Incurred but not reported
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
insurance Insurance is a means of protection from financial loss in which, in exchange for a fee, a party agrees to compensate another party in the event of a certain loss, damage, or injury. It is a form of risk management, primarily used to hedge ...
, incurred but not reported (IBNR) claims is the amount owed by an insurer to all valid claimants who have had a covered loss but have not yet reported it. Since the insurer knows neither how many of these losses have occurred, nor the severity of each loss, IBNR is necessarily an estimate. The sum of IBNR losses plus reported losses yields an estimate of the total eventual liabilities the insurer will cover, known as ultimate losses.


IBNR and IBNER

The term "IBNR" is sometimes ambiguous, as it is not always clear whether it includes development on reported claims. ''Pure IBNR'' refers to only unreported claims, not any development on reported claims. ''Incurred but not enough reported (IBNER)'', in contrast, refers to development on reported claims. For example, when a claim is first reported, a $100 payment might be made, and a $900 case reserve might be established, for a total initial reported amount of $1000. However, the claim may later settle for a larger amount, resulting in $2000 of payments from the insurer to the claimant before the claim is closed. The estimated amount of this future development on reported claims is known as IBNER. In some cases, the term "IBNR" refers only to pure IBNR; in other case, it is understood to be the sum of pure IBNR and IBNER.


Methods of estimation

Actuarial
loss reserving Loss reserving refers to the calculation of the required reserves for a tranche of general insurance business.Schmidt, K. D., Zocher, M.The Bornhuetter–Ferguson Principle Variance 2:1, 2008, pp. 85-110. It includes outstanding claims reserves. Ty ...
methods including the chain-ladder method,
Bornhuetter–Ferguson method The Bornhuetter–Ferguson method is a loss reserving technique in insurance. Background The Bornhuetter–Ferguson method was introduced in the 1972 paper "The Actuary and IBNR", co-authored by Ron Bornhuetter and Ron Ferguson.
, expected claims technique, and others are used to estimate IBNR and, hence, ultimate losses. Since the implementation of
Solvency II Solvency II Directive 20092009/138/EC is a Directive in European Union law that codifies and harmonises the EU insurance regulation. Primarily this concerns the amount of capital that EU insurance companies must hold to reduce the risk of insolv ...
,
stochastic Stochastic (, ) refers to the property of being well described by a random probability distribution. Although stochasticity and randomness are distinct in that the former refers to a modeling approach and the latter refers to phenomena themselv ...
claims reserving methods have become more common.


See also

*
Loss reserving Loss reserving refers to the calculation of the required reserves for a tranche of general insurance business.Schmidt, K. D., Zocher, M.The Bornhuetter–Ferguson Principle Variance 2:1, 2008, pp. 85-110. It includes outstanding claims reserves. Ty ...
* Actuarial science


References

{{Reflist Actuarial science