Obviously need more detail...what type of claim etc..
For a given period, Claims paid during the period+Outstanding claims at the end of the period-Outstanding claims at the beginning of the period
Not all paint covers the same area.You need to find out what it claims to cover,then calculate the surface area by multiplying the height and width of the individual walls.
You can look at Wikipedia for a list and boundary definitions of territorial claims on the Antarctic continent: http:/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_claims_of_AntarcticaOn that page, you can see that countries have claimed over 75% of the continent leaving nearly 25% of it unclaimed. Also note that many claims overlap each other.Note, however, that The Antarctic Treaty specifically discounts all territorial claims on the continent.
claims
To calculate the number of visits per thousand members based on claims information, first, total the number of visits recorded in the claims data over a specific period. Next, determine the total membership count during that same period. Finally, use the formula: (Total Visits / Total Membership) * 1,000 to find the number of visits per thousand members. This provides a standardized measure of visit frequency relative to the member base.
Total amount of claims paid/outstanding x number of vehicles on policy. vehicle years Normally done on a three year claims experience rather than one year to give a true reflection of how the fleet is running.
Claims about single individuals should be treated as A claims or E claims. pg 254 in your textbook
total claims divided by 55%(a fixed rate depending on type of policy) multiplied by 100 multiplied by 3years total claims x 100 x 3years fixed rate depending on policy type =total premiums to be collected to break even
The NPA is a Non Performing Asset as defined by the Reserve Bank of India. To calculate the Net NPA you take the Gross NPA minus the balance of a suspense account, DICGC claims, part payments received, and the provisions held.
Negative claims
claims attachement
Are electronic claims edited at a higher standard than paper claims