Edu 2009 Fall Exam C Questions PDF
Edu 2009 Fall Exam C Questions PDF
Edu 2009 Fall Exam C Questions PDF
Copyright 2008 by the Society of Actuaries and the Casualty Actuarial Society
Some of the questions in this study note are taken from past SOA/CAS examinations.
F b xg =
bx / g
1+ bx / g
Calculate the estimate of by percentile matching, using the 40th and 80th empirically
smoothed percentile estimates.
(ii) Claim sizes have a Pareto distribution with parameters = 0.5 and = 6 .
(iv) The observed pure premium should be within 2% of the expected pure premium 90%
of the time.
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3. You study five lives to estimate the time from the onset of a disease to death. The times to
death are:
2 3 3 3 7
Using a triangular kernel with bandwidth 2, estimate the density function at 2.5.
(A) 8/40
(B) 12/40
(C) 14/40
(D) 16/40
(E) 17/40
f ( x ) = ( +1) , x >1, 0< <
x
(ii) A random sample of size five produced three losses with values 3, 6 and 14, and two
losses exceeding 25.
(A) 0.25
(B) 0.30
(C) 0.34
(D) 0.38
(E) 0.42
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5. You are given:
(i) The annual number of claims for a policyholder has a binomial distribution with
probability function:
2
p ( x q ) = q x (1 q ) , x = 0, 1, 2
2 x
( q ) = 4q 3 , 0 < q < 1
C-09-08 -3-
7. DELETED
(E) At least 4
9. DELETED
10. DELETED
(i) Losses on a companys insurance policies follow a Pareto distribution with probability
density function:
f (x ) = , 0< x<
( x + )
2
(ii) For half of the companys policies = 1 , while for the other half = 3 .
C-09-08 -4-
Determine the posterior probability that losses for this policy in Year 2 will exceed 8.
(A) 0.11
(B) 0.15
(C) 0.19
(D) 0.21
(E) 0.27
Year
Policyholder 1 2 3 4
X 730 800 650 700
Y 655 650 625 750
Using the nonparametric empirical Bayes method, determine the Bhlmann credibility
premium for Policyholder Y.
(A) 655
(B) 670
(C) 687
(D) 703
(E) 719
13. A particular line of business has three types of claims. The historical probability and the
number of claims for each type in the current year are:
You test the null hypothesis that the probability of each type of claim in the current year is the
same as the historical probability.
C-09-08 -5-
Calculate the chi-square goodness-of-fit test statistic.
(E) At least 12
14. The information associated with the maximum likelihood estimator of a parameter is 4n ,
where n is the number of observations.
(A) 1
2n
(B) 1
n
(C) 4
n
(D) 8n
(E) 16n
C-09-08 -6-
15. You are given:
(i) The probability that an insured will have at least one loss during any year is p.
(iii) An insured is observed for 8 years and has at least one loss every year.
Determine the posterior probability that the insured will have at least one loss during Year 9.
(A) 0.450
(B) 0.475
(C) 0.500
(D) 0.550
(E) 0.625
Number at Risk
Time (t) at Time t Failures at Time t
1 30 5
2 27 9
3 32 6
4 25 5
5 20 4
16. The probability of failing at or before Time 4, given survival past Time 1, is 3 q1 .
Calculate Greenwoods approximation of the variance of 3 q1 .
(A) 0.0067
(B) 0.0073
(C) 0.0080
(D) 0.0091
(E) 0.0105
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17. bg
Calculate the 95% log-transformed confidence interval for H 3 , based on the Nelson-Aalen
estimate.
Determine the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the second claim amount from the same risk.
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19. You are given:
(i) A sample x1 , x2 ,, x10 is drawn from a distribution with probability density function:
1
2 [1 exp( x ) + 1 exp( x )], 0< x<
(ii) >
(A) 9
(B) 10
(C) 15
(D) 20
(E) 21
1
You estimate Var(X) using the estimator g(X1, X2) =
2
( X i X )2 .
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 4
(D) 8
(E) 16
C-09-08 -9-
21. You are given:
(i) The number of claims incurred in a month by any insured has a Poisson distribution
with mean .
f ( ) =
(100 ) e 100
6
120
(A) 16.7
(B) 16.9
(C) 17.3
(D) 17.6
(E) 18.0
22. You fit a Pareto distribution to a sample of 200 claim amounts and use the likelihood ratio test
to test the hypothesis that = 1.5 and = 7.8 .
(ii) The natural logarithm of the likelihood function evaluated at the maximum likelihood
estimates is 817.92.
C-09-08 - 10 -
(A) Reject at the 0.005 significance level.
(B) Reject at the 0.010 significance level, but not at the 0.005 level.
(C) Reject at the 0.025 significance level, but not at the 0.010 level.
(D) Reject at the 0.050 significance level, but not at the 0.025 level.
losses in the jth interval and O j is the observed number of losses in the jth interval.
(A) 6.0
(B) 6.4
(C) 6.8
(D) 7.2
(E) 7.6
C-09-08 - 11 -
24. You are given:
(i) The probability that an insured will have exactly one claim is .
bg
=
3
2
, 0< <1
A randomly chosen insured is observed to have exactly one claim.
(A) 0.54
(B) 0.58
(C) 0.63
(D) 0.67
(E) 0.72
C-09-08 - 12 -
(A) Negative binomial
(C) Poisson
(D) Binomial
(i) Low-hazard risks have an exponential claim size distribution with mean .
(ii) Medium-hazard risks have an exponential claim size distribution with mean 2 .
(iii) High-hazard risks have an exponential claim size distribution with mean 3 .
(v) Three claims from medium-hazard risks are observed, of sizes 1, 2 and 3.
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 3
(D) 4
(E) 5
C-09-08 - 13 -
27. You are given:
(ii) = E X partial
(A) Pr k X partial + k
(B) Pr Z k Z X partial Z +k
(C) Pr Z Z X partial Z +
(D) Pr 1 k Z X partial + (1 Z ) 1 + k
(E) Pr k Z X partial + (1 Z ) + k
C-09-08 - 14 -
c h b
Estimate E X 2 E X 150 g 2
.
(ii)
Annual Claim
Type of Risk Prior Probability Probability
I 0.7 0.1
II 0.2 0.2
III 0.1 0.4
One randomly chosen risk has three claims during Years 1-6.
(A) 0.22
(B) 0.28
(C) 0.33
(D) 0.40
(E) 0.46
C-09-08 - 15 -
30. You are given the following about 100 insurance policies in a study of time to policy
surrender:
(i) The study was designed in such a way that for every policy that was surrendered, a
new policy was added, meaning that the risk set, r j , is always equal to 100.
(iii) The number of policies surrendered at the end of each policy year was observed to be:
(iv) The Nelson-Aalen empirical estimate of the cumulative distribution function at time n,
F ( n) , is 0.542.
(B) 9
(C) 10
(D) 11
(E) 12
31. You are given the following claim data for automobile policies:
200 255 295 320 360 420 440 490 500 520 1020
(A) 358
(B) 371
(C) 384
(D) 390
(E) 396
C-09-08 - 16 -
32. You are given:
(i) The number of claims made by an individual insured in a year has a Poisson
distribution with mean .
(ii) The prior distribution for is gamma with parameters = 1 and = 1.2 .
Three claims are observed in Year 1, and no claims are observed in Year 2.
(A) 1.35
(B) 1.36
(C) 1.40
(D) 1.41
(E) 1.43
(iii) The Nelson-Aalen estimate of the cumulative hazard function, H(t), immediately
following the second paid claim, was 23/132.
Determine the Nelson-Aalen estimate of the cumulative hazard function, H(t), immediately
following the fourth paid claim.
(A) 0.35
(B) 0.37
(C) 0.39
(D) 0.41
(E) 0.43
C-09-08 - 17 -
34. The number of claims follows a negative binomial distribution with parameters and r,
where is unknown and r is known. You wish to estimate based on n observations,
where x is the mean of these observations.
x
(A)
r2
x
(B)
r
(C) x
(D) rx
(E) r2x
35. You are given the following information about a credibility model:
Bayesian Estimate of
First Observation Unconditional Probability Second Observation
1 1/3 1.50
2 1/3 1.50
3 1/3 3.00
Determine the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the second observation, given that the first
observation is 1.
(A) 0.75
(B) 1.00
(C) 1.25
(D) 1.50
(E) 1.75
C-09-08 - 18 -
36. For a survival study, you are given:
(i) bg
The Product-Limit estimator S t0 is used to construct confidence intervals for
bg
S t0 .
(ii) bg b
The 95% log-transformed confidence interval for S t0 is 0.695, 0.843 .g
bg
Determine S t0 .
(A) 0.758
(B) 0.762
(C) 0.765
(D) 0.769
(E) 0.779
37. A random sample of three claims from a dental insurance plan is given below:
Claims are assumed to follow a Pareto distribution with parameters = 150 and .
C-09-08 - 19 -
38. An insurer has data on losses for four policyholders for 7 years. The loss from the i th
policyholder for year j is X ij .
4
c Xi X h
2
= 3.30
i =1
Using nonparametric empirical Bayes estimation, calculate the Bhlmann credibility factor
for an individual policyholder.
39. You are given the following information about a commercial auto liability book of business:
(i) Each insureds claim count has a Poisson distribution with mean , where has a
gamma distribution with = 15
. and = 0.2 .
(ii) Individual claim size amounts are independent and exponentially distributed with
mean 5000.
(iii) The full credibility standard is for aggregate losses to be within 5% of the expected
with probability 0.90.
C-09-08 - 20 -
Using classical credibility, determine the expected number of claims required for full
credibility.
(A) 2165
(B) 2381
(C) 3514
(D) 7216
(E) 7938
29 64 90 135 182
(iii) The mean of the exponential distribution is estimated using the method of moments.
(A) 0.14
(B) 0.16
(C) 0.19
(D) 0.25
(E) 0.27
41. You are given:
(i) Annual claim frequency for an individual policyholder has mean and variance 2 .
(ii) The prior distribution for is uniform on the interval [0.5, 1.5].
Using Bhlmann credibility, estimate the number of claims in Year 2 for the selected
policyholder.
C-09-08 - 21 -
(A) 0.56
(B) 0.65
(C) 0.71
(D) 0.83
(E) 0.94
42. DELETED
(i) The prior distribution of the parameter has probability density function:
bg
=
1
2
, 1< <
(ii) Given = , claim sizes follow a Pareto distribution with parameters = 2 and .
A claim of 3 is observed.
(A) 0.33
(B) 0.42
(C) 0.50
(D) 0.58
(E) 0.64
C-09-08 - 22 -
44. You are given:
(ii) bg
The prior density of is =
500
2
, > 500 .
Two claims, x1 = 400 and x2 = 600 , are observed. You calculate the posterior
distribution as:
C-09-08 - 23 -
(A) 450
(B) 500
(C) 550
(D) 600
(E) 650
+ + +
2 3 3 5 5 6 7 7 9 10
Using the Product-Limit estimator, calculate the probability that the loss on a policy
exceeds 8.
(A) 0.20
(B) 0.25
(C) 0.30
(D) 0.36
(E) 0.40
47. You are given the following observed claim frequency data collected over a period of 365
days:
Fit a Poisson distribution to the above data, using the method of maximum likelihood.
