Actuarial science

2003 US mortality (life) table, Table 1, Page 1

Actuarial science is the discipline that applies mathematical and statistical methods to assess risk in the insurance and finance industries. Actuaries are professionals who are qualified in this field through education and experience. In the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and several other countries, actuaries must demonstrate their qualifications by passing a series of professional examinations.

Actuarial science includes a number of interrelating subjects, including probability and statistics, finance, and economics. Historically, actuarial science used deterministic models in the construction of tables and premiums. The science has gone through revolutionary changes during the last 30 years due to the proliferation of high speed computers and the synergy of stochastic actuarial models with modern financial theory .

Many universities have undergraduate and graduate degree programs in actuarial science. In 2002, a Wall Street Journal survey on the best jobs in the United States listed "actuary" as the second best job .

Contents

Life insurance, pensions and healthcare

Actuarial science became a formal mathematical discipline in the late 17th century with the increased demand for long-term insurance coverages such as Burial, Life insurance, and Annuities. These long term coverages required that money be set aside to pay future benefits, such as annuity and death benefits many years into the future. This requires estimating future contingent events, such as the rates of mortality by age, as well as the development of mathematical techniques for discounting the value of funds set aside and invested. This led to the development of an important actuarial concept, referred to as the Present value of a future sum. Pensions and healthcare emerged in the early 20th century as a result of collective bargaining. Certain aspects of the actuarial methods for discounting pension funds have come under criticism from modern financial economics.

Actuarial science applied to other forms of insurance

Actuarial science is also applied to short-term forms of insurance, referred to as Property & Casualty or Liability insurance, or General insurance. In these forms of insurance, coverage is generally provided on a renewable annual period, (such as a yearly contract to provide homeowners insurance policy covering damage to a house and its contents for one year). Coverage can be cancelled at the end of the period by either party.

Reinsurance is complex. Company management and their actuaries need to deal with all the known insurable contingent events, as well as underwrite the quality of their cedant companies, and maintain the information tools and auditing practices to identify arbitrage and spirals.

Development

Pre-formalization

In the ancient world there was no room for the sick, suffering, disabled, aged, or the poor—it was not part of the cultural consciousness of societies . Early methods of protection involved charity; religious organizations or neighbors would collect for the destitute and needy. By the middle of the third century, 1,500 suffering people were being supported by charitable operations in Rome . Charitable protection is still an active form of support to this very day . However, receiving charity is uncertain and is often accompanied by social stigma. Elementary mutual aid agreements and pensions did arise in antiquity . Early in the Roman empire, associations were formed to meet the expenses of burial, cremation, and monuments—precursors to burial insurance and friendly societies. A small sum was paid into a communal fund on a weekly basis, and upon the death of a member, the fund would cover the expenses of rites and burial. These societies sometimes sold shares in the building of columbāria, or burial vaults, owned by the fund—the precursor to mutual insurance companies . Other early examples of mutual surety and assurance pacts can be traced back to various forms of fellowship within the Saxon clans of England and their Germanic forbears, and to Celtic society . However, many of these earlier forms of surety and aid would often fail due to lack of understanding and knowledge .

Initial development

The seventeenth century was a period of extraordinary advances in mathematics in Germany, France and England. At the same time there was a rapidly growing desire and need to place the valuation of personal risk on a more scientific basis. Independently from each other, compound interest was studied and probability theory emerged as a well understood mathematical discipline. Another important advance came in 1662 from a London draper named John Graunt, who showed that there were predictable patterns of longevity and death in a defined group, or cohort, of people, despite the uncertainty about the future longevity or mortality of any one individual person. This study became the basis for the original life table. It was now possible to set up an insurance scheme to provide life insurance or pensions for a group of people, and to calculate with some degree of accuracy, how much each person in the group should contribute to a common fund assumed to earn a fixed rate of interest. The first person to demonstrate publicly how this could be done was Edmond Halley (of Halley's comet fame). In addition to constructing his own life table, Halley demonstrated a method of using his life table to calculate the premium or amount of money someone of a given age should pay to purchase a life-annuity .

