Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Wednesday, April 21 2021 - 23:00
AsiaNet
To protect businesses from pandemic risk, governments need to be 'insurers of last resort': new Geneva Association report
ZURICH, April 22, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

- To support government-insurer discussions on how to close the protection gap 
for business interruption risk in the case of a pandemic, The Geneva 
Association has released Public-Private Solutions to Pandemic Risk ( 
https://www.genevaassociation.org/research-topics/socio-economic-resilience/public-private-solutions-pandemic-risk-research-report 
), outlining four possible government-led schemes: 1) direct insurance, 2) 
reinsurance, 3) social insurance and 4) post-event protection.

- The first report in this series, An Investigation into the Insurability of 
Pandemic Risk ( 
https://www.genevaassociation.org/research-topics/socio-economic-resilience/investigation-insurability-pandemic-risk-research-report 
), revealed that business interruption risk is uninsurable by insurers alone: 
compared to projected global output losses of more than USD 4 trillion for 2020 
due to the pandemic, the global P&C insurance industry collects USD 1.6 
trillion in annual premiums, with just an estimated USD 30 billion for business 
interruption policies.

- Capital at risk makes it impossible for private insurers to offer meaningful 
pandemic business interruption coverage, but they can make important non-risk 
bearing contributions that leverage their expertise in risk assessment, risk 
mitigation and claims management. 

COVID-19 has illustrated that pandemic-related business interruption is 
directly linked to the decisions of governments to implement lockdown measures, 
making it impossible for insurers to model and price such a risk. Furthermore, 
it is systemic in nature, inducing widespread and simultaneous financial 
losses. Coverage for pandemic business continuity risks with meaningful limits 
will therefore remain unavailable from the private insurance market due to 
prohibitively high capital requirements. Government involvement is essential to 
enhancing preparedness for and resilience to future pandemic shocks. 

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/714100/Geneva_Association_Logo.jpg 

In this context The Geneva Association has just released Public-Private 
Solutions to Pandemic Risk ( 
https://www.genevaassociation.org/research-topics/socio-economic-resilience/public-private-solutions-pandemic-risk-research-report 
), expounding four exemplary pandemic risk funding schemes where governments 
can play a leading role: 

    -- Direct insurance: the public sector provides voluntary or 
       mandatory insurance to businesses exposed to pandemic risk 
    -- Reinsurance: governments provide reinsurance coverage to 
       insurers that kicks in above a certain threshold and up to a 
       certain limit 
    -- Social insurance: modest public-sector coverage with mandatory 
       participation through pre-event payments (e.g. tax or levy) 
    -- Post-event protection: an ad hoc safety net offered by 
       governments to those affected

Recognising there is no one-size-fits-all solution, the report assesses the 
benefits of each scheme against seven public policy goals: 1) maximum coverage, 
2) limited public exposure, 3) matching of funds with needs, 4) risk mitigation 
incentives, 5) cost-efficiency of risk transfer, 6) operational efficiency, and 
7) macroeconomic benefits. 

Jad Ariss, The Geneva Association's Managing Director, said: "It is a tragedy 
that businesses, particularly SMEs, have suffered so much financial loss during 
the pandemic as a result of the lockdowns, which were beyond their control. The 
public sector had to step in with multi-trillion dollar emergency relief 
measures. Governments and insurers must work together on how to close the 
massive protection gap exposed by COVID-19, with governments as the leading 
players."

Kai-Uwe Schanz, The Geneva Association's Head of Research & Foresight and the 
leading author of the report, said: "We want to emphasise that of the four 
pandemic risk insurance schemes outlined, distributing cash post-event – as 
many governments did for COVID-19 – is likely least effective. For the other 
schemes, deciding whether participation is mandatory or voluntary, as well as 
the role of insurers in pricing and offering coverage, are critical 
considerations. We hope this report effectively guides governments and insurers 
in finalising their partnership terms."

About The Geneva Association

The Geneva Association is the only global association of insurance companies; 
its members are insurance and reinsurance CEOs. Based on rigorous research 
conducted in collaboration with its members, academic institutions and 
multilateral organisations, The Geneva Association Identifies and investigates 
key trends and risk areas that are likely to shape or impact the insurance 
industry and develops corresponding recommendations for the industry and for 
policymakers. 

In total, the companies of Geneva Association members are headquartered in 25 
countries around the world; manage USD 17.1 trillion in assets; employ 2.4 
million people; and protect 1.8 billion people.

pamela_corn@genevaassociation.org 

SOURCE  The Geneva Association


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