357
22
Liability Rating Using Increased Limit Factor Curves
We have seen how exposure curves may help pricing property business. With suitable
adjustments, the same idea can be used to price liability business. The method is based on
the use of the so-called increased limit factor (ILF) reference curves (Miccoli 1977; Palmer
2006; Riegel 2008). The key idea behind ILF curves is that they should help you determine
how the expected losses increase by increasing the limit purchased, and ultimately that
helps you determine the cost of reinsuring a specic layer of reinsurance.
22.1 How ILF Curves Arise
The main difference between liability and property in the construction of reference curves
is that for liability, there is no natural upper limit to the size of the loss such as the sum
insured or the maximum possible loss (MPL) for property. True, liability is usually pur-
chased up to a given limit L, but this limit does not provide in itself information on the
potential loss severity: you can buy £5M of cover for employers’ liability but still get a
£50M claim.
One of the consequences of this difference is that the ILF curves – the reference curves
for liability business – inevitably deal with absolute monetary amounts and not relative
damages – and unless the ILF curve has a very specic shape that is invariant at different
scales (such as a single-parameter Pareto), then the shape of the curve will depend on the
basis value, that is, the lowest amount for which the curve is provided.
22.1.1 Assumptions Underlying ILF Curves
There are two main assumptions behind ILF curves (Palmer 2006):
The ground-up loss frequency is independent of the limit purchased
The ground-up severity is independent of the number of losses and of the limit
purchased
These two assumptions are quite reasonable although not unquestionable: the second
one is basically one of the assumptions of the collective risk model, and we have already
discussed in Chapter 6 how this can easily be breached. As usual, they are quite use-
ful hypotheses that should be abandoned only if someone had good empirical evidence
that they are not true – and a more sophisticated model to replace that created on these
assumptions.
If the assumptions above are satised, the shape of an ILF curve depends only on the
underlying severity distribution – in other words, there is a 1:1 correspondence between
severity curves and ILF curves, as was the case for property exposure curves.
358 Pricing in General Insurance
22.1.2 Definition of ILF Curves
Suppose that we know the expected losses to a liability risk with a policy limit b and that
we want to know the expected losses to a policy with a limit u. Using the familiar results
on the expected losses to a layer of insurance (in this case, a ground-up layer with limit u)
from Chapter 20, we can then write
ES EXuEN
EXu
EXb
E
u
() (min(,)) ()
(min(,))
((,))
min
((min(,)) ()
() ()
Xb EN
uES
bb
×
ILF
(22.1)
where
ILF
min
b
u
EX
u
EX
b
()
(min(,))
((,))
=
(22.2)
As we did in Chapter 20, we ask: would it not be good if we could have ILF
b
(u) already
tabulated for us, so that we could simply plug that information into Equation 22.1 and nd
the expected losses for any limit we want? This is what casualty rating with ILF curves is
all about. Indeed, ILF curves are often provided as tables that give the value of the ILF as a
function of a monetary amount (in a specied currency, and at a given point in time), as in
Figure 22.1. An example of an ILF curve in graphical format is given in Figure 22.2.
x ILF(x)
100,000 1.00
200,000 1.37
300,000 1.58
400,000 1.72
500,000 1.83
600,000 1.92
700,000 1.99
800,000 2.05
900,000 2.10
1,000,000 2.15
1,100,000 2.19
1,200,000 2.23
1,300,000 2.26
1,400,000 2.30
1,500,000 2.33
1,600,000 2.35
FIGURE 22.1
Example of ILF curve in tabular format. Note that the currency unit of x must be specied along with the context
to which this curve can be applied and the point in time at which this curve was valid.

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