The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines

As regulatory changes take place in the Philippine health insurance industry, this study focused on addressing the existing pricing concerns by introducing the loss model driven Frequency-Severity Method which is widely used in other insurance markets around the world. The study aimed to demonstrate...

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Main Author: Baria, Soleil G.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2018
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/5465
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_masteral-123032023-01-23T01:24:28Z The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines Baria, Soleil G. As regulatory changes take place in the Philippine health insurance industry, this study focused on addressing the existing pricing concerns by introducing the loss model driven Frequency-Severity Method which is widely used in other insurance markets around the world. The study aimed to demonstrate the application of risk management and loss modeling on the estimation of health insurance product prices and the advantages and disadvantages of the Frequency-Severity Method over the traditional Loss-Cost approach in which only claims severity is estimated. The results of the study showed that by classifying data according to its similar characteristics, the risk of wrongly specifying a best-fit probability distribution is minimized, percentiles can be determined through Maximum Likelihood Estimation hence avoiding the use of the central limit theorem and the resulting segmented pricing equation is more effective in expressing in numbers the primary pricing drivers. Claims data were right-skewed heavy-tailed and best-fitted into the Weibull distribution as determined by Anderson Darling and p-value estimates. The modeled premiums were approximately twenty-percent higher than the empirical premiums, however, showed a fifty-percent increase in underwriting profit on the onset. The twenty-percent gap was also addressed through the adjustment of the frequency component, and by this adjustment proved the versatility of the pricing model. 2018-02-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/5465 Master's Theses English Animo Repository Health insurance--Philippines Health insurance--Rates--Philippines Insurance
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Health insurance--Philippines
Health insurance--Rates--Philippines
Insurance
spellingShingle Health insurance--Philippines
Health insurance--Rates--Philippines
Insurance
Baria, Soleil G.
The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines
description As regulatory changes take place in the Philippine health insurance industry, this study focused on addressing the existing pricing concerns by introducing the loss model driven Frequency-Severity Method which is widely used in other insurance markets around the world. The study aimed to demonstrate the application of risk management and loss modeling on the estimation of health insurance product prices and the advantages and disadvantages of the Frequency-Severity Method over the traditional Loss-Cost approach in which only claims severity is estimated. The results of the study showed that by classifying data according to its similar characteristics, the risk of wrongly specifying a best-fit probability distribution is minimized, percentiles can be determined through Maximum Likelihood Estimation hence avoiding the use of the central limit theorem and the resulting segmented pricing equation is more effective in expressing in numbers the primary pricing drivers. Claims data were right-skewed heavy-tailed and best-fitted into the Weibull distribution as determined by Anderson Darling and p-value estimates. The modeled premiums were approximately twenty-percent higher than the empirical premiums, however, showed a fifty-percent increase in underwriting profit on the onset. The twenty-percent gap was also addressed through the adjustment of the frequency component, and by this adjustment proved the versatility of the pricing model.
format text
author Baria, Soleil G.
author_facet Baria, Soleil G.
author_sort Baria, Soleil G.
title The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines
title_short The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines
title_full The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines
title_fullStr The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed The application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the Philippines
title_sort application of loss modeling in pricing for group health insurance in the philippines
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2018
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/5465
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