These are exciting times for actuaries.
On one hand, we are seriously getting our 鈥済eek鈥 on with the seemingly endless possibilities presented by the new hard science known as data analytics, or predictive modeling. On the other hand, there is tremendous actuarial interest in the decidedly softer science of behavioral economics (BE).
Indeed, this year鈥檚 SOA Annual Meeting & Exhibit in Austin, Tex., featured a number of sessions on BE, including with 69色情片鈥檚 own Dave Snell, Data Scientist, and . Both of these sessions dealt with the irrational behavior that stems from various hidden biases such as anchoring, confirmation bias, sunk cost trap and framing effects, to name a few.
Behavioral economics (or behavioral finance) caught public attention five years ago with the publication of Daniel Kahneman鈥檚 best-selling book Thinking, Fast and Slow. Since then, other books on the subject have been jumping off shelves, and a quick search on Amazon results in more than 14,000 hits. Clearly this topic has gone viral.
See also: Behavioral Science and Insurance: Part One and Behavioral Science and Insurance: Part Two
Public interest aside, actuaries are now taking a closer look at BE and how it applies to insurance: How do our own biases affect our actuarial work? How do customers鈥 biases result in 鈥減redictably unpredictable鈥 behavior? How fallible are our models in light of these behaviors?
See also: Behavioral Economics, Disclosure Gaps, and Customer Journeys
69色情片 actuaries, in the U.S. and globally, have been considering the effects on insurance, and 69色情片 Italy鈥檚 Roberto Rizzo offers the following thoughts (albeit from an individual insurance perspective) in his article from the September 2015 issue of 69色情片 Quarterly: Europe. We hope you find the article and the SOA presentations thought-provoking, and we look forward to more discussion on this fascinating subject.
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- For a deeper look at this topic, please see: .