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Session 161 Comparative Emergency Management Session 16 Slide Deck.

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Presentation on theme: "Session 161 Comparative Emergency Management Session 16 Slide Deck."— Presentation transcript:

1 Session 161 Comparative Emergency Management Session 16 Slide Deck

2 Session 162 Session Objectives 1.Provide a Broad Understanding of Risk Transfer, Sharing, and Spreading Mechanisms 2.Explain the Various Risk Transfer, Sharing, and Spreading Techniques and Provide Examples from The United States and Abroad

3 Session 163 Risk Transfer Also called: –Risk Sharing –Risk Spreading Debated as a mitigation measure Allows for the financial disaster consequences that do occur to be shared by a large group of people, rather than a large financial burden falling only on the affected individuals or communities

4 Session 164 Risk Transfer Roots 1950 BC Practice of “bottomry” Costs of shipping losses shared among participants – e.g., all vessels in a fleet

5 Session 165 Modern Risk Transfer Can be private or government administered Primarily consist of insurance and reinsurance Direct risk sharing more commonly found in developing countries –Informal agreements within social / familial groups –E.g., food sharing

6 Session 166 Insurance “a promise of compensation for specific potential future losses in exchange for a periodic payment”

7 Session 167 Insurance Considerations Can be mandatory or optional In 2008, over $4.2 trillion in premiums (17% increase over 2006) US – represents 26% of the insurance market

8 Session 168 Common Types of Insurance Automobile insurance Homeowners / Renters insurance Health insurance Disability insurance Life insurance Flood insurance Earthquake insurance Terrorism insurance Business interruption insurance

9 Session 169 Reinsurance Companies Reinsurance companies insure insurance companies Tend to be internationally based Spread risk across greater geographical ranges

10 Session 1610 Two Factors of Insurability The hazard in question must be identifiable and quantifiable. Insurers must be able to set premiums for “each potential customer or class of customers” (Kunreuther and Freement, 1997).

11 Session 1611 Insurance Problems Catastrophic Disasters Hazards for which information is scarce Disasters that cover wide geographic areas

12 Session 1612 Catastrophic Insurance Problems Only those people who are likely to suffer the specific loss defined in the policy are likely to purchase that type of policy, creating the need for much higher premiums than if the specific hazard policy were spread across a more general population. This phenomenon is called “adverse selection”

13 Session 1613 Advantages of Insurance Victims are guaranteed a secure and predictable amount of compensation for their losses Insurance allows for losses to be distributed in an equitable fashion, protecting many for only a fraction of the cost each would have incurred individually if exposed to hazards Insurance can actually reduce hazard impact by encouraging policyholders to adopt certain required mitigation measures

14 Session 1614 Insurance Limitations May be impossible to purchase in the highest-risk areas Participation is often voluntary Participation has been known to encourage more irresponsible actions Many companies are pulling out of specific disaster insurance plans because the probability that they will not be able to cover catastrophic losses is too great Catastrophic losses that cover a wide but specific geographic space within a country may result in inequitable premium increases if coverage areas are too general

15 Session 1615 Risk Sharing Pools Group members share risk internally Often used by government agencies to cover public sector risk Can work by allowing individual members to benefit from group buying power Risk insured is specific to the needs of the pool Can include other services, such as technical assistance or advice

16 Session 1616 Weather Derivatives Use investment instruments to mitigate risk Used heavily by agricultural / energy sectors Used to cover losses associated with cancelled / affected events

17 Session 1617 Catastrophe Bonds Disaster-based investment mechanism Investors ‘bet’ that a disaster will not occur Disassociated with standard financial markets Require a trigger

18 Session 1618 Cat Bond Triggers Indemnity Modeled Loss Indexed to Industry Parametric Parametric Index


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