Early actuaries

James Dodson’s pioneering work on the level premium system led to the formation of the Society for Equitable Assurances on Lives and Survivorship (now commonly known as Equitable Life) in London in 1762. The company still exists, though it has encountered difficulties recently. This was the first life insurance company to use premium rates which were calculated scientifically for long-term life policies. Many other life insurance companies and pension funds were created over the following 200 years. It was the Society for Equitable Assurances which first used the term ‘actuary’ for its chief executive officer in 1762. Previously, the use of the term had been restricted to an official who recorded the decisions, or ‘acts’, of ecclesiastical courts . Other companies that did not originally use such mathematical and scientific methods most often failed or were forced to adopt the methods pioneered by Equitable .

Effects of technology

In the 18th and 19th centuries, computational complexity was limited to manual calculations. The actual calculations required to compute fair insurance premiums are rather complex. The actuaries of that time developed methods to construct easily-used tables, using sophisticated approximations called commutation functions, to facilitate timely, accurate, manual calculations of premiums . Over time, actuarial organizations were founded to support and further both actuaries and actuarial science, and to protect the public interest by ensuring competency and ethical standards . However, calculations remained cumbersome, and actuarial shortcuts were commonplace. Non-life actuaries followed in the footsteps of their life compatriots in the early twentieth century. The 1920 revision to workers compensation rates took over two months of around-the-clock work by day and night teams of actuaries . In the 1930s and 1940s, however, the rigorous mathematical foundations for stochastic processes were developed . Actuaries could now begin to forecast losses using models of random events, instead of the deterministic methods they had been constrained to in the past. The introduction and development of the computer industry further revolutionized the actuarial profession. From pencil-and-paper to punchcards to current high-speed devices, the modeling and forecasting ability of the actuary has grown exponentially, and actuaries needed to adjust to this new world .

Actuarial science and modern financial economics

Some aspects of traditional actuarial science are not aligned with modern financial economics. Pension actuaries have been challenged by financial economists regarding funding and investment strategies. There are two reasons for the divergence of actuarial and financial economic practices. The first deals with the sheer complexity of calculations, and the second with the heavy burden of regulations resulting from the Armstrong investigation of 1905, the Glass-Steagall Act of 1932, the adoption of the Mandatory Security Valuation Reserve by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners; the latter law cushioned market fluctuations. Finally pensions valuations and funding must comply with the Financial Accounting Standards Board, (FASB) in the USA and Canada. The regulatory burden led to a separation of powers regarding the management and valuation of assets and liabilities.

Historically, much of the foundation of actuarial theory predated modern financial theory. In the early twentieth century, actuaries were developing many techniques that can be found in modern financial theory, but for various historical reasons, these developments did not achieve much recognition . As a result, actuarial science developed along a different path, becoming more reliant on assumptions, as opposed to the arbitrage-free risk-neutral valuation concepts used in modern finance. The divergence is not related to the use of historical data and statistical projections of liability cash flows, but is instead caused by the manner in which traditional actuarial methods apply market data with those numbers. For example, one traditional actuarial method suggests that changing the asset allocation mix of investments can change the value of liabilities and assets (by changing the discount rate assumption). This concept is inconsistent with financial economics.

The potential of modern financial economics theory to complement existing actuarial science was recognized by actuaries in the mid-twentieth century . In the late 1980s and early 1990s, there was a distinct effort for actuaries to combine financial theory and stochastic methods into their established models. . Ideas from financial economics became increasingly influential in actuarial thinking, and actuarial science has started to embrace more sophisticated mathematical modelling of finance . Today, the profession, both in practice and in the educational syllabi of many actuarial organizations, is cognizant of the need to reflect the combined approach of tables, loss models, stochastic methods, and financial theory . However, assumption-dependent concepts are still widely used (such as the setting of the discount rate assumption as mentioned earlier), particularly in North America.

Product design adds another dimension to the debate. Financial economists argue that pension benefits are bond-like and should not be funded with equity investments without reflecting the risks of not achieving expected returns. But some pension products do reflect the risks of unexpected returns. In some cases, the pension beneficiary assumes the risk, or the employer assumes the risk. The current debate now seems to be focusing on four principles:

  1. financial models should be free of arbitrage
  2. assets and liabilities with identical cash flows should have the same price. This, of course, is at odds with FASB
  3. the value of an asset is independent of its financing
  4. the final issue deals with how pension assets should be invested.

Essentially, financial economics state that pension assets should not be invested in equities for a variety of theoretical and practical reasons. .

