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Universal Life and Indeterminate Premium Products and Policyholder Dividends
in marketing and designing products. Interest, mortality, lapse, and expense assumptions are secondary ... example, I0 percent interest and 70 percent mortality might be used in place of best-estimate assump- ...- Authors: Ted E Becker, Stephen D Bickel, Robert J Callahan, Mark Anthony Hug, Thomas G Kabele, Stephen B Moses, John Palmer, Claude Thau, John C Winter
- Date: Oct 1983
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge>External forces and business performance; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving>Problem analysis and definition
- Publication Name: Transactions of the SOA
- Topics: Financial Reporting & Accounting>Tax accounting; Public Policy; Public Policy
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Mathematical Analysis of 'The Life Insurance Company Income Tax Act of 1959' Revisited
due to the potential radical fluctuations in mortality and interest rates, the federal govern- ment ... ] = 0.48[6 -- D P - - (0.25 V r -- 0.25 V r(~s) -- P-x)] = 0.48(G -- D P - - 0.25 V T + 0.25 ...- Authors: Calvert A Jared
- Date: Oct 1974
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge>External forces and business performance; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving>Problem analysis and definition; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving>Process and technique refinement
- Publication Name: Transactions of the SOA
- Topics: Financial Reporting & Accounting>Tax accounting; Public Policy