Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5076249 Insurance: Mathematics and Economics 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Risk-adjusted distributions are commonly used in actuarial science to define premium principles. In this paper, we claim that an appropriate risk-adjusted distribution, besides satisfying other desirable properties, should be well-behaved under conditioning with respect to the original risk distribution. Based on a sequence of such risk-adjusted distributions, we introduce a family of premium principles that gradually incorporate the degree of risk-aversion of the insurer in the risk loading. Members of this family are particular distortion premium principles that can be represented as mixtures of TVaRs, where the weights in the mixture reflect the attitude toward risk of the insurer. We make a systematic study of this family of premium principles.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
Authors
, , ,