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Risk Management and Insurance: Perspectives in a Global Economy15. Risk Management for Catastrophes Click Here to Add Professor and Course Information
Points to Ponder • Risk analysis • Risk control • Risk financing
Risk Analysis • The analysis for events that hold a catastrophic potential are largely identical to those for non-catastrophic event, except: • Risk managers devote greater time and effort to exploring the susceptibility of the firm’s physical structure to damage. • Such corporations commonly rely more heavily on modeling to estimate the probable effects of natural catastrophes on their businesses. • Scenario planning can play a significant role.
Susceptibility to Damage • Design features and construction quality • The tradeoff between cost and quality • Causes of damage • Natural • Human-made (e.g., terrorists or disgruntled employees) • Age of structures • The Great Hanshin (Kobe) Earthquake in Japan in 1995 • Infrastructure • Transportation and communication facilities of the affected area • Critical to a prompt and orderly recovery • Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005 in the U.S.
Catastrophe Modeling • The use of computer-assisted mathematical techniques to estimate possible losses associated with catastrophic events • Use of site and specific property characteristics (the so-called “exposure data”) • Primarily for natural catastrophes such as hurricanes, earthquakes, storms, floods • Some for terrorism (e.g., AIR modeling) • Widely used by insurers, reinsurers and intermediaries • Figure 15.1 for a natural catastrophe model
Natural Catastrophe Risk Modeling (Figure 15.1) Description of the model in pages 376-377.
Scenario Planning • A strategic planning method in which analysts generate simulation gamesthat are used by management to consider and develop plans to deal with alternative futures • Scenarios should bring forth decisions by those who are ultimately responsible for making them. • Subsumes elements that are difficult and often impossible to formalize, let alone quantify • It is intended to cause decision-makers to realize that they consciously or unconsciously likely have a preconceived notion of what the “official future” will hold. • Insight 15.1 • Figure 15.2
Construct Multiple Scenarios Monitor the Environment and Strategic Implementation Devise Strategic Plan Based on Scenarios Implement Strategies Closed Strategic Management Loop
Terrorism Risk Analysis • Protection priority • High priority • Medium priority • Low priority • Hazard and vulnerability assessment • Defining threats • Identifying likely threat event profile and tactics • Assignment of a threat rating Go also to FEMA for additional information.
Loss Prevention • Land use restrictions • Building codes • Disaster planning • The U.S. – A Failure of Initiative, a report about government preparedness against disasters – Hurricane Katrina and New Orleans • Insight 15.3 (Home Depot’s reactions to the hurricane) • The E.U. – The Environmental Integration Manual
Loss Reduction • Crisis management • The process of identifying those situations that constitute a crisis, having an organized response to the crisis and ultimately resolving the crisis • The process • Engage appropriate employees to consider the range of crises • Develop responses for each identified crisis, including a master plan • Assign clear recovery responsibilities to individuals • Speak with one voice and through one high-level person • Keep employees, customers, other stakeholders and the public well informed by honestly and openly sharing the nature of the difficulty and what the organization is doing about it
Loss Reduction • The importance of effective crisis management – “sustainable risk management” • Corporate catastrophes and shareholder value • Reputation crises and shareholder value • Mass fatality events and shareholder value Discussion based on Knight and Pretty’s works
Loss Reduction • Insight 15.4 (Tylenol case) • Insight 15.5 (Boycott) • Insight 15.6 (Reputation loss) • Figure 15.4 (Reaction of Share Prices to Mass Fatality Events)
Retention • Recommended when • Insurance is unavailable or unaffordable • Property owners have the capability of financing losses internally • Retention is often used along with other risk financing options. • For example, excess insurance on top of large retention • The problems with retention are vividly demonstrated when a catastrophe occurs. • Especially in developing countries
Insurance • Risk financing capacity for catastrophic loss exposures remains a major concern for the insurance industry internationally • Insurance policies often exclude coverage for many catastrophic events. • Nuclear-related events • Flood damages • Earth movement • Terrorist act • Countrywide variations exist.
Insurance – Catastrophe Reinsurance • Often a risk-financing and loss-sharing arrangement between insurance firms • Several reinsurers that specialize in catastrophe reinsurance • The Caribbean • The London market
Insurance – Private Risk Pools • A wide array of uses by insurance companies • Residual markets for nonstandard drivers in automobile insurance or employers in workers’ compensation • A case of catastrophic loss exposure – nuclear activity • The World Nuclear Association • OECD’s Paris Convention on Third Party Liability in the Field • of Nuclear Energy of 1960 (amended in 2004) • The Price-Anderson Act in 1957 (U.S.) • Insight 15.7
Nuclear Insurance Coverage (Insight 15.7) • Facility form (liability) policy • Secondary financial protection policy • Master worker policy • Suppliers and transporters policy
Assessment against insurers $2.0 Reinsurance $1.5 $1.0 Line of credit $2.0 Reinsurance $3.0 Additional commitments from insurers Insurers' Initial Capital Contributions $1.0 Insurance – Government Risk Pools (CEA) Source: CEA (www.earthquakeauthority.com)
Insurance – Terrorism Risk • Australia – Australian Reinsurance Pool • Austria – Terrorpool Austria • France – GAREAT • Germany – Extremus • Israel – The Property and Tax Compensation Fund • The Netherlands – NHT • Spain – CCS • South Africa – SASRIA • The U.K. – Pool Re • The U.S. – Terrorism Risk and Insurance Act Table 15.1
Premium Coverage Insurer (Reinsurer) Premium Investment Coverage Principal + Return SPV(Reinsurer + Bond Issuer) Escrow Account(Bond Investment) Investment Bank(Bond Underwriting + Rating) Catastrophe Risk Securitization – Cat Bonds Not in the Book! CatastropheRisk InstitutionalInvestors
Discussion Question 1 • Older facilities often are more susceptible to damage than newer ones. Explain why this is so and make a case for why the government should not require that the owners of such older facilities to upgrade them to contemporary structural standards?
Discussion Question 2 • Loss mitigation is a fundamental factor in better managing the physical environment risk. What aspects of loss mitigation do you believe offer the most promise for the future?
Discussion Question 3 • Develop at least two “alternative futures” for how risk management might change for operators of nuclear power plants.
Discussion Question 4 • If sound crisis management is as important as suggested in this chapter, why do major corporations seem to accord it so little attention?
Discussion Question 5 • We have described terrorism risk pools in selected countries. • Find the reasons why some governments listed in the table acted upon creation of a terrorism insurance scheme before September 11, 2001. • Do you find any other governments offering similar programs? (Hint: Examine Brazil, Finland, Hong Kong and Japan for possible programs.)