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Insurance Risk and Ruin

Insurance Risk and Ruin

Insurance Risk and Ruin

David C. M. Dickson, University of Melbourne
January 2005
Hardback
9780521846400
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eBook

    Based on the author's experience of teaching final-year actuarial students in Britain and Australia, and suitable for a first course in insurance risk theory, this book focuses on the two major areas of risk theory – aggregate claims distributions and ruin theory. For aggregate claims distributions, detailed descriptions are given of recursive techniques that can be used in the individual and collective risk models. For the collective model, different classes of counting distribution are discussed, and recursion schemes for probability functions and moments presented. For the individual model, the three most commonly applied techniques are discussed and illustrated. Care has been taken to make the book accessible to readers who have a solid understanding of the basic tools of probability theory. Numerous worked examples are included in the text and each chapter concludes with exercises, which have answers in the book and full solutions available for instructors from www.cambridge.org/9780521846400.

    • Introduces the reader to recent research in ruin theory
    • Covers material from professional actuarial examinations
    • Challenging exercises, including actuarial exam-style questions, with answers in the book and full solutions at www.cambridge.org/9780521846400

    Reviews & endorsements

    "This is a nice introduction to some basic aspects of risk theory, with special emphasis on utility theory, recursive methods and ruin theory. The book is written in a style which is close to what a presentation in a classroom might be: it is narrative and moves ahead from definitions to results in a flow of mathematical arguments and accompanying explanations...The book greatly benefits from numerical illustrations, numerous examples and many exercises and their solutions. What I appreciate most is the way in which the author explains the different topics dealt with in this book." ISI Short Book Reviews

    "...this is a nice textbook, especially for students with a limited background in probability. In particular, it should be useful for students studying fro the professional examination.... I am not aware of any book on the same level in which ruin theory is treated so deeply. The numerous exercises allow for the application of theory immediately. For this reason, this book is also ideal for an applied course for students with only a basic introduction to probability."
    Journal of the American Statistical Association

    "A clear, concise and well written text-book on two daunting actuarial areas... The exposition is so clear that it feels like [the author is] talking to you... This is an excellent book equally suitable for self-study and classroom instruction. It is highly recommended as supplementary reading for students studying for their professional exams and as an overview of the latest developments in risk models, ruin theory and reinsurance for practitioners."
    Seow Fan Chong, Annals of Actuarial Science

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2011
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9780511839061
    0 pages
    0kg
    50 b/w illus. 15 tables 75 exercises
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • 1. Probability distributions and insurance applications
    • 2. Utility theory
    • 3. Principles of premium calculation
    • 4. The collective risk model
    • 5. The individual risk model
    • 6. Introduction to ruin theory
    • 7. Classical ruin theory
    • 8. Advanced ruin theory
    • 9. Reinsurance
    • References
    • Solutions to exercises
    • Index.
    Resources for
    Type
    Solutions
    Size: 314.93 KB
    Type: application/pdf
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      Author
    • David C. M. Dickson , University of Melbourne

      David C. M. Dickson is a Professor in Actuarial Studies in the Department of Economics at the University of Melbourne. He is also Adjunct Professor in the Department of Statistics and Actuarial Science at the University of Waterloo.