Panjer recursion
The Panjer recursion is an algorithm to compute the probability distribution approximation of a compound random variable where both and are random variables and of special types. In more general cases the distribution of S is a compound distribution. The recursion for the special cases considered was introduced in a paper [1] by Harry Panjer (Distinguished Emeritus Professor, University of Waterloo[2]). It is heavily used in actuarial science (see also systemic risk).
Preliminaries
[edit]We are interested in the compound random variable where and fulfill the following preconditions.
Claim size distribution
[edit]We assume the to be i.i.d. and independent of . Furthermore the have to be distributed on a lattice with latticewidth .
In actuarial practice, is obtained by discretisation of the claim density function (upper, lower...).
Claim number distribution
[edit]The number of claims N is a random variable, which is said to have a "claim number distribution", and which can take values 0, 1, 2, .... etc.. For the "Panjer recursion", the probability distribution of N has to be a member of the Panjer class, otherwise known as the (a,b,0) class of distributions. This class consists of all counting random variables which fulfill the following relation:
for some and which fulfill . The initial value is determined such that
The Panjer recursion makes use of this iterative relationship to specify a recursive way of constructing the probability distribution of S. In the following denotes the probability generating function of N: for this see the table in (a,b,0) class of distributions.
In the case of claim number is known, please note the De Pril algorithm.[3] This algorithm is suitable to compute the sum distribution of discrete random variables.[4]
Recursion
[edit]The algorithm now gives a recursion to compute the .
The starting value is with the special cases
and
and proceed with
Example
[edit]The following example shows the approximated density of where and with lattice width h = 0.04. (See Fréchet distribution.)
As observed, an issue may arise at the initialization of the recursion. Guégan and Hassani (2009) have proposed a solution to deal with that issue .[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Panjer, Harry H. (1981). "Recursive evaluation of a family of compound distributions" (PDF). ASTIN Bulletin. 12 (1). International Actuarial Association: 22–26. doi:10.1017/S0515036100006796. S2CID 15372040.
- ^ CV, actuaries.org; Staff page, math.uwaterloo.ca
- ^ Vose Software Risk Wiki: http://www.vosesoftware.com/riskwiki/Aggregatemodeling-DePrilsrecursivemethod.php
- ^ De Pril, N. (1988). "Improved approximations for the aggregate claims distribution of a life insurance portfolio". Scandinavian Actuarial Journal. 1988 (1–3): 61–68. doi:10.1080/03461238.1988.10413837.
- ^ Guégan, D.; Hassani, B.K. (2009). "A modified Panjer algorithm for operational risk capital calculations". Journal of Operational Risk. 4 (4): 53–72. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.413.5632. doi:10.21314/JOP.2009.068. S2CID 4992848.