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In this manner, liability for past losses could be transferred year after year until it reached the current Syndicate.
A member joining a Syndicate with a long history of such transactions could – and often did – pick up liability for losses on policies written decades previously.
So long as the reserves had been correctly estimated, and the appropriate RITC premium paid every year, then all would have been well, but in many cases this had not been possible.
No one could have predicted the surge in APH losses.
Therefore, the amounts of money transferred from earlier years by successive RITC premiums to cover these losses were insufficient, and the current members had to pay the shortfall.

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