Suppose you own an expensive car and purchase auto insurance. This insurance has a $1000 deductible, so
Question:
Suppose you own an expensive car and purchase auto insurance. This insurance has a $1000 deductible, so that if you have an accident and the damage is less than $1000, you pay for it out of your pocket. However, if the damage is greater than $1000, you pay the first $1000 and the insurance pays the rest. In the current year, there is probability 0.025 of your having an accident. If you have an accident, the damage amount is normally distributed with mean $3000 and standard deviation $750.
a. Use Excel and a one-way data table to simulate the amount you have to pay for damages to your car.
Run 5000 iterations. Then find the average amount you pay, the standard deviation of the amounts you pay, and a 95% confidence interval for the average amount you pay. (Note that many of the amounts you pay will be 0 because you have no accident.)
b. Continue the simulation in part a by creating a two-way data table, where the row input is the deductible amount, varied from $500 to $2000 in multiples of $500. Now find the average amount you pay, the standard deviation of the amounts you pay, and a 95% confidence interval for the average amount you pay for each deductible amount.
c. Do you think it is reasonable to assume that damage amounts are normally distributed? What would you criticize about this assumption? What might you suggest instead?
Step by Step Answer:
Practical Management Science, Revised
ISBN: 9781118373439
3rd Edition
Authors: Wayne L Winston, S. Christian Albright