Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5076368 | Insurance: Mathematics and Economics | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
This article considers a co-reinsurance strategy that (1) protects insurance companies against catastrophic risks; (2) enables insurers to gather sufficient information about the different risk attitudes of reinsurers and diversify their reinsured risks; (3) enables insurers to create better risk-sharing profiles by balancing the risk tolerances of reinsurers; (4) has the benefit of allowing reinsurers to accumulate experience with risks with which they are unfamiliar; (5) reduces the overall direct cost of a reinsurance contract; (6) allows a government to back some insurance products, such as the terrorism insurance programs that were established in many countries after the September 11th terrorist attacks; and (7) reflects the practical reinsurance industry of some countries, such as Iran. Such a co-reinsurance strategy can be fully determined by estimating its parameters whenever three optimal criteria are satisfied and prior information about the unknown parameters is available. Two simulation-based studies have been conducted to demonstrate (1) the practical applications of our findings and (2) the possible impact of any type of dependency between the co-reinsurance's parameters and the evaluated optimal co-reinsurance strategy.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Mathematics
Statistics and Probability
Authors
Amir T. Payandeh Najafabadi, Ali Panahi Bazaz,