Exposure Bases in Insurance
An exposure base is the basic unit of risk measurement used to determine an insurance policy’s premium. It serves as the denominator in rate calculations (e.g., rate per exposure).
Criteria for Selecting an Exposure Base
When selecting or evaluating an exposure base, three primary criteria must be balanced:
1. Proportionality to Expected Loss
- The exposure base should have a direct, proportional relationship with the expected loss potential.
- If a policyholder doubles their exposures (e.g., doubling car-years or payroll), their expected losses should ideally double, assuming all other risk characteristics remain constant.
2. Practicality & Verifiability
- Objectivity: The base must be clearly defined and easy to measure.
- Cost-Effectiveness: It should be inexpensive to collect and verify.
- Tamper-Resistance: It should be difficult for the insured to manipulate or misreport to avoid paying adequate premium.
3. Historical Precedence
- Changing an exposure base is highly disruptive. Considerations include:
- System Costs: High IT and administrative expenses to update rating systems and database structures.
- Data Continuity: Disruption to historical loss development and trend analysis.
- Customer Impact: Large, sudden premium swings for individual policyholders, potentially causing customer dissatisfaction and lapses.
Common Exposure Bases by Line of Business
| LOB | Standard Exposure Base | Alternative Bases |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Auto | Car-Year (1 car insured for 1 year) | Miles driven, vehicle value |
| Homeowners | House-Year (1 home insured for 1 year) | Replacement cost, square footage |
| Personal Articles Floater | Value of insured item (e.g., jewelry) | Appraised value, item count |
| Commercial Property | Amount of insurance (AOI) coverage | Square footage, number of locations |
| Inland Marine | Value of property/goods transported | Annual shipping volume, vehicle count |
| Workers’ Compensation | Total payroll (usually per $100) | Number of employees, hours worked |
| Commercial General Liability (CGL) | Gross sales, payroll, square footage | Number of customers, units produced |
| Products Liability | Gross sales revenue | Number of units sold, product type |
| Professional Liability | Number of professionals (e.g., lawyers) | Annual revenue, billable hours |
| Physicians Malpractice | Physician-Year (1 physician for 1 year) | Number of patient visits, procedures performed |
| Cyber Liability | Annual gross revenue | Number of records, employee count |
| Directors & Officers (D&O) | Total corporate assets | Revenue, market capitalization, employee count |
| Umbrella / Excess Liability | Underlying policy limits / premiums | Operations type, underlying exposures |
[!TIP] While miles driven is more proportional to auto loss than car-years, car-years is historically preferred because it is objective and easy to verify, whereas miles driven has historically been difficult and expensive to track (though telematics is changing this).