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14 April, 19:51

In fact, the insurance company sees that in the entire population of homeowners, the mean loss from fire is μ = $300 and the standard deviation of the loss is σ = $400. what are the mean and standard deviation of the average loss for 10 policies? (losses on separate policies are independent. round your standard deviation to two decimal places.)

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  1. 14 April, 22:22
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    If we based solving this using the Central Limit Theorem, then if are given n random variables (in this case, losses from fire) and all with mean μ and standard deviation σ, then the distribution of the average of these random variables will behave in a normal distribution with mean μ and standard deviation σ / sqrt (n). Therefore the rules are:

    μ’ = μ

    σ’ = σ / sqrt (n)

    So if we are given 10 policies, n = 10. Therefore the new mean μ’ and standard deviation σ’ are:

    μ’ = $300

    σ’ = $400 / sqrt (10) = $126.49
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