Results 301 to 310 of about 107,288 (354)
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FUNDAMENTAL DEFINITION OF THE SOLVENCY CAPITAL REQUIREMENT IN SOLVENCY II
ASTIN Bulletin, 2014AbstractIt is essential for insurance regulation to have a clear picture of the risk measures that are used. We compare different mathematical interpretations of the Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR) definition from Solvency II that can be found in the literature.
Andreas Niemeyer, Marcus C. Christiansen
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Infinance, or Narration and Solvency
differences, 2020Narrativity and indebtedness are inextricably intertwined. Absolvere, in Latin, means both to “pay off” a debt and to “relate” a historical event that has reached its conclusion, that is complete (absolutum). In the Arabian Nights, Scheherazade tells many stories about debt and debtors; but it is also her very narration that she evokes as the redeeming
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Solvency margins and equalization reserves
Insurance: Mathematics and Economics, 1999zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
de Vijlder, F.E.C., Goovaerts, M.J.
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Orbis, 2014
Abstract The American defense establishment has come to think of itself as the victim of complex and demanding threats, political irresponsibility and public apathy. While true, such conditions are often the case in American history. “Don’t fight the problem” is a standard instruction in war games. The Department of Defense should adopt that approach
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Abstract The American defense establishment has come to think of itself as the victim of complex and demanding threats, political irresponsibility and public apathy. While true, such conditions are often the case in American history. “Don’t fight the problem” is a standard instruction in war games. The Department of Defense should adopt that approach
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ASTIN Bulletin, 1971
Effectively, a non-life insurance concern may be considered to be solvent if the supervisory authorities of the country or countries in which it operates allow it to continue operating. It is of no avail to claim that, by some other criterion, the concern may be considered to be solvent; it is by reference to the controls imposed by supervisory ...
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Effectively, a non-life insurance concern may be considered to be solvent if the supervisory authorities of the country or countries in which it operates allow it to continue operating. It is of no avail to claim that, by some other criterion, the concern may be considered to be solvent; it is by reference to the controls imposed by supervisory ...
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Insurance regulators have historically taken a number of approaches to protecting policyholders. The most common approach has been to set strict standards for provisioning for future liabilities, for pricing of products, and even regulating benefits. While these approaches can indeed help protect policyholders, they can also carry systemic risks.
Mark Stober+2 more
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Solvency requirements for pension annuities
Journal of Pension Economics and Finance, 2003This paper deals with solvency requirements for life annuities portfolios and funded pension plans. Particular emphasis is devoted to longevity risk, i.e. the risk arising from uncertainty in future mortality trends. This risk must be faced by insurance companies and pension plans that have guaranteed lifelong payoffs.Solvency is investigated referring
OLIVIERI A., PITACCO, ERMANNO
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Time Consistent Solvency Capital Requirement Under Solvency II.
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2020In this paper, we analyse the current dynamic definitions of the Solvency Capital Requirement (SCR) and we propose a new dynamic and time consistent formulation of the SCR, that is compliant with the Solvency II directive. In case of a single liability cash-flow at maturity, Devolder and Lebegue (2017) analyse the time-consistent dynamic formulation of
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Corporate Liquidity and Solvency [PDF]
This paper studies the impact of both solvency and liquidity concerns on corporate finance. A firm optimally chooses capital structure, cash holdings, dividends and default while facing stochastic cash flows with two sources of uncertainty. The expected cash flows are uncertain and low profitability leads to solvency distress.
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The Solvency of Government Finances in Europe
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2000Different definitions of sustainability and of the empirical counterparts of the variables involved are reviewed in the paper by Michael Artis and Massimiliano Marcellino. They apply retrospective tests for fiscal sustainability along the lines of the paper by Fernandez and de Cos to EU countries and find evidence that debt to GDP ratios are converging.
Massimiliano Marcellino+2 more
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