Literature DB >> 33727981

A simulation of the insurance industry: the problem of risk model homogeneity.

Torsten Heinrich1,2,3,4, Juan Sabuco1,2,3,5, J Doyne Farmer1,2,6.   

Abstract

We develop an agent-based simulation of the catastrophe insurance and reinsurance industry and use it to study the problem of risk model homogeneity. The model simulates the balance sheets of insurance firms, who collect premiums from clients in return for insuring them against intermittent, heavy-tailed risks. Firms manage their capital and pay dividends to their investors and use either reinsurance contracts or cat bonds to hedge their tail risk. The model generates plausible time series of profits and losses and recovers stylized facts, such as the insurance cycle and the emergence of asymmetric firm size distributions. We use the model to investigate the problem of risk model homogeneity. Under the European regulatory framework Solvency II, insurance companies are required to use only certified risk models. This has led to a situation in which only a few firms provide risk models, creating a systemic fragility to the errors in these models. We demonstrate that using too few models increases the risk of nonpayment and default while lowering profits for the industry as a whole. The presence of the reinsurance industry ameliorates the problem but does not remove it. Our results suggest that it would be valuable for regulators to incentivize model diversity. The framework we develop here provides a first step toward a simulation model of the insurance industry, which could be used to test policies and strategies for capital management.
© The Author(s) 2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Agent-based modeling; Insurance; Reinsurance; Risk modeling; Systemic risk

Year:  2021        PMID: 33727981      PMCID: PMC7952833          DOI: 10.1007/s11403-021-00319-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Econ Interact Coord        ISSN: 1860-711X


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3.  Normalized US hurricane damage estimates using area of total destruction, 1900-2018.

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1.  Introduction to the special issue on the 24th annual Workshop on Economic science with Heterogeneous Interacting Agents, London, 2019 (WEHIA 2019).

Authors:  Fabio Caccioli; Tiziana Di Matteo; Giulia Iori; Saqib Jafarey; Giacomo Livan; Simone Righi
Journal:  J Econ Interact Coord       Date:  2022-05-03
  1 in total

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