| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9552762 | Insurance: Mathematics and Economics | 2005 | 19 Pages | 
Abstract
												Consider an employer who, through an insurer, provides optional group term life insurance to a group of employees. The employees are assumed to have mortality following a mixture mortality model where they have different mortality rates belonging to a common probability distribution. To reduce the effects of possible adverse selection, the insurer sets a maximum acceptable mortality level (qM). The insurer then uses a costly medical underwriting/exam to determine each applicant's mortality level, q. If q>qM the employee is refused insurance otherwise insurance is granted. Each employee is assumed to have a reservation price for term insurance. Economic theory is used to determine the employees' inverse aggregate demand function. This demand function is then used to determine the mortality cut-off level and premium that maximize the insurer's expected profits. First order conditions and several necessary conditions for profit maximization are given.
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													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Mathematics
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											Authors
												Colin M. Ramsay, 
											