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Some Approximations from Valuation Statistics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2016

Extract

The following notes deal with methods which, although they have been used in various forms for some time, derive special interest from the consideration of the Assurance Companies Act by a Committee appointed by the Board of Trade. In view of the appointment of this Committee, the Council of the Institute felt that a general study of the Act should be made from the point of view of the Actuary, and, in due course, it put forward, among other recommendations, suggestions for improving and simplifying the Schedules. With trifling exceptions, of which, we understand, the particular point under review was not one, there was unanimity among the members of the Council present on the occasions when the Schedules were discussed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Institute and Faculty of Actuaries 1925

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References

page 264 note * For convenience we shall use the term “Fifth Schedule” for the part of the Fifth Schedule which the Council suggested should be eliminated, and “Fourth Schedule” for the new Fourth Schedule put forward. We have also assumed that the Fifth Schedule, if retained, will in future include net premiums.

page 264 note † In some cases we should not reach the result in the Fourth Schedule owing to adjustments made by the company.

page 273 note * We thank Mr. H. T. Adlard for much help in connection with this example.

page 274 note * ā was used to save work, although the answers to the Fourth Schedule stated that a slightly modified annuity-value had been employed. The error introduced is slight, as the method adjusts it to a large extent.

page 278 note * We have inserted the word “usually” because in rare cases we get outside the limits.

page 280 note * The easiest way to follow this is to take a very old age, such as 70, and see from tables of net premiums that a pair with even so young an age as 20 will only give an average age of 59. If the actual average age is, say, 50, and by other means we are satisfied that there is substantial business at old entry ages, we must bring in a young age twice, or a greater number of young ages than is usually necessary.

page 285 note * Cf. remarks on annuity model office, J.I.A, vol. lv, p. 236.

page 300 note * This letter is given on the following page.