The Demand for Insurance With an Upper Limit on Coverage

Abstract
The demand for insurance is examined when the indemnity schedule is subject to an upper limit. The optimal contract is shown to display full insurance above a deductible up to the cap. Some results derived in the standard model with no upper limit on coverage turn out to be invalid; the optimal deductible of an actuarially fair policy is positive and insurance may be a normal good under decreasing absolute risk aversion. An increase in the upper limit would induce the policyholder with constant absolute risk aversion to reduce his or her optimal deductible and therefore this would increase the demand for insurance against small losses.
Volume
Vol. 71, No. 2, June
Page
253-264
Year
2004
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Ratemaking
Deductibles, Retentions, and Limits
Publications
Journal of Risk and Insurance, The
Authors
J David Cummins
Olivier Mahul