Actuaries outside insurance

There is an increasing trend to recognize that actuarial skills can be applied to a range of applications outside the insurance industry. One notable example is the use in some US states of actuarial models to set criminal sentencing guidelines. These models attempt to predict the chance of re-offending according to rating factors which include the type of crime, age, educational background and ethnicity of the offender . However, these models have been open to criticism as providing justification by law enforcement personnel on specific ethnic groups. Whether or not this is statistically correct or a self-fulfilling correlation remains under debate .

Another example is the use of actuarial models to assess the risk of sex offense recidivism. Actuarial models and associated tables, such as the MnSOST-R, Static-99, and SORAG, have been used since the late 1990s to determine the likelihood that a sex offender will recidivate and thus whether he or she should be institutionalized or set free .

Standards

See also

References

Works cited

a b c Bühlmann, Hans (November 1997). "THE ACTUARY: THE ROLE AND LIMITATIONS OF THE PROFESSION SINCE THE MID-19th CENTURY" (PDF). ASTIN Bulletin 27 (2): 165–171. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. ISSN 0515-0361. http://www.casact.org/library/astin/vol27no2/165.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ (PDF) Analysis of Senate Bill 174: Hearing Aids for Children. Revised November 19, 2004. California Health Benefits Review Program. February 9, 2004. http://www.chbrp.org/documents/hearingaids174final.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ D’arcy, Stephen P. (May 1989). "On Becoming An Actuary of the Third Kind" (PDF). Proceedings of the Casualty Actuarial Society LXXVI (145): 45–76. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. http://www.casact.org/pubs/proceed/proceed89/89045.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ "When the spinning stops: Can actuaries help to sort out the mess in corporate pensions?". The Economist. 2006. http://www.economist.com/finance/displayStory.cfm?story_id=5436947. Retrieved 2006-04-10. 

a Feldblum, Sholom (2001) [1990]. "Introduction". In Robert F. Lowe (ed.). Foundations of Casualty Actuarial Science (4th ed.). Arlington, Virginia: Casualty Actuarial Society. ISBN [[Special:BookSources/0-9624762-2-6 LCCN 2001-88378|0-9624762-2-6 LCCN 2001-88378]]. 

^ Frees, Edward W. (January 1990). "Stochastic life contingencies with solvency considerations" (PDF). Transactions of the Society of Actuaries XLII: 91–148. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. http://library.soa.org/library/tsa/1990-95/TSA90V427.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ Halley, Edmond (1693). "An Estimate of the Degrees of the Mortality of Mankind, Drawn from Curious Tables of the Births and Funerals at the City of Breslaw; With an Attempt to Ascertain the Price of Annuities upon Lives" (PDF). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 17: 596–610. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. ISSN 0260-7085. http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/maths/histstat/halley.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-21. 

^ Harcourt, Bernard E. (2003). "The Shaping of Chance: Actuarial Models and Criminal Profiling at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century" (PDF). University of Chicago Law Review 70 (105): 105–128. doi:10.2307/1600548. ISSN 0041-9494. http://www.law.uchicago.edu/faculty/harcourt/resources/08_harcourt.pdf. Retrieved 2007-02-06. 

^ Hickman, James (2004). "History of Actuarial Profession" (PDF). Encyclopedia of Actuarial Science. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.. pp. 4. http://www.wiley.co.uk/eoas/pdfs/TAH012-.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ Hsiao, William C. (August 2001). "Commentary: Behind the Ideology and Theory: What Is the Empirical Evidence for Medical Savings Accounts?" (PDF). Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 26 (4): 733–737. doi:10.1215/03616878-26-4-733. PMID 11523960. http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/phcf/Papers/Ideology%20and%20theory%20-%20Hsiao.pdf. Retrieved 2006-07-01. 

^ Hsiao, William C (2004). "Harvard School of Public Health" (PDF). http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/faculty/WilliamHsiao.html. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ Johnston, Harold Whetstone (1932) [1903]. "BURIAL PLACES AND FUNERAL CEREMONIES". The Private Life of the Romans. Revised by Mary Johnston. Chicago, Atlanta: Scott, Foresman and Company. pp. §475–§476. LCCN 32-7692. http://www.forumromanum.org/life/johnston_14.html. Retrieved 2006-06-26. "Early in the Empire, associations were formed for the purpose of meeting the funeral expenses of their members, whether the remains were to be buried or cremated, or for the purpose of building columbāria, or for both.…If the members had provided places for the disposal of their bodies after death, they now provided for the necessary funeral expenses by paying into the common fund weekly a small fixed sum, easily within the reach of the poorest of them. When a member died, a stated sum was drawn from the treasury for his funeral….If the purpose of the society was the building of a columbārium, the cost was first determined and the sum total divided into what we should call shares (sortēs virīlēs), each member taking as many as he could afford and paying their value into the treasury." 