Regroup the data, by number of claims per day, into four groups:
0 1 2 3+
C-09-08 - 24 -
Apply the chi-square goodness-of-fit test to evaluate the null hypothesis that the claims follow
a Poisson distribution.
(B) Reject at the 0.010 significance level, but not at the 0.005 level.
(C) Reject at the 0.025 significance level, but not at the 0.010 level.
(D) Reject at the 0.050 significance level, but not at the 0.025 level.
X 0 1
0 0.4 0.1
1 0.1 0.2
2 0.1 0.1
10
xi = 10
i=1
(A) 0.75
(B) 0.79
(C) 0.82
(D) 0.86
(E) 0.89
C-09-08 - 25 -
49. You are given:
x 0 1 2 3
Pr[X = x] 0.5 0.3 0.1 0.1
The method of moments is used to estimate the population mean, , and variance, 2 ,
( X X)
2
i
by X and S 2
n = , respectively.
n
(A) 0.72
(B) 0.49
(C) 0.24
(D) 0.08
(E) 0.00
50. You are given four classes of insureds, each of whom may have zero or one claim, with the
following probabilities:
A class is selected at random (with probability ), and four insureds are selected at random
from the class. The total number of claims is two.
If five insureds are selected at random from the same class, estimate the total number of
claims using Bhlmann-Straub credibility.
C-09-08 - 26 -
(A) 2.0
(B) 2.2
(C) 2.4
(D) 2.6
(E) 2.8
51. DELETED
52. With the bootstrapping technique, the underlying distribution function is estimated by which
of the following?
Number of
Claims Probability Claim Size Probability
0 1
5
3 1
1 5 25 3
2
150 3
1 2
2 5 50 3
1
200 3
Claim sizes are independent.
C-09-08 - 27 -
(A) 4,050
(B) 8,100
(C) 10,500
(D) 12,510
(E) 15,612
(A) 249
(B) 253
(C) 257
(D) 260
(E) 263
C-09-08 - 28 -
55. You are given:
(A) 1.00
(B) 1.25
(C) 1.33
(D) 1.67
(E) 1.75
56. You are given the following information about a group of policies:
5 50
15 50
60 100
100 100
500 500
500 1000
29
(B) f(50) f(50) f(100) f(100) f(500) f(1000) / [1-F(1000)]
30
(i) The number of claims per auto insured follows a Poisson distribution with mean
.
(ii) The prior distribution for has the following probability density function:
f b g =
b500 g e
50 500
b50g
Year 1 Year 2
Number of claims 75 210
Number of autos insured 600 900
(A) 178
(B) 184
(C) 193
(D) 209
(E) 224
59. The graph below shows a p-p plot of a fitted distribution compared to a sample.
31
Fitted
Sample
Which of the following is true?
(A) The tails of the fitted distribution are too thick on the left and on the right, and the
fitted distribution has less probability around the median than the sample.
(B) The tails of the fitted distribution are too thick on the left and on the right, and the
fitted distribution has more probability around the median than the sample.
(C) The tails of the fitted distribution are too thin on the left and on the right, and the
fitted distribution has less probability around the median than the sample.
(D) The tails of the fitted distribution are too thin on the left and on the right, and the
fitted distribution has more probability around the median than the sample.
(E) The tail of the fitted distribution is too thick on the left, too thin on the right, and
the fitted distribution has less probability around the median than the sample.
60. You are given the following information about six coins:
32
A coin is selected at random and then flipped repeatedly. X i denotes the outcome of the
ith flip, where 1 indicates heads and 0 indicates tails. The following sequence is
obtained:
l q l
S = X 1 , X 2 , X 3 , X 4 = 11 q
, ,0,1
c h
Determine E X 5 S using Bayesian analysis.
(A) 0.52
(B) 0.54
(C) 0.56
(D) 0.59
(E) 0.63
61. You observe the following five ground-up claims from a data set that is truncated from
below at 100:
(A) 73
(B) 100
(C) 125
(D) 156
(E) 173
62. An insurer writes a large book of home warranty policies. You are given the following
information regarding claims filed by insureds against these policies:
33
(i) A maximum of one claim may be filed per year.
(ii) The probability of a claim varies by insured, and the claims experience for each
insured is independent of every other insured.
(iii) The probability of a claim for each insured remains constant over time.
(iv) The overall probability of a claim being filed by a randomly selected insured in a
year is 0.10.
An insured selected at random is found to have filed 0 claims over the past 10 years.
Determine the Bhlmann credibility estimate for the expected number of claims the
selected insured will file over the next 5 years.
(A) 0.04
(B) 0.08
(C) 0.17
(D) 0.22
(E) 0.25
63. DELETED
(i) The amount of a claim is uniformly distributed but will not exceed a certain
unknown limit .
(ii) bg
The prior distribution of is =
500
2
, > 500 .
Determine the probability that the next claim will exceed 550.
(A) 0.19
34
(B) 0.22
(C) 0.25
(D) 0.28
(E) 0.31
65. You are given the following information about a general liability book of business
comprised of 2500 insureds:
Ni
(i) X i = Yij is a random variable representing the annual loss of the ith insured.
j =1
(ii) N1, N 2 , ..., N 2500 are independent and identically distributed random variables
following a negative binomial distribution with parameters r = 2 and = 0.2.
(iii) Yi1, Yi 2 , ..., YiN i are independent and identically distributed random variables
following a Pareto distribution with = 3.0 and = 1000 .
(iv) The full credibility standard is to be within 5% of the expected aggregate losses
90% of the time.
Using classical credibility theory, determine the partial credibility of the annual loss
experience for this book of business.
(A) 0.34
(B) 0.42
(C) 0.47
(D) 0.50
(E) 0.53
66. To estimate E X , you have simulated X 1 , X 2 , X 3 , X 4 and X 5 with the following results:
1 2 3 4 5
You want the standard deviation of the estimator of E X to be less than 0.05.
35
Estimate the total number of simulations needed.
67. You are given the following information about a book of business comprised of 100
insureds:
Ni
(i) X i = Yij is a random variable representing the annual loss of the i th insured.
j =1
(ii) N1, N 2 , ..., N100 are independent random variables distributed according to a
negative binomial distribution with parameters r (unknown) and = 0.2.
(iv) Yi1, Yi 2 , ..., YiN i are independent random variables distributed according to a Pareto
distribution with = 3.0 and = 1000 .
(A) 0.000
(B) 0.045
(C) 0.500
(D) 0.826
(E) 0.905
68. For a mortality study of insurance applicants in two countries, you are given:
(i)
Country A Country B
ti Sj rj Sj rj
1 20 200 15 100
36
2 54 180 20 85
3 14 126 20 65
4 22 112 10 45
(ii) b g
r j is the number at risk over the period ti 1 , ti . Deaths, S j , during the period
bt , t g are assumed to occur at t .
i 1 i i
(iii) S bt g is the Product-Limit estimate of S bt g based on the data for all study
T
participants.
(iv) bg bg
S B t is the Product-Limit estimate of S t based on the data for study
participants in Country B.
bg
Determine S T 4 S B 4 . bg
(A) 0.06
(B) 0.07
(C) 0.08
(D) 0.09
(E) 0.10
Determine the coefficient of variation of the maximum likelihood estimate of the mean,
.
(A) 0.33
(B) 0.45
(C) 0.70
(D) 1.00
37
(E) 1.21
70. You are given the following information on claim frequency of automobile accidents for
individual drivers:
(ii) There are an equal number of business and pleasure use drivers.
(A) 0.05
(B) 0.09
(C) 0.17
(D) 0.19
(E) 0.27
71. You are investigating insurance fraud that manifests itself through claimants who file
claims with respect to auto accidents with which they were not involved. Your evidence
consists of a distribution of the observed number of claimants per accident and a standard
distribution for accidents on which fraud is known to be absent. The two distributions are
summarized below:
Determine the result of a chi-square test of the null hypothesis that there is no fraud in the
observed accidents.
(B) Reject at the 0.010 significance level, but not at the 0.005 level.
(C) Reject at the 0.025 significance level, but not at the 0.010 level.
(D) Reject at the 0.050 significance level, but not at the 0.025 level.
72. You are given the following data on large business policyholders:
(i) Losses for each employee of a given policyholder are independent and have a
common mean and variance.
(ii) The overall average loss per employee for all policyholders is 20.
Determine the Bhlmann-Straub credibility premium per employee for this policyholder.
73. You are given the following information about a group of 10 claims:
Assume that claim sizes and censorship points are uniformly distributed within each
interval.
Estimate, using the life table methodology, the probability that a claim exceeds 30,000.
(A) 0.67
(B) 0.70
(C) 0.74
(D) 0.77
(E) 0.80
74. DELETED
(i) Claim amounts follow a shifted exponential distribution with probability density
function:
bg
f x = e b x g/ , < x <
1
40
(ii) A random sample of claim amounts X1, X 2 ,..., X10 :
5 5 5 6 8 9 11 12 16 23
(A) 3.0
(B) 3.5
(C) 4.0
(D) 4.5
(E) 5.0
(i) The annual number of claims for each policyholder follows a Poisson distribution
with mean .
(ii) The distribution of across all policyholders has probability density function:
bg
f = e , > 0
z
1
(iii) e n d =
0
n2
A randomly selected policyholder is known to have had at least one claim last year.
Determine the posterior probability that this same policyholder will have at least one
claim this year.
(A) 0.70
(B) 0.75
(C) 0.78
(D) 0.81
(E) 0.86
41
77. A survival study gave (1.63, 2.55) as the 95% linear confidence interval for the
bg
cumulative hazard function H t0 .
bg
Calculate the 95% log-transformed confidence interval for H t0 .
(ii) The random variable has a mean of 1000 and variance of 50.
(iii) The following three claims were observed: 750, 1075, 2000
Calculate the expected size of the next claim using Bhlmann credibility.
(A) 1025
(B) 1063
(C) 1115
(D) 1181
(E) 1266
42
79. Losses come from a mixture of an exponential distribution with mean 100 with
probability p and an exponential distribution with mean 10,000 with probability 1 p .
F pe . b1 pge I .F pe . b1 pge I
1 0.01 20 0.2
(A) GH 100 10,000 JK GH 100 10,000 JK
F pe . b1 pge I + F pe . b1 pge I
1 0.01 20 0.2
(B) GH 100 10,000 JK GH 100 10,000 JK
F pe + b1 pge I .F pe + b1 pge I
1 0.01 20 0.2
(C) GH 100 10,000 JK GH 100 10,000 JK
F pe + b1 pge I + F pe + b1 pge I
1 0.01 20 0.2
(D) GH 100 10,000 JK GH 100 10,000 JK
F e + e I + b1 pg.F e + e I
p. G
1 0.01 20 0.2
(E)
H 100 10,000 JK GH 100 10,000 JK
80. DELETED
With probability 0.3, Y is exponentially distributed with mean 0.5. With probability 0.7,
Y is uniformly distributed on 3, 3 . You simulate the mixing variable where low
values correspond to the exponential distribution. Then you simulate the value of Y ,
where low random numbers correspond to low values of Y . Your uniform random
numbers from 0, 1 are 0.25 and 0.69 in that order.
(A) 0.19
43
(B) 0.38
(C) 0.59
(D) 0.77
(E) 0.95
82. N is the random variable for the number of accidents in a single year. N follows the
distribution:
Pr( N = n) = 0.9(0.1) n 1 , n = 1, 2,
X i is the random variable for the claim amount of the ith accident. X i follows the
distribution:
Let U and V1 ,V2 ,... be independent random variables following the uniform distribution
on (0, 1). You use the inverse transformation method with U to simulate N and Vi to
simulate X i with small values of random numbers corresponding to small values of N
and X i .
You are given the following random numbers for the first simulation:
u v1 v2 v3 v4
0.05 0.30 0.22 0.52 0.46
Calculate the total amount of claims during the year for the first simulation.
(A) 0
(B) 36
(C) 72
(D) 108
(E) 144
44
83. You are the consulting actuary to a group of venture capitalists financing a search for
pirate gold.
Its a risky undertaking: with probability 0.80, no treasure will be found, and thus the
outcome is 0.
The rewards are high: with probability 0.20 treasure will be found. The outcome, if
treasure is found, is uniformly distributed on [1000, 5000].
You use the inverse transformation method to simulate the outcome, where large random
numbers from the uniform distribution on [0, 1] correspond to large outcomes.
Your random numbers for the first two trials are 0.75 and 0.85.
(A) 0
(B) 1000
(C) 2000
(D) 3000
(E) 4000
The effect the incentive plan will have on underlying hospital claims is modeled by
assuming that the new total hospital claims will follow a two-parameter Pareto
distribution with = 2 and = 300 .
E( B ) = 100
Calculate c.
(A) 0.44
(B) 0.48
45
(C) 0.52
(D) 0.56
(E) 0.60
(i) The distribution of the number of maintenance calls each machine will need in a
year is Poisson with mean 3.
(ii) The cost for a maintenance call has mean 80 and standard deviation 200.
(iii) The number of maintenance calls and the costs of the maintenance calls are all
mutually independent.
The department must buy a maintenance contract to cover repairs if there is at least a
10% probability that aggregate maintenance costs in a given year will exceed 120% of
the expected costs.
Using the normal approximation for the distribution of the aggregate maintenance costs,
calculate the minimum number of computers needed to avoid purchasing a maintenance
contract.
(A) 80
(B) 90
(C) 100
(D) 110
(E) 120
(i) The number of losses before any coverage modifications follows a Poisson
distribution with mean .
(ii) The severity of each loss before any coverage modifications is uniformly
distributed between 0 and b.
46
The insurer would like to model the impact of imposing an ordinary deductible,
d ( 0 < d < b ) , on each loss and reimbursing only a percentage, c ( 0 < c 1) , of each loss
in excess of the deductible.
It is assumed that the coverage modifications will not affect the loss distribution.
The insurer models its claims with modified frequency and severity distributions. The
modified claim amount is uniformly distributed on the interval 0, c ( b d ) .
(A)
(B) c
d
(C)
b
bd
(D)
b
bd
(E) c
b
0.012
0.010
0.008
f(x ) 0.006
0.004
0.002
0.000
0 80 120
Loss amount, x
(A) 0.20
(B) 0.24
47
(C) 0.28
(D) 0.32
(E) 0.36
88. A towing company provides all towing services to members of the City Automobile
Club.
You are given:
Towing Distance Towing Cost Frequency
0-9.99 miles 80 50%
10-29.99 miles 100 40%
30+ miles 160 10%
(i) The automobile owner must pay 10% of the cost and the remainder is paid by the
City Automobile Club.
(ii) The number of towings has a Poisson distribution with mean of 1000 per year.
(iii) The number of towings and the costs of individual towings are all mutually
independent.
Using the normal approximation for the distribution of aggregate towing costs, calculate
the probability that the City Automobile Club pays more than 90,000 in any given year.
(A) 3%
(B) 10%
(C) 50%
(D) 90%
(E) 97%
(iii) The ordinary deductible for the coming year is 4/3 of the current deductible.
48
(A) 70%
(B) 75%
(C) 80%
(D) 85%
(E) 90%
90. Actuaries have modeled auto windshield claim frequencies. They have concluded that
the number of windshield claims filed per year per driver follows the Poisson distribution
with parameter , where follows the gamma distribution with mean 3 and variance 3.
Calculate the probability that a driver selected at random will file no more than 1
windshield claim next year.
(A) 0.15
(B) 0.19
(C) 0.20
(D) 0.24
(E) 0.31
91. The number of auto vandalism claims reported per month at Sunny Daze Insurance
Company (SDIC) has mean 110 and variance 750. Individual losses have mean 1101 and
standard deviation 70. The number of claims and the amounts of individual losses are
independent.
Using the normal approximation, calculate the probability that SDICs aggregate auto
vandalism losses reported for a month will be less than 100,000.
(A) 0.24
(B) 0.31
(C) 0.36
49
(D) 0.39
(E) 0.49
92. Prescription drug losses, S, are modeled assuming the number of claims has a geometric
distribution with mean 4, and the amount of each prescription is 40.
b
Calculate E S 100 g +
.
(A) 60
(B) 82
(C) 92
(D) 114
(E) 146
93. At the beginning of each round of a game of chance the player pays 12.5. The player
then rolls one die with outcome N. The player then rolls N dice and wins an amount
equal to the total of the numbers showing on the N dice. All dice have 6 sides and are
fair.
Using the normal approximation, calculate the probability that a player starting with
15,000 will have at least 15,000 after 1000 rounds.
(A) 0.01
(B) 0.04
(C) 0.06
(D) 0.09
(E) 0.12
50
94. X is a discrete random variable with a probability function which is a member of the
(a,b,0) class of distributions.
(ii) P( X = 2) = 01875
.
b
Calculate P X = 3 . g
(A) 0.120
(B) 0.125
(C) 0.130
(D) 0.135
(E) 0.140
95. The number of claims in a period has a geometric distribution with mean 4. The amount
b g
of each claim X follows P X = x = 0.25 , x = 1,2,3,4. The number of claims and the
claim amounts are independent. S is the aggregate claim amount in the period.
bg
Calculate Fs 3 .
(A) 0.27
(B) 0.29
(C) 0.31
(D) 0.33
(E) 0.35
96. Insurance agent Hunt N. Quotum will receive no annual bonus if the ratio of incurred
losses to earned premiums for his book of business is 60% or more for the year. If the
ratio is less than 60%, Hunts bonus will be a percentage of his earned premium equal to
15% of the difference between his ratio and 60%. Hunts annual earned premium is
800,000.
51
Incurred losses are distributed according to the Pareto distribution, with = 500,000 and
= 2.
(A) 13,000
(B) 17,000
(C) 24,000
(D) 29,000
(E) 35,000
97. A group dental policy has a negative binomial claim count distribution with mean 300
and variance 800.
Severity Probability
40 0.25
80 0.25
120 0.25
200 0.25
You expect severity to increase 50% with no change in frequency. You decide to impose
a per claim deductible of 100.
52
98. You own a fancy light bulb factory. Your workforce is a bit clumsy they keep dropping
boxes of light bulbs. The boxes have varying numbers of light bulbs in them, and when
dropped, the entire box is destroyed.
You pay your employees a bonus if the value of light bulbs destroyed in a month is less
than 8000.
Assuming independence and using the normal approximation, calculate the probability
that you will pay your employees a bonus next month.
(A) 0.16
(B) 0.19
(C) 0.23
(D) 0.27
(E) 0.31
99. For a certain company, losses follow a Poisson frequency distribution with mean 2 per
year, and the amount of a loss is 1, 2, or 3, each with probability 1/3. Loss amounts are
independent of the number of losses, and of each other.
An insurance policy covers all losses in a year, subject to an annual aggregate deductible
of 2.
(A) 2.00
(B) 2.36
(C) 2.45
(D) 2.81
(E) 2.96
53
100. The unlimited severity distribution for claim amounts under an auto liability insurance
policy is given by the cumulative distribution:
bg
F x = 1 0.8e 0.02 x 0.2e 0.001x , x0
Calculate the expected payment under this policy for one claim.
(A) 57
(B) 108
(C) 166
(D) 205
(E) 240
101. The random variable for a loss, X, has the following characteristics:
x bg
F x b
E Xx g
0 0.0 0
100 0.2 91
200 0.6 153
1000 1.0 331
Calculate the mean excess loss for a deductible of 100.
(A) 250
(B) 300
(C) 350
(D) 400
(E) 450
54
102. WidgetsRUs owns two factories. It buys insurance to protect itself against major repair
costs. Profit equals revenues, less the sum of insurance premiums, retained major repair
costs, and all other expenses. WidgetsRUs will pay a dividend equal to the profit, if it is
positive.
k Prob (k)
0 0.4
1 0.3
2 0.2
3 0.1
(iv) At each factory, the insurance policy pays the major repair costs in excess of that
factorys ordinary deductible of 1. The insurance premium is 110% of the
expected claims.
(A) 0.43
(B) 0.47
(C) 0.51
(D) 0.55
(E) 0.59
55
103. For watches produced by a certain manufacturer:
(i) Lifetimes follow a single-parameter Pareto distribution with > 1 and = 4.
(A) 0.44
(B) 0.50
(C) 0.56
(D) 0.61
(E) 0.67
(iii) He repeats the process 999 more times: first generating a value , then
generating x from the Poisson distribution with mean .
(A) 75
(B) 100
(C) 125
(D) 150
(E) 175
56
105. An actuary for an automobile insurance company determines that the distribution of the
annual number of claims for an insured chosen at random is modeled by the negative
binomial distribution with mean 0.2 and variance 0.4.
The number of claims for each individual insured has a Poisson distribution and the
means of these Poisson distributions are gamma distributed over the population of
insureds.
(A) 0.20
(B) 0.25
(C) 0.30
(D) 0.35
(E) 0.40
106. A dam is proposed for a river which is currently used for salmon breeding. You have
modeled:
(i) For each hour the dam is opened the number of salmon that will pass through and
reach the breeding grounds has a distribution with mean 100 and variance 900.
(ii) The number of eggs released by each salmon has a distribution with mean of 5
and variance of 5.
(iii) The number of salmon going through the dam each hour it is open and the
numbers of eggs released by the salmon are independent.
Using the normal approximation for the aggregate number of eggs released, determine
the least number of whole hours the dam should be left open so the probability that
10,000 eggs will be released is greater than 95%.
(A) 20
(B) 23
(C) 26
(D) 29
(E) 32
57
107. For a stop-loss insurance on a three person group:
(i) Loss amounts are independent.
(A) 2.00
(B) 2.03
(C) 2.06
(D) 2.09
(E) 2.12
108. For a discrete probability distribution, you are given the recursion relation
bg
pk =
2
k
b g
* p k 1 , k = 1, 2,.
Determine p 4 .bg
(A) 0.07
(B) 0.08
(C) 0.09
(D) 0.10
(E) 0.11
58
109. A company insures a fleet of vehicles. Aggregate losses have a compound Poisson
distribution. The expected number of losses is 20. Loss amounts, regardless of vehicle
type, have exponential distribution with = 200.
In order to reduce the cost of the insurance, two modifications are to be made:
(i) a certain type of vehicle will not be insured. It is estimated that this will
reduce loss frequency by 20%.
Calculate the expected aggregate amount paid by the insurer after the modifications.
(A) 1600
(B) 1940
(C) 2520
(D) 3200
(E) 3880
110. You are the producer of a television quiz show that gives cash prizes. The number of
prizes, N, and prize amounts, X, have the following distributions:
n b
Pr N = n g x b
Pr X = x g
1 0.8 0 0.2
2 0.2 100 0.7
1000 0.1
Your budget for prizes equals the expected prizes plus the standard deviation of prizes.
(A) 306
(B) 316
(C) 416
(D) 510
(E) 518
59
111. The number of accidents follows a Poisson distribution with mean 12. Each accident
generates 1, 2, or 3 claimants with probabilities 2 , 3 , 6 , respectively.
1 1 1
(A) 20
(B) 25
(C) 30
(D) 35
(E) 40
112. In a clinic, physicians volunteer their time on a daily basis to provide care to those who
are not eligible to obtain care otherwise. The number of physicians who volunteer in any
day is uniformly distributed on the integers 1 through 5. The number of patients that can
be served by a given physician has a Poisson distribution with mean 30.
Determine the probability that 120 or more patients can be served in a day at the clinic,
using the normal approximation with continuity correction.
(A) b g
1 0.68
(B) 1 b0.72g
(C) 1 b0.93g
(D) 1 b313
. g
(E) 1 b316
. g
113. The number of claims, N, made on an insurance portfolio follows the following
distribution:
n Pr(N=n)
0 0.7
2 0.2
3 0.1
If a claim occurs, the benefit is 0 or 10 with probability 0.8 and 0.2, respectively.
60
The number of claims and the benefit for each claim are independent.
Calculate the probability that aggregate benefits will exceed expected benefits by more
than 2 standard deviations.
(A) 0.02
(B) 0.05
(C) 0.07
(D) 0.09
(E) 0.12
114. A claim count distribution can be expressed as a mixed Poisson distribution. The mean
of the Poisson distribution is uniformly distributed over the interval [0,5].
(A) 0.61
(B) 0.66
(C) 0.71
(D) 0.76
(E) 0.81
115. A claim severity distribution is exponential with mean 1000. An insurance company will
pay the amount of each claim in excess of a deductible of 100.
Calculate the variance of the amount paid by the insurance company for one claim,
including the possibility that the amount paid is 0.
(A) 810,000
(B) 860,000
(C) 900,000
(D) 990,000
(E) 1,000,000
61
116. Total hospital claims for a health plan were previously modeled by a two-parameter Pareto
distribution with = 2 and = 500 .
The health plan begins to provide financial incentives to physicians by paying a bonus of
50% of the amount by which total hospital claims are less than 500. No bonus is paid if total
claims exceed 500.
Total hospital claims for the health plan are now modeled by a new Pareto distribution with
= 2 and = K . The expected claims plus the expected bonus under the revised model
equals expected claims under the previous model.
Calculate K.
(A) 250
(B) 300
(C) 350
(D) 400
(E) 450
117. For an industry-wide study of patients admitted to hospitals for treatment of cardiovascular
illness in 1998, you are given:
(i)
Duration In Days Number of Patients
Remaining Hospitalized
0 4,386,000
5 1,461,554
10 486,739
15 161,801
20 53,488
25 17,384
30 5,349
35 1,337
40 0
(ii) Discharges from the hospital are uniformly distributed between the durations shown
in the table.
Calculate the mean residual time remaining hospitalized, in days, for a patient who has been
hospitalized for 21 days.
62
(A) 4.4
(B) 4.9
(C) 5.3
(D) 5.8
(E) 6.3
(ii) The amount of each pharmacy claim is uniformly distributed between 5 and 95.
(iii) The amounts of the claims and the number of claims are mutually independent.
Determine the probability that aggregate claims for this individual will exceed 2000 using the
normal approximation.
(A) b g
1 133
.
(B) 1 b166
. g
(C) 1 b2.33g
(D) 1 b2.66g
(E) 1 b3.33g
63
119-120 Use the following information for questions 119 and 120.
An insurer has excess-of-loss reinsurance on auto insurance. You are given:
(ii) In the year 2001 individual losses have a Pareto distribution with
F 2000 IJ , x > 0.
F b xg = 1 G
2
H x + 2000K
(iii) Reinsurance will pay the excess of each loss over 3000.
(iv) Each year, the reinsurer is paid a ceded premium, Cyear , equal to 110% of the
expected losses covered by the reinsurance.
(B) 3,300,000
(C) 4,400,000
(D) 5,500,000
(E) 6,600,000
(B) 1.05
(C) 1.06
(D) 1.07
(E) 1.08
64
121. DELETED
122. You are simulating a compound claims distribution:
(i) The number of claims, N, is binomial with m = 3 and mean 1.8.
(iii) Claim amounts are independent, and are independent of the number of claims.
(iv) You simulate the number of claims, N, then the amounts of each of those claims,
X 1, X 2 , , X N . Then you repeat another N, its claim amounts, and so on until you
have performed the desired number of simulations.
(v) When the simulated number of claims is 0, you do not simulate any claim amounts.
(vi) All simulations use the inverse transform method, with low random numbers
corresponding to few claims or small claim amounts.
(vii) Your random numbers from (0, 1) are 0.7, 0.1, 0.3, 0.1, 0.9, 0.5, 0.5, 0.7, 0.3, and 0.1.
Calculate the aggregate claim amount associated with your third simulated value of N.
(A) 3
(B) 5
(C) 7
(D) 9
(E) 11
65
123. Annual prescription drug costs are modeled by a two-parameter Pareto distribution with
= 2000 and = 2 .
A prescription drug plan pays annual drug costs for an insured member subject to the
following provisions:
(i) The insured pays 100% of costs up to the ordinary annual deductible of 250.
(ii) The insured then pays 25% of the costs between 250 and 2250.
(iii) The insured pays 100% of the costs above 2250 until the insured has paid 3600 in
total.
(A) 1120
(B) 1140
(C) 1160
(D) 1180
(E) 1200
(iii) The numbers of calories of scientists eaten are independent, and are independent of
the number of scientists eaten.
Calculate the probability that two or more scientists are eaten and exactly two of those eaten
have at least 8000 calories each.
66
(A) 0.23
(B) 0.25
(C) 0.27
(D) 0.30
(E) 0.35
125. Two types of insurance claims are made to an insurance company. For each type, the
number of claims follows a Poisson distribution and the amount of each claim is uniformly
distributed as follows:
The numbers of claims of the two types are independent and the claim amounts and claim
numbers are independent.
Calculate the normal approximation to the probability that the total of claim amounts
exceeds 18.
(A) 0.37
(B) 0.39
(C) 0.41
(D) 0.43
(E) 0.45
67
126. The number of annual losses has a Poisson distribution with a mean of 5. The size of each
loss has a two-parameter Pareto distribution with = 10 and = 2.5 . An insurance for the
losses has an ordinary deductible of 5 per loss.
Calculate the expected value of the aggregate annual payments for this insurance.
(A) 8
(B) 13
(C) 18
(D) 23
(E) 28
127. Losses in 2003 follow a two-parameter Pareto distribution with = 2 and = 5. Losses in
2004 are uniformly 20% higher than in 2003. An insurance covers each loss subject to an
ordinary deductible of 10.
(A) 5/9
(B) 5/8
(C) 2/3
(D) 3/4
(E) 4/5
68
128. DELETED
129. DELETED
130. Bob is a carnival operator of a game in which a player receives a prize worth W = 2 N if the
player has N successes, N = 0, 1, 2, 3, Bob models the probability of success for a player
as follows:
Calculate E [W ] .
(A) 5
(B) 7
(C) 9
(D) 11
(E) 13
69
131. You are simulating the gain/loss from insurance where:
(i) Claim occurrences follow a Poisson process with = 2 / 3 per year.
(ii) Each claim amount is 1, 2 or 3 with p(1) = 0.25, p(2) = 0.25, and p(3) = 0.50 .
(iv) The annual premium equals expected annual claims plus 1.8 times the standard
deviation of annual claims.
(v) i=0
You use 0.25, 0.40, 0.60, and 0.80 from the unit interval and the inversion method to
simulate time between claims.
You use 0.30, 0.60, 0.20, and 0.70 from the unit interval and the inversion method to
simulate claim size.
Calculate the gain or loss from the insurers viewpoint during the first 2 years from this
simulation.
(A) loss of 5
(B) loss of 4
(C) 0
(D) gain of 4
(E) gain of 5
70
132. Annual dental claims are modeled as a compound Poisson process where the number of
claims has mean 2 and the loss amounts have a two-parameter Pareto distribution with
= 500 and = 2 .
An insurance pays 80% of the first 750 of annual losses and 100% of annual losses in excess
of 750.
You simulate the number of claims and loss amounts using the inverse transform method
with small random numbers corresponding to small numbers of claims or small loss amounts.
The random number to simulate the number of claims is 0.8. The random numbers to
simulate loss amounts are 0.60, 0.25, 0.70, 0.10 and 0.80.
(A) 294
(B) 625
(C) 631
(D) 646
(E) 658
3 3 x
p ( x ) = q x (1 q ) , x = 0, 1, 2, 3
x
Using Bhlmann credibility, estimate the number of claims in Year 2 for the selected insured.
- 71 -
(A) 0.33
(B) 0.50
(C) 1.00
(D) 1.33
(E) 1.50
134. You are given the following random sample of 13 claim amounts:
99 133 175 216 250 277 651 698 735 745 791 906 947
(A) 219.4
(B) 231.3
(C) 234.7
(D) 246.6
(E) 256.8
- 72 -
135. For observation i of a survival study:
di is the left truncation point
Observation (i) di xi ui
1 0 0.9
2 0 1.2
3 0 1.5
4 0 1.5
5 0 1.6
6 0 1.7
7 0 1.7
8 1.3 2.1
9 1.5 2.1
10 1.6 2.3
- 73 -
136. You are given:
(i) Two classes of policyholders have the following severity distributions:
Determine the Bayesian estimate of the expected value of a second claim from the same
policyholder.
You fit a distribution with the following density function to the data:
bg b g
f x = p + 1 x p , 0 < x < 1 , p > 1
(A) 4.0
(B) 4.1
(C) 4.2
(D) 4.3
(E) 4.4
- 74 -
138. You are given the following sample of claim counts:
0 0 1 2 2
(i) The mean of the fitted model equals the sample mean.
(ii) The 33rd percentile of the fitted model equals the smoothed empirical 33rd percentile
of the sample.
(A) 2
(B) 3
(C) 4
(D) 5
(E) 6
139. Members of three classes of insureds can have 0, 1 or 2 claims, with the following
probabilities:
Number of Claims
Class 0 1 2
I 0.9 0.0 0.1
II 0.8 0.1 0.1
III 0.7 0.2 0.1
A class is chosen at random, and varying numbers of insureds from that class are observed
over 2 years, as shown below:
Determine the Bhlmann-Straub credibility estimate of the number of claims in Year 3 for 35
insureds from the same class.
