An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.

The increasing life expectancy trend that is observed at present means that pensioners are increasingly facing the problem of longevity risk (the risk of living longer than one can financially sustain themselves). As a result, there is an increasing demand for annuities, so that the longevity risk...

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Main Author: Anand, Aniel
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20678/
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author Anand, Aniel
author_facet Anand, Aniel
author_sort Anand, Aniel
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The increasing life expectancy trend that is observed at present means that pensioners are increasingly facing the problem of longevity risk (the risk of living longer than one can financially sustain themselves). As a result, there is an increasing demand for annuities, so that the longevity risk can be transferred from the annuitant to the insurer. In order to price an annuity, the insurer must estimate future liabilities. Liabilities are the obligation to pay out a set amount for each period for as many periods as the annuitant remains alive for. Therefore, an insurer needs to estimate the life expectancy of their annuitants which should first reflect the insurers own mortality experience and secondly, the amount of prudence the insurer chooses to add. Under Section 4.4 of an insurance company FSA return, they are required to disclose what their expectation of life is. This value differs between insurance companies. This dissertation attempts to discover what factors affect an insurers estimate of life expectancy, and thus explain the variation in the different expectations of life. The four factors that were tested were the Average Annuity offered by the insurer; the Financial Strength of the insurer; whether or not the insurance company was a mutual or a proprietary and the size of the insurance company, measured by total assets. The findings show that the Financial Strength of the insurer and whether or not the insurance company was a mutual or a proprietary were strongly significant; the size of the insurance company was weakly significant and the Average Annuity was not significant.
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spelling nottingham-206782018-02-02T16:12:21Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20678/ An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies. Anand, Aniel The increasing life expectancy trend that is observed at present means that pensioners are increasingly facing the problem of longevity risk (the risk of living longer than one can financially sustain themselves). As a result, there is an increasing demand for annuities, so that the longevity risk can be transferred from the annuitant to the insurer. In order to price an annuity, the insurer must estimate future liabilities. Liabilities are the obligation to pay out a set amount for each period for as many periods as the annuitant remains alive for. Therefore, an insurer needs to estimate the life expectancy of their annuitants which should first reflect the insurers own mortality experience and secondly, the amount of prudence the insurer chooses to add. Under Section 4.4 of an insurance company FSA return, they are required to disclose what their expectation of life is. This value differs between insurance companies. This dissertation attempts to discover what factors affect an insurers estimate of life expectancy, and thus explain the variation in the different expectations of life. The four factors that were tested were the Average Annuity offered by the insurer; the Financial Strength of the insurer; whether or not the insurance company was a mutual or a proprietary and the size of the insurance company, measured by total assets. The findings show that the Financial Strength of the insurer and whether or not the insurance company was a mutual or a proprietary were strongly significant; the size of the insurance company was weakly significant and the Average Annuity was not significant. 2006 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20678/1/Dissertation.pdf Anand, Aniel (2006) An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished) Expectation of Life Life Expectancy Assumptions Annuity Pricing of Annuities longevity risk
spellingShingle Expectation of Life
Life Expectancy Assumptions
Annuity
Pricing of Annuities
longevity risk
Anand, Aniel
An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
title An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
title_full An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
title_fullStr An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
title_full_unstemmed An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
title_short An Investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
title_sort investigation into what factors influence the expectation of life made by life insurance companies.
topic Expectation of Life
Life Expectancy Assumptions
Annuity
Pricing of Annuities
longevity risk
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/20678/