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Market Imperfections and Catastrophe Insurance: Building the Case for Government Intervention. Kenneth A. Froot Harvard University. Insurance Risk Sharing. Purpose of insurance is to share risk How good is the sharing of pervasive event risks?
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Market Imperfections and Catastrophe Insurance:Building the Case for Government Intervention Kenneth A. Froot Harvard University (c) Froot
Insurance Risk Sharing • Purpose of insurance is to share risk • How good is the sharing of pervasive event risks? • What could explain the lack of large event risk sharing? • What are the implications for intermediation? • Focus on reinsurance of large catastrophic risks from natural perils (e.g., hurricane, earthquake, freeze, fire, etc.) • Objective event probabilities estimated by modelers • Less scope for moral hazard and adverse selection (c) Froot
Historically Much Cat Risk is Retained • Insurerspurchasing catastrophe reinsurance protect mostly against small events • Many insurers purchase no reinsurance • Similar for cat covers of nonfinancial corporations • Not because insurance capital is so large (c) Froot
Percentage of US Cat Exposure Reinsured by Insurance Companies (c) Froot
Why So Little Risk Transfer? • In a perfect world • elasticity of supply and demand are high Demand = Supply price quantity (c) Froot
What distortions diminish risk transfer? Demand • Two types of explanations • 1. Supply of Insurance/Reinsurance capacity is low Supply price quantity (c) Froot
What distortions diminish risk transfer? Supply • Two types of explanations • 2. Demand for Insurance / Reinsurance capacity is low Demand price quantity (c) Froot
What distortions diminish risk transfer? • Supply is low (and prices high) because • 1. Reinsurance capital is not cheap • 2. Reinsurers have market power • 3. The private reinsurance production process is inefficient • 4. Moral hazard / adverse selection • Demand is low because • 5. Awareness is low (also, mitigation is low) • 6. Insurers are regulated, and regulation suppresses final price • 7. Ex-post subsidies expected from governments • 9. Behavioral factors make unlikely events seem irrelevant (c) Froot
Do these distortions diminish risk transfer? • Demand-driven distortions can’t be solved by direct government intervention in bulk risk financing • Can be improved by other forms of intervention • Increase penetration and mitigation • Ensure that regulation does not artificially suppress price • Note: requires more, not less, reliance on market mechanisms • Create commitment mechanisms making ex-post subsidies costly • Promote information release to overcome behavior biases (c) Froot
Do these distortions diminish risk transfer? • Supply-driven distortions are more complex • If the problem is • High private capital costs, • Then intervention may help • Market power, • Then regulate don’t produce • High costs of production, • Then no distortion to counteract • Adverse selection, • Then costs of government becoming informed (c) Froot
Choosing Among These • Some facts to help separate out competing explanations… (c) Froot
Reinsurance Price / Quantity Pairs (c) Froot
Price: Premium / Expected Loss : (c) Froot
The Impact of Unrelated Perils on Prices (c) Froot
Capital Supply Changes Help Explain Facts Demand Supply price quantity (c) Froot
Capital Supply Changes Help Explain Facts • Specifically, three corporate finance distortions interact • 1. Internal capital valuable because capital market imperfections make external finance costly. • 2. Internal capital valuable because product market imperfections make insureds ‘overpay’ for safer coverage • 3. Internal capital costly because agency costs and corporate taxation add a corporate cost of ‘carry’ • 1 and 2 push companies toward holding excess capital, 3 pushes toward reduced capital (c) Froot
In the absence of these distortions, corporate value increases 1-for-1 with capital Value with Perfect markets Value 0 Quantity of capital deployed (given risk underwritten) (c) Froot
With distortion 3, value increases less than 1-for-1 with capital Value Value of internal capital = Value of capital deployed less taxes and agency 0 Quantity of capital deployed (given risk underwritten) (c) Froot
Adding distortions 1 and 2, value increases strongly at low amounts of capital Value Value with agency, taxes, capital & product market imperfections 0 Quantity of capital deployed (given risk underwritten) (c) Froot
Some Implications of these Distortions • 1. Privately deployed insurance capital is always scarcer than under perfect markets (c) Froot
Some Implications of these Distortions • 2. There is an optimal amount of external capital to deploy; it minimizes distortions for given risks. (c) Froot
Some Implications of these Distortions • 3. An additional dollar has higher marginal value as internal capital rather than as external capital. Firms should treat internal capital as scarce. A marginal event loss has a greater impact on undercapitalized companies. (c) Froot
Some Implications of these Distortions • 4. Uncertainty in underwriting performance reduces insurer value, and does so by relatively more for less-well-capitalized firms. (c) Froot
Some evidence to support this • Event losses from September 11, 2001 had a more negative impact on the market value of more-poorly-rated insurance firms From Cummins and Lewis, 2002, “Catastrophic events, parameter uncertainty, and the breakdown of implicit long-term contracting in the insurance market (c) Froot
Some evidence to support this • Excess, risk-adjusted returns 1995-2001 on a panel of insurers are decreasing in the realized volatility of company earnings Controlling for company rating makes these results stronger (c) Froot
But Markets are Resilient: Marginal Reinsurance Coverage 8 Years After Hurricane Andrew : (c) Froot
Can Government Intervention Solve? • 3. Internal capital costly because agency costs and corporate taxation add a corporate cost of ‘carry’ • Tax policy can reduce corporate capital carry cost, but not agency-based carry costs. • Government financing is pay-as-you-go, eliminating capital carry. • 2. Internal capital valuable because product market imperfections make insureds ‘overpay’ for safer coverage • Little that government should do to interfere with private tastes. • 1. Internal capital valuable because capital market imperfections make external finance costly. • Some governments have lower credit risk than the best firms, potentially reducing deadweight costs of external finance. • Short-run costs of raising external capital are greater than long-run costs. (c) Froot
Intervention creates distortions as well • Dynamic inefficiencies • Market responses and adjustments in pricing and cover. • Experiment in US with terrorist protection. (c) Froot
Conclusions • There is both theory and evidence to suggest that financial and product market imperfections prevent the first-best provision of catastrophic protection. • Policies aimed at removing the distortions may be counterproductive (e.g., reducing tax-based carry costs) but should be explored. • Policies aimed at partially supplanting market finance (for the bulk of exposures) should focus primarily on temporary distortions (c) Froot