In my (admittedly limited) experience, you'll probably run into some of the same issues with QlikView being "expensive, ugly, and completely lacking in statistical tools".
"Actuarial tables" are really only used to price life insurance. Property/Casualty insurance (auto, home, work comp, etc.) are priced by analyzing recent loss experience, then trending loss costs forward (as medical…
In my (admittedly limited) experience, you'll probably run into some of the same issues with QlikView being "expensive, ugly, and completely lacking in statistical tools".
"Actuarial tables" are really only used to price life insurance. Property/Casualty insurance (auto, home, work comp, etc.) are priced by analyzing recent loss experience, then trending loss costs forward (as medical…