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William Morgan & the First Actuarial Valuation (1775–1776)

Event Date: 1775–1776 Category: Actuarial Science — Valuation / Reserves / Surplus / Professionalization

Summary

William Morgan (1750–1833), appointed actuary of the Society for Equitable Assurances in 1775, performed the first systematic actuarial valuation of a life insurer’s liabilities. His work established the core practices of modern actuarial science: calculating reserves, analyzing mortality experience, determining surplus, and distributing dividends based on actual results rather than arbitrary formulas. Morgan transformed the Equitable into the world’s first scientifically managed life office and, in doing so, defined the actuarial profession.

Internal links: Link “reserves” → Founding of the Equitable (1762) Link “valuation” → Development of Actuarial Standards (19th Century) Link “surplus distribution” → Rise of Mutual Life Insurance (19th Century)

Background / Context

By the mid‑1770s, the Equitable had been operating for more than a decade using:

But it lacked a formal method to:

In other words, the Equitable had the theory (Dodson) and the institution (Mores), but not yet the mathematical governance required for long‑term stability.

Enter William Morgan.

What Happened

⭐ 1. Morgan Becomes the First Modern Actuary (1775)

Morgan was appointed “Actuary” of the Equitable in 1775—the first person to hold the title in its modern sense. His mandate was unprecedented:

This was the birth of actuarial valuation as a professional function.

⭐ 2. The First Actuarial Valuation (1776)

Morgan’s 1776 valuation introduced several revolutionary practices:

This was the first time a life insurer had been subjected to a scientific audit of its promises.

⭐ Sidebar: Why Morgan’s Valuation Changed Everything

The moment life insurance became a measurable, governable financial system

Morgan’s valuation established the principles that still define actuarial practice:

Before Morgan, life insurance was a mathematical idea. After Morgan, it was a profession with standards.

⭐ 3. Mortality Experience Studies

Morgan compared the Equitable’s actual mortality to the tables it used. This was the first experience study in insurance history.

He discovered:

This created the feedback loop that defines actuarial science.

⭐ 4. Surplus and Dividends

Morgan introduced the idea that:

This was the foundation of the participating policy and the modern mutual‑company model.

⭐ 5. Morgan’s Long Tenure (1775–1830)

Morgan served as actuary for 55 years, shaping:

By the time he retired, actuarial science was a recognized discipline.

Claims Impact

Morgan’s work:

His valuation practices became the backbone of life‑insurance solvency.

Regulatory / Legal Impact

Morgan’s methods influenced:

His work became the template for 19th‑century insurance regulation.

Market Impact

Morgan’s valuation:

It also made actuarial science indispensable to the industry.

Why It Mattered (Plain English)

Morgan solved the central problem of life insurance:

How do you know if you can afford the promises you’ve made?

His answer—actuarial valuation—became the foundation of:

Morgan didn’t just work at the Equitable. He invented the job of actuary as we understand it today.

Sources / Notes

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