21.3k views
3 votes
For a stop-loss insurance on a three-person group:

i. Loss amounts are independent:
ii. The distribution of loss amount for each person is:
iii: The stop-loss insurance has a deductible of 1 for the group

Loss Amount Probability
0 0.4
1 0.3
2 0.2
3 0.1

Calculate the net stop-loss premium:
2.00
2.03
2.06
2.09
2.12

User Scottkosty
by
9.6k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Final answer:

To calculate the net stop-loss premium, you use the provided probability distribution to find the expected value of claims exceeding the deductible, which reflects a fair premium that covers claims, costs, and profits.

Step-by-step explanation:

The student asked to calculate the net stop-loss premium for a three-person group with independent loss amounts and a given probability distribution for each person. A deductible of 1 for the group implies that losses only start to be covered once the group as a whole exceeds this amount. The distribution of loss amounts has probabilities of 0.4, 0.3, 0.2, and 0.1 for amounts 0, 1, 2, and 3 respectively. To find the net stop-loss premium, we need to consider the expected value of a claim exceeding the deductible.

When it comes to insurance, actuarial fairness means setting a premium so that the average payments into the insurance cover the average claims, company costs, and allow for profits. The premiums must reflect the risk group to which a person belongs. The loss distribution table provided is the basis for calculating the expected loss, and thereby, the premium that ensures actuarial fairness.

User Ayush Pallav
by
7.9k points

No related questions found