developed the theory to measure and manage risks that are contingent on demographic experience as well as on financial variables. The material is presented with a certain level of mathematical rigour; we intend for readers to understand the principles involved, rather than to memorize methods or formulae. The reason is that a rigorous approach will prove more useful in the long run than a short-term utilitarian outlook, as theory can be adapted to changing products and technology in ways that techniques, without scientific support, cannot.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Actuarial Mathematics for Life Contingent Risks , pp. xiv - xviiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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