Caribbean and Central American Partnership for Catastrophe Risk Insurance : Pooling Risk to Safeguard against Catastrophes Generated by Natural Events
Author(s)
World BankKeywords
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTSHURRICANE SEASON
NATURAL HAZARDS
HURRICANE
HURRICANE CENTER
WIND SPEED
DEBT
EFFECTS OF EARTHQUAKES
CAPITALIZATION
STORMS
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
DISASTERS
EXTREME RAINFALL
CONTINGENT LIABILITY
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
EMERGENCY RESPONSE
EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE
INSURANCE PAYOUT
LANDSLIDES
DONOR COMMUNITY
PROGRAMS
STORM SURGE
REINSURANCE MARKETS
INSURANCE POLICIES
FINANCIAL STRUCTURE
PRIVATE INSURANCE
DISASTER RECONSTRUCTION
DISASTER EVENT
MITIGATION
DISASTER REDUCTION
DISASTER RISK FINANCING
TROPICAL CYCLONES
REINSURER
PARAMETRIC INSURANCE PRODUCTS
INSURANCE PRODUCTS
INSURANCE DESIGN
RISK REDUCTION
RATES
ECONOMIC IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
EARTHQUAKE
COST OF INSURANCE
FLOODS
MINISTRIES OF FINANCE
ANNUAL FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
TRANSPORT
INSURANCE PRODUCT
AUDITS
RELIEF
SAVINGS
INSURERS
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
NATURAL CATASTROPHES
STORM
RISK EXPOSURE
EXTREME RAINFALL EVENTS
FLOOD
EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS
RISK ASSESSMENTS
RESERVES
SAFETY
ECONOMIC BENEFITS
ACCOUNTABILITY
HURRICANES
INDEMNITY INSURANCE
REINSURERS
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
DISASTER RECOVERY
NATURAL HAZARD
DISASTER RISKS
EMERGENCY RESPONSE ACTIVITIES
MORAL HAZARD
EARLY WARNING
EMERGENCIES
SOLVENCY
TROPICAL CYCLONE
CATASTROPHE INSURANCE
DONOR PLEDGES
CATASTROPHIC EVENTS
CLIMATE
REINSURANCE CONTRACT
RISK PROFILES
RISK TRANSFER
RISK INSURANCE
CLIMATE CHANGE
CLIMATE RISK INSURANCE
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
OPERATING COSTS
OPERATING EXPENDITURES
DAT DATABASE
CATASTROPHES
BUILDING CODES
MONETARY FUND
REINSURANCE CONTRACTS
SUBSIDIARY
EFFICIENCY GAINS
INSURANCE ACTIVITIES
PORTFOLIO
INDEMNITY
DISASTER EVENTS
SCENARIOS
COST OF REINSURANCE
RISK MANAGEMENT
FIXED COSTS
INSURANCE PREMIUM
RISK ASSESSMENT
FINANCIAL RESILIENCE
INSURANCE INSTRUMENTS
REINSURANCE
CYCLONE EVENTS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
LAWS
FINANCIAL NEEDS
SOVEREIGN RISK
COST OF CAPITAL
DISASTER
IMPACT OF DISASTERS
PRIMARY INSURER
INSURANCE PORTFOLIO
ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS
PUBLIC DEBT
CATASTROPHE RISK FINANCING
CATASTROPHE COVERAGE
UNDERWRITING
FLOODING
INSURANCE COVERAGE
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
CAPITAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL CAPACITY
INSURANCE COMPANY
DAMAGES
CAPTIVE INSURANCE COMPANIES
REINSURANCE PREMIUMS
CAPTIVE INSURANCE
DISASTER RISK
SUSTAINABILITY
INSURANCE PREMIUMS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18635Abstract
Countries in the Caribbean and Central America are highly vulnerable to the adverse effects associated with earthquakes, tropical cyclones, and other major hydro-meteorological events such as excessive rainfall. Aftermath of disasters typically place significant strain on the fiscal systems of affected countries. Consequently, ministers of the Central American integration system (SICA) and Caribbean community (CARICOM) countries have expressed a strong intention to collectively manage the disaster risk. By understanding the loss potential of disasters caused by natural events and the extent of public intervention in recovery and reconstruction efforts, governments can ascertain their respective contingent liabilities. Sovereign disaster risk financing and insurance can also safeguard against sudden macroeconomic shocks that negatively impact fiscal performance, and in turn, economic development. Caribbean and Central American governments are constrained in their ability to access quick liquidity to absorb fiscal shocks associated with natural hazard impacts because they have limited ability to create contingency funds, and limited capacity for external borrowing. The World Bank in partnership with the United States department of treasury assessed various options, which guided Ministers of Finance of Central America, Panama, and the Dominican Republic (COSEFIN) to identify the Caribbean catastrophe risk insurance facility (CCRIF) as the best option. The CCRIF provides cost-effective and fast-disbursing liquidity, and is an efficient way to finance a liquidity gap arising in the immediate aftermath of disaster.Date
