|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Until now there were no published analyses of the recent solvency
work conducted in Europe, specifically the risk categories proposed
by the International Actuarial Association (IAA). Answering the
insurance industry's demand in the wake of the EU Solvency II
project, Solvency: Models, Assessment and Regulation provides a
concrete summary and review of solvency and inspires additional
work in the field. Following an introduction to the concept, the
first section of the book provides a historical review of solvency,
detailing solvency regulation and accounting within the EU. A
review of the steps leading to Solvency II looks at accounting,
supervision, the actuarial field, the first phase of Solvency II,
international approaches to banking, and the solvency systems of 12
major nations. The second section explores the current basis for
solvency modeling, focusing on the valuation of assets and
liabilities, dependency and various conservative approaches, as
well as a baseline and benchmark approach. This section also
provides examples of risk structure and the effects of
diversification. The final section discusses groups and internal
modeling as it relates to EU Solvency II. It addresses insurance
groups, financial conglomerates, reinsurance, the importance of
internal modeling and stress testing, and the current state of the
second phase of EU Solvency II.
Until now there were no published analyses of the recent solvency
work conducted in Europe, specifically the risk categories proposed
by the International Actuarial Association (IAA). Answering the
insurance industry's demand in the wake of the EU Solvency II
project, Solvency: Models, Assessment and Regulation provides a
concrete summary and review of solvency and inspires additional
work in the field. Following an introduction to the concept, the
first section of the book provides a historical review of solvency,
detailing solvency regulation and accounting within the EU. A
review of the steps leading to Solvency II looks at accounting,
supervision, the actuarial field, the first phase of Solvency II,
international approaches to banking, and the solvency systems of 12
major nations. The second section explores the current basis for
solvency modeling, focusing on the valuation of assets and
liabilities, dependency and various conservative approaches, as
well as a baseline and benchmark approach. This section also
provides examples of risk structure and the effects of
diversification. The final section discusses groups and internal
modeling as it relates to EU Solvency II. It addresses insurance
groups, financial conglomerates, reinsurance, the importance of
internal modeling and stress testing, and the current state of the
second phase of EU Solvency II.
|
|