Mortality in a heterogeneous population - Lee-Carter's methodology

03/29/2018
by   Kamil Jodź, et al.
0

The EU Solvency II directive recommends insurance companies to pay more attention to the risk management methods. The sense of risk management is the ability to quantify risk and apply methods that reduce uncertainty. In life insurance, the risk is a consequence of the random variable describing the life expectancy. The article will present a proposal for stochastic mortality modeling based on the Lee and Carter methodology. The maximum likelihood method is often used to estimate parameters in mortality models. This method assumes that the population is homogeneous and the number of deaths has the Poisson distribution. The aim of this article is to change assumptions about the distribution of the number of deaths. The results indicate that the model can get a better match to historical data, when the number of deaths has a negative binomial distribution.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
04/18/2023

Makeham Mortality Models as Mixtures

Mortality modeling is crucial to understanding the complex nature of pop...
research
06/27/2023

Catastrophe risk in a stochastic multi-population mortality model

This paper presents an approach to incorporate mortality shocks into mor...
research
01/26/2021

Applications of Clustering with Mixed Type Data in Life Insurance

Death benefits are generally the largest cash flow item that affects fin...
research
01/05/2020

Decline of war or end of positive check? Analysis of change in war size distribution between 1816-2007

This study examines whether there has been a decline in the risk of deat...
research
12/17/2019

Pay-As-You-Drive Insurance Pricing Model

Every time drivers take to the road, and with each mile that they drive,...
research
12/16/2015

Feature Representation for ICU Mortality

Good predictors of ICU Mortality have the potential to identify high-ris...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset