Sparre–Anderson model
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In actuarial science and applied probability, ruin theory (sometimes risk theory or collective risk theory) uses mathematical models to describe an insurer's vulnerability to insolvency/ruin. In such models key quantities of interest are the probability of ruin, distribution of surplus immediately prior to ruin and deficit at time of ruin.


Classical model

The theoretical foundation of ruin theory, known as the Cramér–Lundberg model (or classical compound-Poisson risk model, classical risk process or Poisson risk process) was introduced in 1903 by the Swedish actuary
Filip Lundberg Ernst Filip Oskar Lundberg (2 June 1876 – 31 December 1965) Swedish actuary, and mathematician. Lundberg is one of the founders of mathematical risk theory and worked as managing director of several insurance companies. According to Harald ...
. Lundberg's work was republished in the 1930s by Harald Cramér. The model describes an insurance company who experiences two opposing cash flows: incoming cash premiums and outgoing claims. Premiums arrive a constant rate ''c'' > 0 from customers and claims arrive according to a
Poisson process In probability, statistics and related fields, a Poisson point process is a type of random mathematical object that consists of points randomly located on a mathematical space with the essential feature that the points occur independently of one ...
N_t with intensity ''λ'' and are
independent and identically distributed In probability theory and statistics, a collection of random variables is independent and identically distributed if each random variable has the same probability distribution as the others and all are mutually independent. This property is usual ...
non-negative random variables \xi_i with distribution ''F'' and mean ''μ'' (they form a
compound Poisson process A compound Poisson process is a continuous-time (random) stochastic process with jumps. The jumps arrive randomly according to a Poisson process and the size of the jumps is also random, with a specified probability distribution. A compound Poisso ...
). So for an insurer who starts with initial surplus ''x'', the aggregate assets X_t are given by: :X_t = x + ct - \sum_^ \xi_i \quad \text \geq 0. The central object of the model is to investigate the probability that the insurer's surplus level eventually falls below zero (making the firm bankrupt). This quantity, called the probability of ultimate ruin, is defined as :\psi(x)=\mathbb^x\ where the time of ruin is \tau=\inf\ with the convention that \inf\varnothing=\infty. This can be computed exactly using the
Pollaczek–Khinchine formula In queueing theory, a discipline within the mathematical theory of probability, the Pollaczek–Khinchine formula states a relationship between the queue length and service time distribution Laplace transforms for an M/G/1 queue (where jobs arrive a ...
as (the ruin function here is equivalent to the tail function of the stationary distribution of waiting time in an
M/G/1 queue In queueing theory, a discipline within the mathematical theory of probability, an M/G/1 queue is a queue model where arrivals are Markovian (modulated by a Poisson process), service times have a General distribution and there is a single server ...
) :\psi(x)=\left(1-\frac\right) \sum_^\infty \left(\frac\right)^n (1-F^_l(x)) where F_l is the transform of the tail distribution of F, :F_l(x) = \frac \int_0^x \left(1-F(u)\right) \textu and \cdot^ denotes the n-fold
convolution In mathematics (in particular, functional analysis), convolution is a mathematical operation on two functions ( and ) that produces a third function (f*g) that expresses how the shape of one is modified by the other. The term ''convolution'' ...
. In the case where the claim sizes are exponentially distributed, this simplifies to :\psi(x) = \frace^.


Sparre Andersen model

E. Sparre Andersen extended the classical model in 1957 by allowing claim inter-arrival times to have arbitrary distribution functions. ::X_t = x + ct - \sum_^ \xi_i \quad \textt \geq 0, where the claim number process (N_t)_ is a
renewal process Renewal theory is the branch of probability theory that generalizes the Poisson process for arbitrary holding times. Instead of exponentially distributed holding times, a renewal process may have any independent and identically distributed (IID) ...
and (\xi_i)_ are independent and identically distributed random variables. The model furthermore assumes that \xi_i > 0 almost surely and that (N_t)_ and (\xi_i)_ are independent. The model is also known as the renewal risk model.


Expected discounted penalty function

Michael R. Powers and Gerber and Shiu analyzed the behavior of the insurer's surplus through the expected discounted penalty function, which is commonly referred to as Gerber-Shiu function in the ruin literature and named after actuarial scientists Elias S.W. Shiu and
Hans-Ulrich Gerber Hans-Ulrich or Hans Ulrich may refer to: * Hans Ulrich Aschenborn (born 1947), animal painter in Southern Africa * Hans-Ulrich Back (1896–1976), German general in the Wehrmacht during World War II * Hans-Ulrich Brunner (1943–2006), Swiss painte ...
. It is arguable whether the function should have been called Powers-Gerber-Shiu function due to the contribution of Powers. In Powers' notation, this is defined as :m(x)=\mathbb^x ^K_/math>, where \delta is the discounting force of interest, K_ is a general penalty function reflecting the economic costs to the insurer at the time of ruin, and the expectation \mathbb^x corresponds to the probability measure \mathbb^x. The function is called expected discounted cost of insolvency by Powers. In Gerber and Shiu's notation, it is given as :m(x)=\mathbb^x ^w(X_,X_)\mathbb(\tau<\infty)/math>, where \delta is the discounting force of interest and w(X_,X_) is a penalty function capturing the economic costs to the insurer at the time of ruin (assumed to depend on the surplus prior to ruin X_ and the deficit at ruin X_), and the expectation \mathbb^x corresponds to the probability measure \mathbb^x. Here the indicator function \mathbb(\tau<\infty) emphasizes that the penalty is exercised only when ruin occurs. It is quite intuitive to interpret the expected discounted penalty function. Since the function measures the actuarial present value of the penalty that occurs at \tau, the penalty function is multiplied by the discounting factor e^, and then averaged over the probability distribution of the waiting time to \tau. While Gerber and Shiu applied this function to the classical compound-Poisson model, Powers argued that an insurer's surplus is better modeled by a family of diffusion processes. There are a great variety of ruin-related quantities that fall into the category of the expected discounted penalty function. Other finance-related quantities belonging to the class of the expected discounted penalty function include the perpetual American put option, the contingent claim at optimal exercise time, and more.


Recent developments

*Compound-Poisson risk model with constant interest *Compound-Poisson risk model with stochastic interest *Brownian-motion risk model *General diffusion-process model *Markov-modulated risk model *Accident probability factor (APF) calculator – risk analysis model (@SBH)


See also

* Financial risk * Volterra integral equation#Ruin theory


References


Further reading

* * {{Stochastic processes Actuarial science Stochastic processes Mathematical finance Risk