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Posts feedPension size as a factor
Mortality and pension size
It will surprise nobody reading this blog that richer people tend to live longer. This applies both between countries (countries with a higher per capita income tend to have higher life expectancies) and also within countries (people of higher socio-economic status tend to live longer than others, even when they all share the same comprehensive healthcare system).
Turning the tables
Modelling improvements in experience data - I
In the first of a pair of blogs we will look at how to allow for changes in mortality levels when calibrating models to experience analysis. We start with time-varying extensions of traditional parametric models proposed by actuaries, beginning of course with the Gompertz (1825) model:
\[{\rm Gompertz}: \mu_{x,y} = e^{\alpha+\beta x + \delta(y-2000)}\qquad (1)\]
Modelling improvements in experience data - II
In my previous blog I looked at the implied mortality improvements from time-varying traditional actuarial survival models. In this blog we consider the implied improvements under the newer Hermite-spline model I proposed in Richards (2019). This paper included an explicit attempt to model age-related mortality changes, as dis
Piquing interest in improvements
When underwriting a pension scheme for a bulk annuity or longevity swap, the first concern is understanding what mortality levels are, especially differentials amongst sub-groups. The next concern is whether the recent mortality improvements in the pension scheme are in line with the pricing basis; if the scheme has experienced faster improvements, say, then this would be a valuable insight for pricing.
Seasoned analysis
The importance of seasonal analysis was underscored by a recent letter form the UK insurance regulator. In a previous blog, I looked at quarterly seasonal variation in a portfolio of defined-benefit pensions, and in a more recent blog I looked at monthly seasonal variation in mortality in England & Wales.