- 75 -
(A) 10.6
(B) 10.9
(C) 11.1
(D) 11.4
(E) 11.6
140. You are given the following random sample of 30 auto claims:
54 140 230 560 600 1,100 1,500 1,800 1,920 2,000
2,450 2,500 2,580 2,910 3,800 3,800 3,810 3,870 4,000 4,800
7,200 7,390 11,750 12,000 15,000 25,000 30,000 32,300 35,000 55,000
You test the hypothesis that auto claims follow a continuous distribution F(x) with the
following percentiles:
You group the data using the largest number of groups such that the expected number of
claims in each group is at least 5.
(E) At least 16
- 76 -
141. The interval (0.357, 0.700) is a 95% log-transformed confidence interval for the cumulative
hazard rate function at time t, where the cumulative hazard rate function is estimated using
the Nelson-Aalen estimator.
(A) 0.50
(B) 0.53
(C) 0.56
(D) 0.59
(E) 0.61
e
( ) = , 0 < < k
1 e k
Determine k.
(A) 1.5
(B) 1.7
(C) 1.9
(D) 2.1
(E) 2.3
- 77 -
143. The parameters of the inverse Pareto distribution
F ( x) = x / ( x + )
are to be estimated using the method of moments based on the following data:
(E) At least 50
144. A sample of claim amounts is {300, 600, 1500}. By applying the deductible to this sample,
the loss elimination ratio for a deductible of 100 per claim is estimated to be 0.125.
Determine the bootstrap approximation to the mean square error of the estimate.
- 78 -
(A) 0.003
(B) 0.010
(C) 0.021
(D) 0.054
(E) 0.081
145. You are given the following commercial automobile policy experience:
Company Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Losses 50,000 50,000 ?
I
Number of Automobiles 100 200 ?
Losses ? 150,000 150,000
II
Number of Automobiles ? 500 300
Losses 150,000 ? 150,000
III
Number of Automobiles 50 ? 150
Determine the nonparametric empirical Bayes credibility factor, Z, for Company III.
- 79 -
146. Let x1, x2 ,..., xn and y1, y2 ,..., ym denote independent random samples of losses from
Region 1 and Region 2, respectively. Single-parameter Pareto distributions with = 1 , but
different values of , are used to model losses in these regions.
Past experience indicates that the expected value of losses in Region 2 is 1.5 times the
expected value of losses in Region 1. You intend to calculate the maximum likelihood
estimate of for Region 1, using the data from both regions.
n
(A) ln ( xi ) = 0
n m ( + 2 ) 2 ln ( yi )
(B) ln ( xi ) + =0
3 ( + 2 )
2
n 2m 2 ln ( yi )
(C) ln ( xi ) + =0
3 ( + 2 ) ( + 2 )
2
n 2m 6 ln ( yi )
(D) ln ( xi ) + =0
( + 2 ) ( + 2 )
2
n 3m 6 ln ( yi )
(E) ln ( xi ) + =0
(3 ) (3 )
2
147. From a population having distribution function F, you are given the following sample:
2.0, 3.3, 3.3, 4.0, 4.0, 4.7, 4.7, 4.7
Calculate the kernel density estimate of F(4), using the uniform kernel with bandwidth 1.4.
(A) 0.31
(B) 0.41
(C) 0.50
(D) 0.53
(E) 0.63
- 80 -
148. You are given:
(i) The number of claims has probability function:
m m x
p ( x ) = q x (1 q ) , x = 0, 1, 2,, m
x
(ii) The actual number of claims must be within 1% of the expected number of claims
with probability 0.95.
Determine q.
(A) 0.05
(B) 0.10
(C) 0.20
(D) 0.40
(E) 0.80
149. If the proposed model is appropriate, which of the following tends to zero as the sample size
goes to infinity?
- 81 -
150. You are given:
(i) Losses are uniformly distributed on ( 0, ) with > 150.
Estimate by matching the average sample payment to the expected payment per loss.
(A) 192
(B) 196
(C) 200
(D) 204
(E) 208
(iii) For each risk in Class 1, the number of claims per year follows a Poisson distribution
with mean 5.
(iv) For each risk in Class 2, the number of claims per year follows a binomial distribution
with m = 8 and q = 0.55 .
(v) A randomly selected risk has three claims in Year 1, r claims in Year 2 and four
claims in Year 3.
The Bhlmann credibility estimate for the number of claims in Year 4 for this risk is 4.6019.
Determine r .
- 82 -
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 3
(D) 4
(E) 5
(A) 233
(B) 400
(C) 500
(D) 733
(E) 1233
- 83 -
153. DELETED
(E) At least 8
You use the method of percentile matching at the 40th and 80th percentiles to fit an Inverse
Weibull distribution to these data.
- 84 -
(A) Less than 1.35
(ii) Observations other than 0 and 1 have been deleted from the data.
(A) 0.50
(B) 0.75
(C) 1.00
(D) 1.25
(E) 1.50
q3
(iii) The prior density is (q) = , 0.6 < q < 0.8.
0.07
A randomly selected policyholder has one claim in Year 1 and zero claims
in Year 2.
For this policyholder, determine the posterior probability that 0.7 < q < 0.8.
- 85 -
(A) Less than 0.3
11, 22, 22, 22, 36, 51, 69, 69, 69, 92, 92, 120, 161, 161, 230
(ii) H 1( x) is the Nelson-Aalen empirical estimate of the cumulative hazard rate function.
(iii) H 2 ( x) is the maximum likelihood estimate of the cumulative hazard rate function
under the assumption that the sample is drawn from an exponential distribution.
(A) 0.00
(B) 0.11
(C) 0.22
(D) 0.33
(E) 0.44
- 86 -
159. For a portfolio of motorcycle insurance policyholders, you are given:
(i) The number of claims for each policyholder has a conditional Poisson
distribution.
You test the hypothesis that the probability density function is:
4
f ( x) = , x>0
(1 + x )
5
- 87 -
(A) Less than 0.05
(A) A uniformly minimum variance unbiased estimator is an estimator such that no other
estimator has a smaller variance.
(B) An estimator is consistent whenever the variance of the estimator approaches zero as
the sample size increases to infinity.
(D) For an unbiased estimator, the mean squared error is always equal to the variance.
(E) One computational advantage of using mean squared error is that it is not a function
of the true value of the parameter.
5
E X 100 X > 100 = E X 50 X > 50
3
(A) 150
(B) 175
(C) 200
(D) 225
(E) 250
- 88 -
163. The scores on the final exam in Ms. Bs Latin class have a normal distribution with mean
and standard deviation equal to 8. is a random variable with a normal distribution with
mean equal to 75 and standard deviation equal to 6.
Each year, Ms. B chooses a student at random and pays the student 1 times the students
score. However, if the student fails the exam (score 65 ), then there is no payment.
Calculate the conditional probability that the payment is less than 90, given that there is a
payment.
(A) 0.77
(B) 0.85
(C) 0.88
(D) 0.92
(E) 1.00
164. For a collective risk model the number of losses, N, has a Poisson distribution with = 20 .
The common distribution of the individual losses has the following characteristics:
(i) E [ X ] = 70
(ii) E [ X 30] = 25
(A) 54,000
(B) 67,500
(C) 81,000
(D) 94,500
(E) 108,000
- 89 -
165. For a collective risk model:
(i) The number of losses has a Poisson distribution with = 2 .
x fx ( x)
1 0.6
2 0.4
(A) 0.74
(B) 0.79
(C) 0.84
(D) 0.89
(E) 0.94
(ii) p0 = 0.5
Calculate c.
(A) 0.06
(B) 0.13
(C) 0.29
(D) 0.35
(E) 0.40
- 90 -
167. The repair costs for boats in a marina have the following characteristics:
Number of Probability that Mean of repair cost Variance of repair
Boat type boats repair is needed given a repair cost given a repair
Power boats 100 0.3 300 10,000
Sailboats 300 0.1 1000 400,000
Luxury yachts 50 0.6 5000 2,000,000
The marina budgets an amount, Y, equal to the aggregate mean repair costs plus the standard
deviation of the aggregate repair costs.
Calculate Y.
(A) 200,000
(B) 210,000
(C) 220,000
(D) 230,000
(E) 240,000
( )
Calculate Var Y P .
- 91 -
(A) 1500
(B) 1875
(C) 2250
(D) 2625
(E) 3000
Calculate Pr ( X 200 ) .
(A) 0.76
(B) 0.79
(C) 0.82
(D) 0.85
(E) 0.88
170. In a certain town the number of common colds an individual will get in a year follows a
Poisson distribution that depends on the individuals age and smoking status. The distribution
of the population and the mean number of colds are as follows:
- 92 -
Calculate the conditional probability that a person with exactly 3 common colds in a year is
an adult smoker.
(A) 0.12
(B) 0.16
(C) 0.20
(D) 0.24
(E) 0.28
(ii) The common distribution of the independent individual loss amounts is uniform from
0 to 20.
(A) 61
(B) 63
(C) 65
(D) 67
(E) 69
- 93 -
172. You are given:
(i) A random sample of five observations from a population is:
(ii) You use the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test for testing the null hypothesis, H 0 , that the
probability density function for the population is:
4
f ( x) = , x>0
(1 + x )
5
(B) Reject H 0 at the 0.10 significance level, but not at the 0.05 significance level.
(C) Reject H 0 at the 0.05 significance level, but not at the 0.025 significance level.
(D) Reject H 0 at the 0.025 significance level, but not at the 0.01 significance level.
- 94 -
173. You are given:
(iv) The number of claims follows a negative binomial distribution with parameters r and
= 3.
Determine the expected number of claims needed for aggregate losses to be within 10% of
expected aggregate losses with 95% probability.
- 95 -
174. You are given:
(vi) A mortality study covers n lives.
(vii) None were censored and no two deaths occurred at the same time.
39
(ix) A Nelson-Aalen estimate of the cumulative hazard rate function is H (t2 ) = .
380
- 96 -
175. Three observed values of the random variable X are:
1 1 4
1
g ( X1, X 2 , X 3 ) = ( Xi X )
3
- 97 -
176. You are given the following p-p plot:
1.0
0.8
0.6
F(x)
0.4
0.2
0.0
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
Fn(x)
1 2 3 15 30 50 51 99 100
- 98 -
177. You are given:
(i) Claims are conditionally independent and identically Poisson distributed with
mean .
2.6
1
F ( ) = 1 , >0
1+
178. DELETED
- 99 -
179-180. Use the following information for questions 179 and 180.
The time to an accident follows an exponential distribution. A random sample of size two
has a mean time of 6.
(A) 0.04
(B) 0.07
(C) 0.11
(D) 0.15
(E) 0.19
180. Use the delta method to approximate the variance of the maximum likelihood estimator of
FY (10) .
(A) 0.08
(B) 0.12
(C) 0.16
(D) 0.19
(E) 0.22
- 100 -
181. You are given:
(i) The number of claims in a year for a selected risk follows a Poisson distribution with
mean .
(ii) The severity of claims for the selected risk follows an exponential distribution with
mean .
