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Workers Comp Earthquake
Modeling Earthquake Risk for a Workers Comp Portfolio For some time, modelers have hypothesized that in
major catastrophes losses in casualty and liability lines could be
correlated to loss of property. However, the absence of an actual occurrence made
this possibility somewhat abstract until the recent World Trade Center (WTC)
tragedy. In response to market uncertainty concerning the catastrophic
loss potential of workers comp lines after the WTC losses, RMS
updated its workers compensation earthquake modeling capabilities.
The RMS® Earthquake Casualty Model can be applied to workers comp
exposures to estimate the likelihood and cost of injuries and deaths in
the workplace caused by earthquakes. Average annual loss estimates
indicate the pure premium contribution to workers comp losses from
earthquake risk. Full Aggregate Exceedance Probability (AEP) curve
output can be used to calculate losses at key return periods, and
individual event outcomes highlight exposure concentrations driving the
risk in a portfolio.
Model Highlights
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Shares event set with property earthquake model,
allowing workers comp losses to be combined with property losses to
determine a company’s total earthquake loss |
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Calibration and validation of casualty rates
based on data from 135 historical events around the world |
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Both probabilistic and deterministic analysis
options available |
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Full consideration of uncertainty |
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Occupation, building construction class, and other structural
characteristics modeled |
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Exposure modeling options include temporal distribution, uniform
adjustment, specific time, and maximum at any one time |
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Model output designed to assist with portfolio
management, reinsurance, and underwriting decisions using exceedance
probability output, loss costs, and scenario losses |
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Output includes both dollar losses and number of
casualties for six injury levels |
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RMS default or user-defined cost severities by
state and injury level |
Geographic Scope
The U.S. Earthquake model is discretized into 11 distinct regions which
are comprised of individual states or groups of states. Each region
reflects the unique characteristics of seismic hazard in different parts
of the U.S. The regions are Alaska, California, Great Basin, Hawaii,
Midwest, Central U.S., Northeast U.S., Northern Rockies, Southeast U.S.,
Southern Rockies, and Pacific Northwest.
Exposure Data Resolution The RMS® Earthquake Casualty
Model supports analyses at each of the following levels of geographic
resolution: Latitude/Longitude, Street Address, ZIP Code, City, and
County. |
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