As an actuarial student, you have probably contemplated whether you should specialize in Life Insurance (Life), Property & Casualty Insurance (P&C), or Pensions. If you’re thinking Pensions is for you then look no further, because you'll be heading into an industry that is set for an early retirement.
Pension Plans: An Outlook of
a Dying Industry

Though the field of pensions is fading away, there is hope for actuaries within this field. The valuation process pension actuaries undertake is very similar to reserving techniques used by P&C actuaries, which happens to be a growing field (CAS 2018). Nevertheless, a pension actuary becomes a Fellow of the Society of Actuaries (FSA), whereas a P&C actuary becomes a Fellow of the Casualty Actuarial Society (FCAS); both varying in academic nature (Brea 2018). As a result, it would be difficult for an FSA to enter the P&C industry. Since Life actuaries become FSAs in their line of work, a Pension actuary would find it much easier to become a Life actuary than one working as a P&C.
Works Cited
Actuarial Consulting Group, Inc. “Frequently Asked
Questions.” Actuarial Consulting Services, 2010, www.acgactuary.com/faq.html.
Brea. “CAS vs. SOA. What's the Difference? Which Path
to Choose?” Etched Actuarial, 7 July 2018, etchedactuarial.com/cas-vs-soa/.
CAS Student Central. “What Is a Property and Casualty
Actuary?” CAS Student Central, 2018,
www.casstudentcentral.org/about-our-profession/what-property-and-casualty-actuary/.
Office of the Superintendent of Financial
Institutions. “Defined Contribution Plan.” Office of the Superintendent of
Financial Institutions, 25 Jan. 2018,
www.osfi-bsif.gc.ca/Eng/pp-rr/ppa-rra/Pages/dc-cd.aspx.
I didn't even know about all these different specializations in the actuarial industry, thanks for letting us know! Nice Star Wars Image!
ReplyDelete-- Jia Ying
The actuarial industry is ever growing, and we might be able to see actuaries tap into new fields in the future!
DeleteAs someone who has spent some time working in the pension actuarial industry, I agree with everything said in the article. However, I have personally done some actuarial work for DC plans, so hopefully we'll find a way to make sure the industry doesn't die out. - Arzaan
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately DC plans require much less actuarial work than DB plans. Hopefully in the future actuaries will figure out how to incorporate DB and DC plans together to keep them busy at work!
DeleteI liked the linguistic and visual link between the "dying industry" and the grim reaper. Maybe consider revising the sentence "Which appears to be the trend." Doesn't make sense on its own, should be linked to previous.
ReplyDeleteGood read about something I as an actuary in a different field, was unaware of. - Aaliyah
The grim reaper appears whenever something is expected to die. That is the prospect for pension-related actuarial science. Hopefully that is not the case!
DeleteThanks for the edit advice.
Wow, this is very insightful. Thanks for the great read.
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome.
DeleteWow~ I actually thought Pensions was for me. This was REALLY helpful. And I loved the humour too. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteGlad to have made you laugh! Good luck with your endeavors
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