Two Studies in Automobile Insurance Ratemaking

Abstract

Section A, Effectiveness of Merit Rating and Class Rating, uses the Canadian experience for private passenger automobiles to show (1) that merit rating is almost as effective as the class plan in separating the better risks from the poorer risks, (2) that both merit rating and class rating leave unanalyzed a considerable amount of variation among risks and (3) that certain available evidence supports the conclusion that annual mileage, which has long been felt to be an important measure of hazard, is a very significant cause of this unanalyzed variation among risks.

Volume
XLVII
Page
1-19
Year
1960
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Ratemaking
Publications
Proceedings of the Casualty Actuarial Society
Authors
Robert A Bailey
LeRoy J Simon
Formerly on syllabus
Off