The BI Settlement Process and Structure of Negotiated Payments

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The BI Settlement Process and Structure of Negotiated Payments

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Title: The BI Settlement Process and Structure of Negotiated Payments


1
The BI Settlement Process and Structure of
Negotiated Payments
  • Richard A. Derrig
  • Automobile Insurers Bureau of MA
  • Herbert I. Weisberg
  • Correlation Research Inc.

NBER Insurance Group Meeting Cambridge,
Massachusetts February 6-7, 2004
2
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4
BI Settlement Issues I
  • IRC Studies (1977, latest 2002 CY)
  • AIB Studies (1986, latest 1996 AY)
  • Medicals Dominate
  • Injury Types
  • General Damages

5
BI Settlement Issues II
  • Investigation
  • Suspicion of Fraud and Build-up
  • Settlement Negotiation
  • Low Impact Collision
  • Passengers
  • Bad Faith
  • Evolution Over Time

6
Comparison of Disability Distributions1989 BI
Claims vs. 1996 BI Claims
7
Total Claimed Medical Charges by Type of Service
8
Injury Type Changes
9
Total Claimed Medical Charges by Type of Service
10
General Damages
  • Special Damages are Claimant Economic Losses
  • Medical Bills
  • Wage Loss
  • Other Economic
  • General Damages are Residual of Negotiated
    Settlement Less Specials
  • Three Times Specials is a Myth

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15
Table 1
16
Table 2
17
Negotiated Settlements
  • Specials may be Discounted or Ignored
  • Medicals Real or Built-up?
  • Information from Investigation
  • Independent Medical Exams (IMEs)
  • Special Investigation
  • Suspicion of Fraud or Build-up

18
Independent Medical Exams
  • Policy Requirement (Mass)
  • General Claim Information plus Medical
    Examination
  • Outcomes
  • No change recommended
  • Refused or no show
  • Damages mitigated or
  • Treatment curtailed
  • Cost (350, 75 no show)

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23
mean calculation of non-zero entries
24
Settlement Modeling
  • Major Claim Characteristics
  • Tobit Regression for Censored Data
  • (right censored for policy limits)
  • Evaluation Model for Objective Facts
  • Negotiation Model for all Other Facts,
    including suspicion of fraud or build-up

25
Evaluation Variables
  • Prior Tobit Model (1993AY)
  • Claimed Medicals ()
  • Claimed Wages ()
  • Fault ()
  • Attorney (18)
  • Fracture (82)
  • Serious Visible Injury at Scene (36)
  • Disability Weeks (10 _at_ 3 weeks)
  • New Model Additions (1996AY)
  • Non-Emergency CT/MRI (31)
  • Low Impact Collision (-14)
  • Three Claimants in Vehicle (-12)
  • Same BI PIP Co. (-10) Passengers -22

26
Negotiation Variables
  • New Model Additions (1996AY)
  • Atty (1st) Demand Ratio to Specials (8 _at_ 6 X
    Specials)
  • BI IME No Show (-30)
  • BI IME Positive Outcome (-15)
  • BI IME Not Requested (-14)
  • BI Ten Point Suspicion Score (-12 _at_ 5.0 Average)
  • 1993 Build-up Variable (-10)
  • Unknown Disability (53)
  • 93A (Bad Faith) Letter Not Significant
  • In Suit Not Significant
  • SIU Referral (-6) but Not Significant
  • EUO Not Significant
  • Note PIP IME No Show also significantly reduces
    BI PIP by
  • discouraging BI claim altogether (-3).

27
Total Value of Negotiation Variables
28
  • Actual parameters for negotiation and evaluation
    models, with and without suspicion variable, are
    shown in the hard copy handout

29
References
  • Derrig, R.A. and H.I. Weisberg 2003, Auto
    Bodily Injury Claim Settlement in Massachusetts,
    Final Results of the Claim Screen Experiment,
    Massachusetts DOI 2003-15.
  • Derrig, R.A. and H.I. Weisberg, 2003,
    Determinants of Total Compensation for Auto
    Bodily Injury Liability Under No-Fault
    Investigation, Negotiation and the Suspicion of
    Fraud, Working paper, Automobile Insurers Bureau
    of MA.
  • Derrig, R.A., H.I. Weisberg and Xiu Chen, 1994,
    Behavioral Factors and Lotteries Under No-Fault
    with a Monetary Threshold A Study of
    Massachusetts Automobile Claims, Journal of Risk
    and Insurance, 612, 245-275.
  • Ross, Lawrence H. 1980, Settled out of Court,
    (Chicago, III Aldine).
  • Insurance Research Council 1999, Injuries in
    Auto Accidents, An Analysis of Auto Insurance
    Claims. Malvern, PA
  • Insurance Research Council 2003, Auto Injury
    Insurance Claims. Countrywide Patterns in
    Treatment, Cost, and Compensation, Malvern PA
  • Abrahamse, A. and Stephen J. Carroll 1999, The
    Frequency of Excess Claims for Automobile
    Personal Injuries, Automobile Insurance Road
    Safety, New Drivers, Risks, Insurance Fraud and
    Regulation, Claire Laberge-Nadeau, and Georges
    Dionne, Eds., Kluwer Academic Publishers,
    131-151.
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