(A) 1
(B) 4/3
(C) 2
(D) 3
(E) 4
- 101 -
182. A company insures 100 people age 65. The annual probability of death for each person is
0.03. The deaths are independent.
Use the inversion method to simulate the number of deaths in a year. Do this three times
using:
u1 = 0.20
u2 = 0.03
u3 = 0.09
(A) 1
3
(B) 1
(C) 5
3
(D) 7
3
(E) 3
183. You are given claim count data for which the sample mean is roughly equal to the sample
variance. Thus you would like to use a claim count model that has its mean equal to its
variance. An obvious choice is the Poisson distribution.
- 102 -
184. You are given:
(i) Annual claim frequencies follow a Poisson distribution with mean .
1 1 /12
( ) = (0.4) e / 6 + (0.6) e , >0
6 12
Determine the Bayesian expected number of claims for the insured in Year 2.
(A) 9.6
(B) 9.7
(C) 9.8
(D) 9.9
(E) 10.0
185. Twelve policyholders were monitored from the starting date of the policy to the time of first
claim. The observed data are as follows:
Using the Nelson-Aalen estimator, calculate the 95% linear confidence interval for the
cumulative hazard rate function H(4.5).
- 103 -
186. For the random variable X, you are given:
(i) E[ X ] = , >0
2
(ii) Var ( X ) =
25
k
(iii) = X, k >0
k +1
2
(iv) MSE ( ) = 2 bias ( )
Determine k.
(A) 0.2
(B) 0.5
(C) 2
(D) 5
(E) 25
( ) = , 0< < ,
( + 1)( +1)
- 104 -
Determine the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the number of claims for the selected policy
in Year 2.
1
(A)
1
( 1) x 1
(B) +
( 1)
(C) x
x +1
(D)
x +1
(E)
1
188. DELETED
189. Which of the following statements is true?
(A) For a null hypothesis that the population follows a particular distribution, using
sample data to estimate the parameters of the distribution tends to decrease the
probability of a Type II error.
(C) The Anderson-Darling test tends to place more emphasis on a good fit in the middle
rather than in the tails of the distribution.
(D) For a given number of cells, the critical value for the chi-square goodness-of-fit test
becomes larger with increased sample size.
- 105 -
190. For a particular policy, the conditional probability of the annual number of claims given
= , and the probability distribution of are as follows:
Number of claims 0 1 2
Probability 2 1 3
0.05 0.30
Probability 0.80 0.20
- 106 -
191. You are given:
(i) The annual number of claims for a policyholder follows a Poisson distribution with
mean .
(2 )5 e2
f ( ) = , >0
24
An insured is selected at random and observed to have x1 = 5 claims during Year 1 and
x2 = 3 claims during Year 2.
Determine E ( x1 = 5, x2 = 3) .
(A) 3.00
(B) 3.25
(C) 3.50
(D) 3.75
(E) 4.00
1 3 3 5
Determine which of the following graphs shows the shape of the kernel density estimator.
- 107 -
(B)
(A)
(D)
(C)
(E)
- 108 -
193. The following claim data were generated from a Pareto distribution:
130 20 350 218 1822
Using the method of moments to estimate the parameters of a Pareto distribution, calculate
the limited expected value at 500.
(A) 0.48
(B) 0.50
(C) 0.52
(D) 0.54
(E) 0.56
- 109 -
195. You are given the following information regarding claim sizes for 100 claims:
Claim Size Number of Claims
0 - 1,000 16
1,000 - 3,000 22
3,000 - 5,000 25
5,000 - 10,000 18
10,000 - 25,000 10
25,000 - 50,000 5
50,000 - 100,000 3
over 100,000 1
Use the ogive to estimate the probability that a randomly chosen claim is between 2,000 and
6,000.
(A) 0.36
(B) 0.40
(C) 0.45
(D) 0.47
(E) 0.50
196. You are given the following 20 bodily injury losses (before the deductible is applied):
Loss Number of Deductible Policy Limit
Losses
750 3 200
200 3 0 10,000
300 4 0 20,000
>10,000 6 0 10,000
400 4 300
Past experience indicates that these losses follow a Pareto distribution with parameters
and = 10,000 .
- 110 -
(A) Less than 2.0
(iii) Each policyholder was insured for the entire 2-year period.
A randomly selected policyholder had one claim over the 2-year period.
Using semiparametric empirical Bayes estimation, determine the Bhlmann estimate for the
number of claims in Year 3 for the same policyholder.
(A) 0.380
(B) 0.387
(C) 0.393
(D) 0.403
(E) 0.443
- 111 -
198. DELETED
199. Personal auto property damage claims in a certain region are known to follow the Weibull
distribution:
( )
0.2
x
F ( x) = 1 e , x>0
(ii) The number of claims follows a Poisson distribution for each risk.
For the same risk, both Bayes and Bhlmann credibility estimates of the number of claims in
Year 2 are calculated for n = 0,1,2, ... ,9.
- 112 -
(A) (B)
(C) (D)
(E)
- 113 -
201. You test the hypothesis that a given set of data comes from a known distribution with
distribution function F(x). The following data were collected:
Number of
Interval F ( xi ) Observations
x<2 0.035 5
2x<5 0.130 42
5x<7 0.630 137
7x<8 0.830 66
8x 1.000 50
Total 300
(B) The hypothesis is rejected at the 0.10 significance level, but is not rejected at the 0.05
significance level.
(C) The hypothesis is rejected at the 0.05 significance level, but is not rejected at the
0.025 significance level.
(D) The hypothesis is rejected at the 0.025 significance level, but is not rejected at the
0.01 significance level.
- 114 -
202. Unlimited claim severities for a warranty product follow the lognormal distribution with
parameters = 5.6 and = 0.75 .
Using these numbers and the inversion method, calculate the average payment per claim for a
contract with a policy limit of 400.
(ii) One-third of the policies have = 2, and the remaining two-thirds have = 5.
Calculate the Bayesian expected number of claims for the selected policy in Year 2.
(A) 3.4
(B) 3.6
(C) 3.8
(D) 4.0
(E) 4.2
- 115 -
204. The length of time, in years, that a person will remember an actuarial statistic is modeled by
an exponential distribution with mean 1Y . In a certain population, Y has a gamma
distribution with = = 2 .
Calculate the probability that a person drawn at random from this population will remember
an actuarial statistic less than 1 2 year.
(A) 0.125
(B) 0.250
(C) 0.500
(D) 0.750
(E) 0.875
205. In a CCRC, residents start each month in one of the following three states: Independent
Living (State #1), Temporarily in a Health Center (State #2) or Permanently in a Health
Center (State #3). Transitions between states occur at the end of the month.
If a resident receives physical therapy, the number of sessions that the resident receives in a
month has a geometric distribution with a mean which depends on the state in which the
resident begins the month. The numbers of sessions received are independent. The number
in each state at the beginning of a given month, the probability of needing physical therapy in
the month, and the mean number of sessions received for residents receiving therapy are
displayed in the following table:
Using the normal approximation for the aggregate distribution, calculate the probability that
more than 3000 physical therapy sessions will be required for the given month.
- 116 -
(A) 0.21
(B) 0.27
(C) 0.34
(D) 0.42
(E) 0.50
206. In a given week, the number of projects that require you to work overtime has a geometric
distribution with = 2 . For each project, the distribution of the number of overtime hours in
the week is the following:
x f ( x)
5 0.2
10 0.3
20 0.5
The number of projects and number of overtime hours are independent. You will get paid for
overtime hours in excess of 15 hours in the week.
Calculate the expected number of overtime hours for which you will get paid in the week.
(A) 18.5
(B) 18.8
(C) 22.1
(D) 26.2
(E) 28.0
- 117 -
207. For an insurance:
(i) Losses have density function
Calculate E Y P .
(A) 2.9
(B) 3.0
(C) 3.2
(D) 3.3
(E) 3.4
208. An actuary has created a compound claims frequency model with the following properties:
(i) The primary distribution is the negative binomial with probability generating function
2
P ( z ) = 1 3 ( z 1) .
(ii) The secondary distribution is the Poisson with probability generating function
P( z) = e ( ) .
z 1
Calculate .
- 118 -
(A) 0.1
(B) 0.4
(C) 1.6
(D) 2.7
(E) 3.1
209. In 2005 a risk has a two-parameter Pareto distribution with = 2 and = 3000 . In 2006
losses inflate by 20%.
An insurance on the risk has a deductible of 600 in each year. Pi , the premium in year i,
equals 1.2 times the expected claims.
The risk is reinsured with a deductible that stays the same in each year. Ri , the reinsurance
premium in year i, equals 1.1 times the expected reinsured claims.
R 2005
P 2005 = 0.55
R 2006
Calculate P2006 .
(A) 0.46
(B) 0.52
(C) 0.55
(D) 0.58
(E) 0.66
- 119 -
210. Each life within a group medical expense policy has loss amounts which follow a compound
Poisson process with = 0.16 . Given a loss, the probability that it is for Disease 1 is 1 .
16
Standard
Mean per loss Deviation per loss
Disease 1 5 50
Other diseases 10 20
Premiums for a group of 100 independent lives are set at a level such that the probability
(using the normal approximation to the distribution for aggregate losses) that aggregate
losses for the group will exceed aggregate premiums for the group is 0.24.
A vaccine which will eliminate Disease 1 and costs 0.15 per person has been discovered.
Define:
A = the aggregate premium assuming that no one obtains the vaccine, and
B = the aggregate premium assuming that everyone obtains the vaccine and the cost of the
vaccine is a covered loss.
Calculate A/B.
(A) 0.94
(B) 0.97
(C) 1.00
(D) 1.03
(E) 1.06
- 120 -
211. An actuary for a medical device manufacturer initially models the failure time for a particular
device with an exponential distribution with mean 4 years.
(iii) is continuous
Calculate the probability of failure in the first 3 years under the revised distribution.
(A) 0.43
(B) 0.45
(C) 0.47
(D) 0.49
(E) 0.51
(iii) Loss amounts and the number of losses are mutually independent.
(A) 36
(B) 48
(C) 72
(D) 96
(E) 120
- 121 -
213. For an insurance portfolio:
(i) The number of claims has the probability distribution
n pn
0 0.1
1 0.4
2 0.3
3 0.2
(ii) Each claim amount has a Poisson distribution with mean 3; and
(iii) The number of claims and claim amounts are mutually independent.
(A) 4.8
(B) 6.4
(C) 8.0
(D) 10.2
(E) 12.4
- 122 -
214. A portfolio of policies has produced the following claims:
100 100 100 200 300 300 300 400 500 600
(iii) For policyholders with 1 claim in Year 1, the credibility estimate for the number of
claims in Year 2 is 0.15.
(iv) For policyholders with an average of 2 claims per year in Year 1 and Year 2, the
credibility estimate for the number of claims in Year 3 is 0.20.
Determine .
-123-
216. A random sample of claims has been drawn from a Burr distribution with known parameter
= 1 and unknown parameters and . You are given:
350 350 500 500 500+ 1000 1000+ 1000+ 1200 1500
where the symbol + indicates that the loss exceeds the policy limit.
^
(iii) S 1 (1250) is the product-limit estimate of S(1250).
^
(iv) S 2 (1250) is the maximum likelihood estimate of S(1250) under the assumption that
the losses follow an exponential distribution.
^ ^
Determine the absolute difference between S 1 (1250) and S 2 (1250) .
