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Reserving for Self-Insureds

Reserving for Self-Insureds. Kevin M. Bingham – Deloitte . kbingham@deloitte.com Casualty Actuarial Society September 12, 2005 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Boston, Massachusetts. INTRODUCTION. Setting Reserves for Self-Insured Corporations “Speak the Language” Business Unit Focus

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Reserving for Self-Insureds

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  1. Reserving for Self-Insureds Kevin M. Bingham – Deloitte. kbingham@deloitte.com Casualty Actuarial Society September 12, 2005 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM Boston, Massachusetts

  2. INTRODUCTION • Setting Reserves for Self-Insured Corporations • “Speak the Language” • Business Unit Focus • Quarterly Monitoring • Year-end Results

  3. Setting Reserves For Self-InsuredCorporations

  4. Setting Reserves For Self-InsuredCorporations Actuarial Consultant

  5. “Speak the Same Language”

  6. “Speak the Same Language” • Provide clear and concise reports • Executive summary • Technical appendix • Meet with each business unit • First understand business unit trends • Second incorporate BU feedback then discuss results • Training class titled “Guidebook to “The Books” and Quarterly Monitoring” • Bridge the gap between Environmental Health and Safety (EH&S) terminology and actuarial terminology

  7. OSHA versus Actuarial Terminology Conceptually Similar • Frequency • OSHA • Number of Cases Divided by Hours Worked • EH&S data tracked separately for lost work day cases, restricted duty cases and medical only cases • Some business units rely on the frequency for OSHA Lost Work Day cases only • Insurance • Number of Claims Divided by Payroll • All types of claims combined

  8. OSHA versus Actuarial Terminology Conceptually Not Even Close • Severity • OSHA • Number of Lost Work Days Divided by Hours Worked • Definition is actually more like a loss rate (i.e., frequency times severity) • Definition is based on number of lost work days rather than claim dollars and therefore does not incorporate inflationary trends in indemnity claim dollars per lost work day, nor the trends in medical costs or litigation costs. • Insurance • Claim Dollars Divided by Number of Claims • Insurance Severity definition measures average value per claim and does not incorporate frequency • EXAMPLE: • EMPLOYEE 1 – 60 LOST DAYS • SEVERE HEAD TRAUMA • INTENSE CARE UNIT • MULTIPLE BRAIN SURGERIES • EMPLOYEE 2 – 60 LOST DAYS • INITIAL BED REST • PAIN RELIEVERS • FAMILY ASSISTS RECOVERY • DRAMATICALLY • DIFFERENT • COSTS • SAME OSHA SEVERITY!

  9. Business Unit Focus

  10. Business Unit Focus • Understand each business unit • Workforce • Age • Location • BU trends (acquisitions, growth, etc.) • Work location • On-site • Travel to customer site • Proactive risk management • On-site medical staff • Focused claims handling • EH&S initiatives Implications on reserving assumptions • Lift programs • Executive Ownership • Design for Environment and Safety (guidebook) • Ergonomics • Machine guarding, etc.

  11. Quarterly Monitoring

  12. Quarterly Monitoring • Monitor results • Early warning when actual exceeds expected • Avoid surprises at BUs → book quarterly adjustment? • Understand drivers • Large losses (e.g., back fusion, severe auto accident) • Spike in frequency • Proactive risk management • Identify data issues • Investigate unusual variances

  13. Quarterly Monitoring • Clear communication is important • What quarterly monitoring is: • Actual versus expected (i.e., uses year-end assumptions to project emergence of incurred/paid losses) • Early warning • What quarterly monitoring is not: • Complete actuarial analysis (i.e., re-pick loss development factors, expected loss rates, etc.) “Adverse/(favorable) quarterly monitoring results may end up worse/(better) at year-end when actuaries re-visit their assumptions…”

  14. Year-end Results

  15. Year-end Results • Data gathering • Preliminary actuarial analysis • BU trend discussion & research • Finalize analysis and communicate results

  16. Year-end Results – Data Gathering • BU loss & ALAE information • BU claim count information • BU exposure information • Fixed expenses (e.g., broker fees, system costs, LOCs, claims handling fees, etc.) • Variable expenses (e.g., 2nd injury assessment rate, self-insured assessment rate, etc.) • Policy period information (e.g., self-insured retention, policy type, reinsurance, etc.) • Discount rate By BU division?

  17. Year-end Results – Preliminary Actuarial Analysis • Traditional actuarial methodologies • Prior year runoff of analysis • Review drivers of change in ultimates • Diagnostics • Frequency • Severity • Paid to incurred ratios • Settlement rates • Aggregate case reserves

  18. Year-end Results – BU trend discussion & research • Discuss preliminary actuarial diagnostics and drivers • Discuss BU trends • Discuss individual large losses • Medical director and claim staff feedback • Settlement efforts (active vs. inactive employees) • Shift in distribution of claims • EH&S update

  19. Year-end Results - Finalize analysis and communicate results • BU presentation • Recap major findings, research efforts and how issues were addressed in the actuarial analysis • Present findings by coverage (e.g., WC, AL, GL, etc.) • Change in prior year ultimates • Change in forecasts • Accrual adjustments • Display graphs • Loss rates • Frequency/Severity • Consolidated presentation (Corporate) • ∆’s in: • Exposures • Fixed expenses • Variable expenses • Ultimate losses • Actuarial assumptions • Discount rate • Etc.

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