ISBN13: 978-0-691-12066-9|256 pages|Hardback|©2007|NT$1380
Author
Christian Gourieroux, the University of Toronto
Joann Jasiak, York University
Description
The individual risks faced by banks, insurers, and marketers are less well understood than aggregate risks such as market-price changes. But the risks incurred or carried by individual people, companies, insurance policies, or credit agreements can be just as devastating as macroevents such as share-price fluctuations. A comprehensive introduction, The Econometrics of Individual Risk is the first book to provide a complete econometric methodology for quantifying and managing this underappreciated but important variety of risk. The book presents a course in the econometric theory of individual risk illustrated by empirical examples. And, unlike other texts, it is focused entirely on solving the actual individual risk problems businesses confront today.
Christian Gourieroux and Joann Jasiak emphasize the microeconometric aspect of risk analysis by extensively discussing practical problems such as retail credit scoring, credit card transaction dynamics, and profit maximization in promotional mailing. They address regulatory issues in sections on computing the minimum capital reserve for coverage of potential losses, and on the credit-risk measure CreditVar.
The book will interest graduate students in economics, business, finance, and actuarial studies, as well as actuaries and financial analysts.
Table of Contents ( Details )
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Dichotomous Risk
Chapter 3: Estimation
Chapter 4: Score Performance
Chapter 5: Count Data Models
Chapter 6: Durations
Chapter 7: Endogenous Selection and Partial Observability
Chapter 8: Transition Models
Chapter 9: Multiple Scores
Chapter 10: Serial Dependence in Longitudinal Data
Chapter 11: Management of Credit Risk
References
Index 239