-124-
(A) 0.00
(B) 0.03
(C) 0.05
(D) 0.07
(E) 0.09
-125-
219. For a portfolio of policies, you are given:
(i) The annual claim amount on a policy has probability density function:
2x
f ( x| ) = , 0 < x <
2
( ) = 4 3 , 0 < < 1
Determine the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the claim amount for the selected policy in
Year 2.
(A) 0.43
(B) 0.45
(C) 0.50
(D) 0.53
(E) 0.56
220. Total losses for a group of insured motorcyclists are simulated using the aggregate loss
model and the inversion method.
The number of claims has a Poisson distribution with = 4 . The amount of each claim has
an exponential distribution with mean 1000.
The number of claims is simulated using u = 0.13 . The claim amounts are simulated using
u1 = 0.05 , u2 = 0.95 and u3 = 0.10 in that order, as needed.
-126-
(A) 0
(B) 51
(C) 2996
(D) 3047
(E) 3152
1 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
(ii) F1 ( x) is the kernel density estimator of the distribution function using a uniform
kernel with bandwidth 1.
(iii) F2 ( x) is the kernel density estimator of the distribution function using a triangular
kernel with bandwidth 1.
Determine which of the following intervals has F1 ( x ) = F2 ( x) for all x in the interval.
-127-
222. 1000 workers insured under a workers compensation policy were observed for one year. The
number of work days missed is given below:
The chi-square goodness-of-fit test is used to test the hypothesis that the number of work
days missed follows a Poisson distribution where:
(i) The Poisson parameter is estimated by the average number of work days missed.
(ii) Any interval in which the expected number is less than one is combined with the
previous interval.
(B) The hypothesis is rejected at the 0.10 significance level, but is not rejected at the 0.05
significance level.
(C) The hypothesis is rejected at the 0.05 significance level, but is not rejected at the
0.025 significance level.
(D) The hypothesis is rejected at the 0.025 significance level, but is not rejected at the
0.01 significance level.
-128-
223. You are given the following data:
Year 1 Year 2
Total Losses 12,000 14,000
Number of Policyholders 25 30
Determine the credibility factor for Year 3 using the nonparametric empirical Bayes
method.
224. DELETED
225. You are given:
(i) Fifty claims have been observed from a lognormal distribution with unknown
parameters and .
LM0.0444 0 OP
N0 0.0222 Q
(iv) The partial derivatives of the lognormal cumulative distribution function are:
F ( z )
= and
F z z
=
bg
-129-
(v) An approximate 95% confidence interval for the probability that the next claim
will be less than or equal to 5000 is:
[PL, PH]
Determine PL .
(A) 0.73
(B) 0.76
(C) 0.79
(D) 0.82
(E) 0.85
-130-
226. For a particular policy, the conditional probability of the annual number of claims given
= , and the probability distribution of are as follows:
Number of Claims 0 1 2
Probability 2 1 3
0.10 0.30
Probability 0.80 0.20
Calculate the Bayesian estimate of the expected number of claims for Year 2.
227. You simulate observations from a specific distribution F(x), such that the number of
simulations N is sufficiently large to be at least 95 percent confident of estimating
F(1500) correctly within 1 percent.
-131-
228. For a survival study, you are given:
(i) Deaths occurred at times y1 < y 2 < < y 9 .
(ii) The Nelson-Aalen estimates of the cumulative hazard function at y 3 and y 4 are:
^ ^
H ( y3 ) = 0.4128 and H ( y4 ) = 0.5691
^ ^
Var[ H ( y3 )] = 0.009565 and Var[ H ( y4 )] = 0.014448
(A) 2
(B) 3
(C) 4
(D) 5
(E) 6
229. A random sample of size n is drawn from a distribution with probability density function:
f ( x) = 2
, 0 < x < , > 0
( + x)
-132-
3 2
(A) n
1
(B)
3n 2
3
(C)
n 2
n
(D)
3 2
1
(E)
3 2
230. For a portfolio of independent risks, the number of claims for each risk in a year follows
a Poisson distribution with means given in the following table:
Mean Number of
Class Claims per Risk Number of Risks
1 1 900
2 10 90
3 20 10
The Bhlmann credibility estimate of the number of claims for the same risk in Year 2 is
11.983.
Determine x.
(A) 13
(B) 14
(C) 15
(D) 16
(E) 17
-133-
231. A survival study gave (0.283, 1.267) as the symmetric linear 95% confidence interval
for H(5).
Using the delta method, determine the symmetric linear 95% confidence interval for S(5).
(ii) i = , for i = 1, 2, 3,
(iii) The parameters i vary in such a way that there is an annual inflation rate of 10%
for losses.
Year 1: 20 40 50
Year 2: 30 40 90 120
(A) 3.87
(B) 4.00
(C) 30.00
(D) 55.71
(E) 63.01
-134-
233. You are given:
(i) A region is comprised of three territories. Claims experience for Year 1 is as
follows:
(ii) The number of claims for each insured each year has a Poisson distribution.
(iii) Each insured in a territory has the same expected claim frequency.
(iv) The number of insureds is constant over time for each territory.
Determine the Bhlmann-Straub empirical Bayes estimate of the credibility factor Z for
Territory A.
234. DELETED
235. You are given:
(i) A random sample of losses from a Weibull distribution is:
(iv) You use the likelihood ratio test to test the hypothesis
H0 : = 2
H1 : 2
-135-
Determine the result of the test.
(B) Reject H 0 at the 0.10 level of significance, but not at the 0.05 level of
significance.
(C) Reject H 0 at the 0.05 level of significance, but not at the 0.025 level of
significance.
(D) Reject H 0 at the 0.025 level of significance, but not at the 0.01 level of
significance.
( ) = E ( X j = ) , j = 1, 2,..., n
and variance,
(
v ( ) = Var X j = , ) j = 1, 2,..., n .
( )
Calculate Cov X i , X j , i j .
-136-
237. Losses for a warranty product follow the lognormal distribution with underlying normal
mean and standard deviation of 5.6 and 0.75 respectively.
You use simulation to estimate claim payments for a number of contracts with different
deductibles.
Using these numbers and the inversion method, calculate the average payment per loss
for a contract with a deductible of 100.
238. The random variable X has the exponential distribution with mean .
(A) 20 4
(B) 21 4
(C) 22 4
(D) 23 4
(E) 24 4
-137-
239. You are given the following data for the number of claims during a one-year period:
Number of Claims Number of Policies
0 157
1 66
2 19
3 4
4 2
5+ 0
Total 248
Calculate P Q .
(A) 0.00
(B) 0.03
(C) 0.06
(D) 0.09
(E) 0.12
-138-
240. For a group of auto policyholders, you are given:
(i) The number of claims for each policyholder has a conditional Poisson
distribution.
(ii) During Year 1, the following data are observed for 8000 policyholders:
-139-
241. You are given:
(i) The following are observed claim amounts:
(iii) The goodness of fit is to be assessed by a p-p plot and a D(x) plot.
Let (s, t) be the coordinates of the p-p plot for a claim amount of 3000.
Determine ( s t ) D ( 3000 ) .
(A) 0.12
(B) 0.07
(C) 0.00
(D) 0.07
(E) 0.12
(ii) For each year, the distribution of the number of claims is:
q2
(q) = , 0.2 < q < 0.5
0.039
A randomly selected policyholder had two claims in Year 1 and two claims in Year 2.
For this insured, determine the Bayesian estimate of the expected number of claims in
Year 3.
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(A) Less than 1.30
243. For 500 claims, you are given the following distribution:
Claim Size Number of Claims
[0, 500) 200
[500, 1,000) 110
[1,000, 2,000) x
[2,000, 5,000) y
[5,000, 10,000) ?
[10,000, 25,000) ?
[25,000, ) ?
You are also given the following values taken from the ogive:
F500(1500) = 0.689
F500(3500) = 0.839
Determine y.
(E) At least 80
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244. Which of statements (A), (B), (C), and (D) is false?
(A) The chi-square goodness-of-fit test works best when the expected number of
observations varies widely from interval to interval.
(B) For the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, when the parameters of the distribution in the null
hypothesis are estimated from the data, the probability of rejecting the null hypothesis
decreases.
(C) For the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, the critical value for right censored data should be
smaller than the critical value for uncensored data.
(D) The Anderson-Darling test does not work for grouped data.
(ii) Claim sizes follow a gamma distribution with parameters (unknown) and
= 10,000 .
(iv) The full credibility standard has been selected so that actual aggregate losses will be
within 10% of expected aggregate losses 95% of the time.
Using limited fluctuation (classical) credibility, determine the expected number of claims
required for full credibility.
(E) The expected number of claims required for full credibility cannot be determined
from the information given.
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246. You are given:
(i) Losses follow a Burr distribution with = 2.
195 255 270 280 350 360 365 380 415 450 490 550 575 590 615
(iii) The parameters and are estimated by percentile matching using the smoothed
empirical estimates of the 30th and 65th percentiles.
Calculate the estimate of .
247. An insurance company sells three types of policies with the following characteristics:
Type of Policy Proportion of Total Annual Claim Frequency
Policies
I 5% Poisson with = 0.25
II 20% Poisson with = 0.50
III 75% Poisson with = 1.00
A randomly selected policyholder is observed to have a total of one claim for Year 1 through
Year 4.
For the same policyholder, determine the Bayesian estimate of the expected number of
claims in Year 5.
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248. You are given a random sample of 10 claims consisting of two claims of 400, seven claims of
800, and one claim of 1600.
n FN ( n )
0 0.125
1 0.312
2 0.500
3 0.656
4 0.773
5 0.855
(ii) The loss amounts follow the Weibull distribution with = 200 and = 2.
(iii) There is a deductible of 150 for each claim subject to an annual maximum out-of-
pocket of 500 per policy.
The inversion method is used to simulate the number of losses and loss amounts for a
policyholder.
(a) For the number of losses use the random number 0.7654.
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Use the random numbers in order and only as needed.
Based on the simulation, calculate the insurers aggregate payments for this policyholder.
(A) 106.93
(B) 161.32
(C) 224.44
(D) 347.53
(E) 520.05
Seven other amounts are known to be less than or equal to 60. Losses follow an inverse
exponential with distribution function
F ( x ) = e / x , x > 0
(E) At least 26
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251. For a group of policies, you are given:
(i) The annual loss on an individual policy follows a gamma distribution with parameters
= 4 and .
(iii) A randomly selected policy had losses of 1400 in Year 1 and 1900 in Year 2.
(v) Based on the data in (iii), the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the loss on the selected
policy in Year 4 is 1800.
(vi) After the estimate in (v) was calculated, the data for Year 3 was located. The loss on
the selected policy in Year 3 was 2763.
Calculate the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the loss on the selected policy in Year 4 based
on the data for Years 1, 2 and 3.
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252. The following is a sample of 10 payments:
4 4 5+ 5+ 5+ 8 10+ 10+ 12 15
(A) 0.016
(B) 0.031
(C) 0.048
(D) 0.064
(E) 0.075
(ii) Sm = X 1 + X 2 + + Xm
Determine the smallest value of m such that the mean of the marginal distribution of Sm is
greater than or equal to 50.
