Decades in the Making, NAIC Outlines Natural Catastrophe Plan

By | November 15, 2009

White Paper Approved at Fall Meeting with Near-Unanimous Vote


The private insurance industry alone ‘cannot be expected to provide comprehensive catastrophe coverage without adequate financial backstops for the most extreme events.’

Although it may seem like the debate over the creation of a national catastrophe insurance plan is a relatively recent phenomenon, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners began addressing the issue as early as 1973. In a report from NAIC proceedings that year, the group recommended a five-step program to address the problem of insuring against national catastrophes.

According to the NAIC white paper, “Natural Catastrophe Risk: Creating a Comprehensive National Plan,” drafted by the NAIC Property and Casualty Insurance (C) Committee in 2008 and adopted nearly unanimously by the commissioners’ group at its Fall 2009 meeting, step five of that original recommendation read: “The Federal Government, in cooperation with the insurance industry and the NAIC, study and develop a mechanism that would provide additional capacity for catastrophe insurance and would allow for the accumulation of funds from which catastrophe losses could be paid without having those funds depleted by Federal income tax in loss-free years.”

Thirty-six years later, aside from the establishment in 1968 of the National Flood Insurance Program, such a national catastrophe insurance mechanism has yet to be finalized.

The only dissenting vote to the adoption of the white paper came from South Dakota Commissioner of Insurance Merle Schieber, who has spoken publicly of his opposition to the idea of inland states subsidizing the risks of those who live near the nation’s coastlines. And the NAIC concedes that “No other issue in the current debate has polarized the regulatory community, the industry, consumer groups, legislators and other parties as much as how to finance and insure against future catastrophic risks.”

Another insurance regulator from the Midwest, Ohio Department of Insurance Director Mary Jo Hudson, echoed Scheiber’s sentiment when she told Insurance Journal late last year she doesn’t “feel that [Ohio] taxpayers should have to share the burden with folks that live in much riskier areas and choose to live there.” The white paper’s adoption by the NAIC, however, was championed by Illinois’ Michael McRaith.

Can’t Go It Alone

In the introduction to “Natural Catastrophe Risk,” the NAIC notes that the federal Government Accountability Office (GAO) has determined the United States is not well equipped to handle large natural disasters, financially or in terms of emergency response. And the premise behind the NAIC’s plan is that the private insurance industry alone “cannot be expected to provide comprehensive catastrophe coverage without adequate financial backstops for the most extreme events.”

The draft document approved by the regulators stems from a proposal originally developed by a group of state regulators, including those from California, Florida, Illinois and New York. It has been revised numerous times, and the NAIC acknowledges that consensus has never been reached on some issues. However, it stipulated that a national plan should be based on “several guiding principles.” Among them:

  • It should promote personal responsibility among policyholders.
  • It should support reasonable building codes, land-use development plans and other mitigation tools.
  • It should maximize the risk-bearing capacity of the private markets.
  • It should provide quantifiable risk management by the federal government.

A public/private interface is envisioned by the plan but the NAIC stressed that “two layers of risk-bearing capacity before federal government resources are utilized. The federal government, represented in the third layer, would become financially involved if the catastrophic losses exceed the capacity of the first two layers.”

The first layer of the three-tiered proposal addresses mitigation, restructuring the insurance contract and enhancing capacity. The second layer calls for a state-level public/private partnership and state-specific mechanisms to address the particular exposures faced by individual states. “The final layer includes limited involvement by the federal government to assist in implementing a public/private risk pooling mechanism,” the paper states.

Not All About Hurricanes

While much of the attention related to catastrophes is focused on hurricanes, the NAIC notes that one of the most costly and destructive natural disasters in the past 20 years was the 1994 Northridge earthquake in California, which in 2007 dollars would have cost the insurance industry $17.9 billion.

NAIC describes the insurance and mitigation mechanisms developed by Japan, which has a “functioning public/private partnership between the Japanese property insurance industry, offering the policies, and the Japanese government, providing a form of reinsurance backstop.” Earthquake insurance must be offered on residential insurance policies, however, the insured may choose to decline the coverage. In addition, economic incentives are offered “to encourage the building of earthquake resistant residences.” Under the program, premium rates may be discounted based on a building’s location and construction methods.

Other Voices

The idea of a public/private partnership on the federal level to address catastrophic risks is generally supported by regulators from coastal states, especially those that border the Gulf of Mexico. Louisiana Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon told Insurance Journal previously that he would like to see the federal government involvement, but that federal participation in a national catastrophe plan should not be used as an “excuse to deregulate and remove jurisdiction from the states that allows [states] to protect consumers.”

Topics Trends Catastrophe Market Japan

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