^ Lee, Tony (2002). "2002: Rating the Nation's Best and Worst Jobs". http://www.careerjournal.com/jobhunting/change/20020507-lee.html. Retrieved 2006-04-04. 

^ Loan, Albert (Winter 1991/92). "Institutional Bases of the Spontaneous Order: Surety and Assurance". Humane Studies Review 7 (1): 538. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. http://mason.gmu.edu/~ihs/w91essay.html. Retrieved 2006-06-26. 

^ MacGinnitie, James (November 1980). "The Actuary and his Profession: Growth, Development, Promise" (PDF). Proceedings of the Casualty Actuarial Society LXVII (127): 49–56. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. http://www.casualtyactuarialsociety.com/pubs/proceed/proceed80/80049.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ Michelbacher, Gustav F. (1920). "The Technique of Rate Making as Illustrated by the 1920 National Revision of Workmen's Compensations Insurance Rates" (PDF). Proceedings of the Casualty Actuarial Society VI (14): 201–249. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. http://www.casact.org/pubs/proceed/proceed19/19201.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ Moriarty, Charlene (2006). "The Actuary's New Clothes, A Canadian Perspective on the Financial Economics Debate" (PDF). American Academy of Actuaries, Contingencies Jul/Aug. http://www.contingencies.org/julaug06/actuarys_new_clothes_0706.asp. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

^ Nieto, Marcus and David Jung (August 2006) (PDF). The Impact of Residency Restrictions on Sex Offenders and Correctional Management Practices: A Literature Review. California Research Bureau, California State Library. http://www.library.ca.gov/crb/06/08/06-008.pdf. Retrieved 2006-09-18. 

a b Perkins, Judith (August 25, 1995). The Suffering Self; Pain and Narrative Representation in the Early Christian Era. London, England: Routledge. ISBN [[Special:BookSources/0-415-11363-6 LCCN 94-42650|0-415-11363-6 LCCN 94-42650]]. 

^ Silver, Eric; Lynette Chow-Martin (October 2002). "A Multiple Models Approach To Assessing Recidivism Risk: Implications for Judicial Decision Making" (PDF). Criminal Justice and Behavior 29 (5): 538–568. doi:10.1177/009385402236732. ISSN 0093-8548. http://cjb.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/29/5/538.pdf. Retrieved 2006-09-18. 

^ Slud, Eric V. (2006) [2001]. "6: Commutation Functions, Reserves & Select Mortality" (PDF). Actuarial Mathematics and Life-Table Statistics. pp. 149–150. http://www.math.umd.edu/~evs/s470/BookChaps/Chp6.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. "The Commutation Functions are a computational device to ensure that net single premiums…can all be obtained from a single table lookup. Historically, this idea has been very important in saving calculational labor when arriving at premium quotes. Even now…company employees without quantitative training could calculate premiums in a spreadsheet format with the aid of a life table." 

^ Thucydides (c. 431 BCE). "VI - Funeral Oration of Pericles". The History of the Peloponnesian War. Translated by Richard Crawley. Greece. http://classics.mit.edu/Thucydides/pelopwar.2.second.html. Retrieved 2006-06-27. "My task is now finished.…those who are here interred have received part of their honours already, and for the rest, their children will be brought up till manhood at the public expense: the state thus offers a valuable prize, as the garland of victory in this race of valour, for the reward both of those who have fallen and their survivors." 

^ Tong, Vinnee (June 19, 2006). "Americans’ donations to charity near record". Chicago Sun-Times (Digital Chicago Inc.). http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-phil19.html. Retrieved 2006-06-21. 

^ Whelan, Shane (December 2002). "Actuaries’ contributions to financial economics" (PDF). The Actuary (Staple Inn Actuarial Society): pp. 34–35. http://www.the-actuary.org.uk/pdfs/02_12_08.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-28. 

Bibliography

External links