With the exception perhaps of extra premium, there is, it seems to me, no
actuarial point in which the practice of assurance offices is so empirical
as that of the allowance to be given for the surrender of a policy. The
usual custom, so far as I am aware, is to find the value of the policy
(generally by the table of mortality and interest used in calculating the
reserve) and from that value to deduct a certain proportion, handing over
the remainder to the policyholder. The amount of this deduction is purely
arbitrary, and were it not for the equalizing effects of competition, would
show very startling diversities; since, even with this counteracting effect,
the differences in practice can hardly help striking anyone who has examined
the amounts given as surrender value by the various offices interested in
large reassurance cases which from any reason do not follow the rule of the
parent company. In fact, making any return whatever under discontinued
policies is the result of that struggle for existence called competition;
and like all things growing from this root, the practice has been moulded
much more by the pressure of circumstances than by theoretical
considerations. Consequent on this method of growth we find extraordinary
and indefensible anomalies imperatively calling for rectification. Further
it seems to me, looking at the matter as a purely practical question and not
one of actuarial fitness at all, there is no point more needful of
examination. As things are at present, nobody can say positively whether as
its proportion of the value the assurance office retains too little or too
much. If the former, the sooner a practice resulting in loss is reformed,
the better.