(A) 1082
(B) 2164
(C) 3246
(D) 4950
(E) 5000
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254. You are given:
(i) A portfolio consists of 100 identically and independently distributed risks.
(ii) The number of claims for each risk follows a Poisson distribution with mean .
(50 ) 4 e50
( ) = , >0
6
Determine the Bayesian expected number of claims for the portfolio in Year 2.
(A) 8
(B) 10
(C) 11
(D) 12
(E) 14
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255. You are planning a simulation to estimate the mean of a non-negative random variable. It is
known that the population standard deviation is 20% larger than the population mean.
Use the central limit theorem to estimate the smallest number of trials needed so that you will
be at least 95% confident that the simulated mean is within 5% of the population mean.
(A) 944
(B) 1299
(C) 1559
(D) 1844
(E) 2213
(ii) You fit a binomial model with parameters m and q using the method of maximum
likelihood.
(A) 10,397
(B) 7,781
(C) 7,750
(D) 6,931
(E) 6,730
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257. You are given:
(i) Over a three-year period, the following claim experience was observed for two
insureds who own delivery vans:
Year
Insured 1 2 3
A Number of Vehicles 2 2 1
Number of Claims 1 1 0
B Number of Vehicles N/A 3 2
Number of Claims N/A 2 3
(ii) The number of claims for each insured each year follows a Poisson distribution.
Determine the semiparametric empirical Bayes estimate of the claim frequency per vehicle
for Insured A in Year 4.
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258. For the data set
200 300 100 400 X
(i) k=4
(ii) s2 = 1
(iii) r4 = 1
Determine X.
(A) 100
(B) 200
(C) 300
(D) 400
(E) 500
10 2 4 0 6 2 4 5 4 2
(iii) You use the method of maximum likelihood to fit a Poisson model.
Determine the estimated coefficient of variation of the estimator of the Poisson parameter.
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(A) 0.10
(B) 0.16
(C) 0.22
(D) 0.26
(E) 1.00
Calculate the Bayesian expected claim size for this policy in Year 2.
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261. For a double-decrement study, you are given:
(i) The following survival data for individuals affected by both decrements (1)
and (2):
j cj q (j )
T
0 0 0.100
1 20 0.182
2 40 0.600
3 60 1.000
(A) 343
(B) 664
(C) 736
(D) 816
(E) 861
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262. You are given:
(i) At time 4 hours, there are 5 working light bulbs.
(iii) Three light bulbs burn out at times 5, 9, and 13 hours, while the remaining light bulbs
are still working at time 4 + p hours.
Determine p.
(E) At least 16
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263. You are given:
(i) The number of claims incurred in a month by any insured follows a Poisson
distribution with mean .
(v)
Month Number of Insureds Number of Claims
1 100 10
2 150 11
3 250 14
Determine the Bhlmann-Straub credibility estimate of the number of claims in the next 12
months for 300 insureds.
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264. You are given:
(i) The following data set:
2500 2500 2500 3617 3662 4517 5000 5000 6010 6932 7500 7500
^
(ii) H1 (7000) is the Nelson-alen estimate of the cumulative hazard rate function
calculated under the assumption that all of the observations in (i) are uncensored.
^
(iii) H 2 (7000) is the Nelson-alen estimate of the cumulative hazard rate function
calculated under the assumption that all occurrences of the values 2500, 5000 and
7500 in (i) reflect right-censored observations and that the remaining observed values
are uncensored.
^ ^
Calculate| H1 (7000) H 2 (7000) |.
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265. For a warranty product you are given:
(i) Paid losses follow the lognormal distribution with = 13.294 and = 0.494 .
The inversion method is used to simulate four paid losses with the following four uniform
(0,1) random numbers:
Using the simulated values, calculate the empirical estimate of the average unpaid losses for
purchase year 2005.
266. Five models are fitted to a sample of n = 260 observations with the following results:
Model Number of Parameters Loglikelihood
I 1 414
II 2 412
III 3 411
IV 4 409
V 6 409
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(A) I
(B) II
(C) III
(D) IV
(E) V
A randomly selected risk had r claims in Year 1. The Bayesian estimate of this risks
expected number of claims in Year 2 is 2.98.
Determine the Bhlmann credibility estimate of the expected number of claims for this risk
in Year 2.
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268. You are given the following ages at time of death for 10 individuals:
25 30 35 35 37 39 45 47 49 55
Using a uniform kernel with bandwidth b = 10, determine the kernel density estimate of the
probability of survival to age 40.
(A) 0.377
(B) 0.400
(C) 0.417
(D) 0.439
(E) 0.485
269. The random variables X 1 , X 2 , , X n are independent and identically distributed with
probability density function
e x /
f ( x) = , x0
Determine E X 2 .
n +1 2
(A)
n
n +1 2
(B) 2
n
2
(C)
n
2
(D)
n
(E) 2
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270. Three individual policyholders have the following claim amounts over four years:
Policyholder Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4
X 2 3 3 4
Y 5 5 4 6
Z 5 5 3 3
Using the nonparametric empirical Bayes procedure, calculate the estimated variance of the
hypothetical means.
271. DELETED
272. You are given:
(i) The number of claims made by an individual in any given year has a binomial
distribution with parameters m = 4 and q.
(A) 0.17
(B) 0.33
(C) 0.50
(D) 0.67
(E) 0.83
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273. A company has determined that the limited fluctuation full credibility standard is 2000
claims if:
(i) The total number of claims is to be within 3% of the true value with probability p.
The standard is changed so that the total cost of claims is to be within 5% of the true value
with probability p, where claim severity has probability density function:
1
f ( x) = , 0 x 10,000
10,000
Using limited fluctuation credibility, determine the expected number of claims necessary to
obtain full credibility under the new standard.
(A) 720
(B) 960
(C) 2160
(D) 2667
(E) 2880
274. For a mortality study with right censored data, you are given the following:
Time Number of Deaths Number at Risk
3 1 50
5 3 49
6 5 k
10 7 21
You are also told that the Nelson-alen estimate of the survival function at time 10 is 0.575.
Determine k.
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(A) 28
(B) 31
(C) 36
(D) 44
(E) 46
275. A dental benefit is designed so that a deductible of 100 is applied to annual dental charges.
The reimbursement to the insured is 80% of the remaining dental charges subject to an
annual maximum reimbursement of 1000.
(i) The annual dental charges for each insured are exponentially distributed with mean
1000.
(ii) Use the following uniform (0, 1) random numbers and the inversion method to
generate four values of annual dental charges:
(A) 522
(B) 696
(C) 757
(D) 947
(E) 1042
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276. For a group of policies, you are given:
(i) Losses follow the distribution function
F ( x ) = 1 / x, < x<.
(A) 5.00
(B) 5.50
(C) 5.75
(D) 6.00
(E) 6.25
Use the delta method to approximate the variance of the maximum likelihood estimator of
S (1500 ) .
- 163 -
(A) 0.019
(B) 0.025
(C) 0.032
(D) 0.039
(E) 0.045
(ii) Two values of the ogive constructed from the data in (i) are:
Calculate x.
(A) 120
(B) 145
(C) 170
(D) 195
(E) 220
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279. Loss amounts have the distribution function
( x /100 ) ,
2
0 x 100
F ( x) =
1 , 100 < x
An insurance pays 80% of the amount of the loss in excess of an ordinary deductible of 20,
subject to a maximum payment of 60 per loss.
Calculate the conditional expected claim payment, given that a payment has been made.
(A) 37
(B) 39
(C) 43
(D) 47
(E) 49
280. A compound Poisson claim distribution has = 5 and individual claim amounts distributed
as follows:
x fX ( x)
5 0.6
k 0.4 where k > 5
Calculate k.
(A) 6
(B) 7
(C) 8
(D) 9
(E) 10
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281. For a special investment product, you are given:
(i) All deposits are credited with 75% of the annual equity index return, subject to a
minimum guaranteed crediting rate of 3%.
(ii) The annual equity index return is normally distributed with a mean of 8% and a
standard deviation of 16%.
(iii) For a random variable X which has a normal distribution with mean and
standard deviation , you are given the following limited expected values:
E [ X 3% ]
= 6% = 8%
= 12% 0.43% 0.31%
= 16% 1.99% 1.19%
E [ X 4% ]
= 6% = 8%
= 12% 0.15% 0.95%
= 16% 1.43% 0.58%
(A) 8.9%
(B) 9.4%
(C) 10.7%
(D) 11.0%
(E) 11.6%
- 166 -
282. Aggregate losses are modeled as follows:
(i) The number of losses has a Poisson distribution with = 3 .
(ii) The amount of each loss has a Burr (Burr Type XII, Singh-Maddala) distribution with
= 3, = 2 , and = 1 .
(iii) The number of losses and the amounts of the losses are mutually independent.
(A) 12
(B) 14
(C) 16
(D) 18
(E) 20
283. The annual number of doctor visits for each individual in a family of 4 has a geometric
distribution with mean 1.5. The annual numbers of visits for the family members are
mutually independent. An insurance pays 100 per doctor visit beginning with the 4th visit per
family.
(A) 320
(B) 323
(C) 326
(D) 329
(E) 332
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284. A risk has a loss amount which has a Poisson distribution with mean 3.
An insurance covers the risk with an ordinary deductible of 2. An alternative insurance
replaces the deductible with coinsurance , which is the proportion of the loss paid by the
insurance, so that the expected insurance cost remains the same.
Calculate .
(A) 0.22
(B) 0.27
(C) 0.32
(D) 0.37
(E) 0.42
285. You are the producer for the television show Actuarial Idol. Each year, 1000 actuarial clubs
audition for the show. The probability of a club being accepted is 0.20.
The number of members of an accepted club has a distribution with mean 20 and
variance 20. Club acceptances and the numbers of club members are mutually independent.
Your annual budget for persons appearing on the show equals 10 times the expected number
of persons plus 10 times the standard deviation of the number of persons.
(A) 42,600
(B) 44,200
(C) 45,800
(D) 47,400
(E) 49,000
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286. Michael is a professional stuntman who performs dangerous motorcycle jumps at extreme
sports events around the world.
The annual cost of repairs to his motorcycle is modeled by a two parameter Pareto
distribution with = 5000 and = 2 .
(ii) Michael pays 20% of repair costs between 1000 and 6000 each year.
(iii) Michael pays 100% of the annual repair costs above 6000 until Michael has paid
10,000 in out-of-pocket repair costs each year.
(iv) Michael pays 10% of the remaining repair costs each year.
(A) 2300
(B) 2500
(C) 2700
(D) 2900
(E) 3100
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287. For an aggregate loss distribution S:
(i) The number of claims has a negative binomial distribution with r = 16 and = 6 .
(ii) The claim amounts are uniformly distributed on the interval (0, 8).
(iii) The number of claims and claim amounts are mutually independent.
Using the normal approximation for aggregate losses, calculate the premium such that the
probability that aggregate losses will exceed the premium is 5%.
(A) 500
(B) 520
(C) 540
(D) 560
(E) 580
(A) 0.125 p 2
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289. A compound Poisson distribution has = 5 and claim amount distribution as follows:
x p ( x)
100 0.80
500 0.16
1000 0.04
(A) 0.022
(B) 0.038
(C) 0.049
(D) 0.060
(E) 0.070
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