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State: Ntl. Moore: Huge Hidden Effect of Catastrophic Claims: [2023-03-14] |
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Mark Walls of Safety National and the Work Comp Analysis Group on LinkedIn posted quite interesting articles over the last two weeks on the hidden effect of catastrophic workers' comp claims. Check out this article in Carrier Chronicles. ![]() James Moore Reading the article will be worth your time. I guarantee it. The National Council on Compensation Insurance, Worker’s Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau and all the other workers' comp rating bureaus have published presentations and articles on catastrophic workers' comp claims. WCRI (not a rating bureau) out of Cambridge, Massachusetts, has also covered this subject. What caught my eye As the above article astutely points out:
"Exactly" is all that I can say about the above passage. Loss triangles and catastrophic claims The article also refers to long-tail claims development. That is why I use and am an advocate of the sum of least squares. I know that might sound like more statistical jargon, but I like to look at a set of claims over 20 years, which is a normal business cycle. Follow the last link to the article that covers the subject. I have made actuaries mad at me for that article. Mark Walls’ group is talking about even longer time spans that the sum of least squares often referred to as linear regression can handle to infinity. By the way, all spreadsheet apps have regression built into them, including Excel’s Statistical package. Bottom line Claims that stretch beyond 10 years are becoming more frequent every year. The Safety National article called it severity frequency. Catastrophic workers' comp claims are going to grow over the next few years and decades. This blog post is provided by James Moore, AIC, MBA, ChFC, ARM, and is republished with permission from J&L Risk Management Consultants. Visit the full website at www.cutcompcosts.com. |