I am an (almost qualified) actuary, working for a life insurance company.
I would love it if I had data of a very high quality. However, most insurance companies can’t use population statistics because of differences with underwriting standards (we don’t cover the very bad risks), target markets (we advertise in the Daily Slum, so only cover low socioeconomic classes, for example), and claim definitions (what is a disease in the population might not be a claim for the insurance company). So we use our own experience to modify the population stats. Very large companies might use entirely their own data.
Generally, there is not enough of it to be sure that it’s totally credible, especially when it comes to fine differences such as how much you smoke or drink. And that’s ignoring problems like non-disclosure. Age and Sex are easier, but there’s not much you can do about changing those, so it doesn’t help with the question at hand.
Of course, for some types of insurance, such as compulsory car insurance, there is more data to work with—I’ve never worked in general insurance, so I can’t comment on that.
I am an (almost qualified) actuary, working for a life insurance company.
I would love it if I had data of a very high quality. However, most insurance companies can’t use population statistics because of differences with underwriting standards (we don’t cover the very bad risks), target markets (we advertise in the Daily Slum, so only cover low socioeconomic classes, for example), and claim definitions (what is a disease in the population might not be a claim for the insurance company). So we use our own experience to modify the population stats. Very large companies might use entirely their own data.
Generally, there is not enough of it to be sure that it’s totally credible, especially when it comes to fine differences such as how much you smoke or drink. And that’s ignoring problems like non-disclosure. Age and Sex are easier, but there’s not much you can do about changing those, so it doesn’t help with the question at hand.
Of course, for some types of insurance, such as compulsory car insurance, there is more data to work with—I’ve never worked in general insurance, so I can’t comment on that.