The Optimal Control of a Jump Mutual Insurance Process

Abstract
We shall define a mutual insurance firm as a firm whose stockholders are the bearers of the insurance contracts issued by the firm. The firm's insurance is then viewed as a collective process of say N persons seeking to protect themselves against claims that may occur to any one of them. For example, large employers protecting their employees by pooling risk and deducting for protection given amounts from salaries may be a case in point. In this latter case, the employer may match withdrawals from employees salaries and provide in the process a fringe benefit and increase employees loyalty to the firm. Alternatively, agricultural collectives have in some cases established mutual insurance firms whose purposes are to protect them, at a coast, from the uncertainty implicitly in their production processes and the fluctuations of agricultural markets. Since these firms do not work for profit, contingent payments, or fund reimbursement in case of excess cash holdings are typical control policies which help cover extraordinary claims and at the same time are assumed the best investment policies.
Volume
13:1
Page
13
Year
1982
Categories
Financial and Statistical Methods
Aggregation Methods
Collective Risk Model
Financial and Statistical Methods
Loss Distributions
Publications
ASTIN Bulletin
Authors
Charles S Tapiero