2014-06-11Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/18635http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18635
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Insurance against Climate Change : Financial Disaster Risk Management and Insurance Options for Climate Change Adaptation in BulgariaWorld Bank Group (Washington, DC, 2014-07-21)Bulgaria is exposed to nearly all types of climate extremes, including floods, droughts, and others, as well as earthquakes. The combination of insurance products, early warning systems, information campaigns, infrastructure adaptation measures, and strict regulations can be very useful in tackling the negative climate change impacts. This note provides an overview of the insurance sector s contribution to climate change - related risk prevention and highlights some of Bulgaria s ongoing disaster risk management (DRM) efforts. The note aims to raise awareness and emphasize the role that financial disaster risk management (FDRM), including insurance, can have in climate change adaptation. Based on a desk review and preliminary in-country stakeholder consultations, the note s findings are meant to motivate new thinking and serve as an engagement tool for ongoing in-country discussions, as well to help identify analytical work to be carried out in the future. Based on the preliminary review of Bulgaria s specific context, several ideas are being put forward to be further explored in the ongoing discussions toward creating FDRM products to address the major natural disasters (in particular, floods, droughts, and earthquakes) and improving adaptation to climate change. Potential areas of analysis that can be further explored and, as such, plant a seed for future action can focus on promoting risk prevention and deploying insurance instruments, including issues around traditional risk management, technology innovation, compulsory disaster insurance, forecast insurance, and disaster insurance pools. The analysis which will assess the extent of vulnerability of the subjects covered by existing insurance products, can subsequently lead to the decisions on priority insurance products to be introduced in the future.
-
Managing Agricultural Risk at the Country Level : The Case of Index-Based Livestock Insurance in MongoliaMahul, Olivier; Skees, Jerry (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2007-08)This paper describes the index-based
 livestock insurance program in Mongolia designed in the
 context of a World Bank lending operation with Government of
 Mongolia and implemented on a pilot basis in 2005. This
 program involves a combination of self-insurance by herders,
 market-based insurance, and social insurance. Herders retain
 small losses, larger losses are transferred to the private
 insurance industry, and extreme or catastrophic losses are
 transferred to the government using a public safety net
 program. A syndicate pooling arrangement protects
 participating insurance companies against excessive insured
 losses, with excess of loss reinsurance provided by the
 government. The fiscal exposure of Government of Mongolia
 toward the most extreme losses is protected with a
 contingent credit facility. The insurance program relies on
 a mortality rate index by species in each local region. The
 index provides strong incentives to individual herders to
 continue to manage their herds so as to minimize the impacts
 of major livestock mortality events; individual herders
 receive an insurance payout based on the local mortality,
 irrespective of their individual losses. This project
 offered the first opportunity to design and implement an
 agriculture insurance program using a country-wide
 agricultural risk management approach. During the first
 sales season, 7 percent of the herders in the three pilot
 regions purchased the insurance product.
-
Catastrophe Risk Financing in Developing Countries : Principles for Public InterventionMahul, Olivier; Cummins, J. David (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2012-05-21)Public intervention in catastrophe insurance markets, supported by the donor community and the World Bank, should be country specific. Low-income countries, where the domestic non-life insurance market is undeveloped, should focus in the short term on the development of sovereign catastrophe insurance solutions and the promotion of public goods related to risk market infrastructure. These countries are usually not mature enough for the promotion of catastrophe insurance pools for private homeowners. Middle-income countries, where the domestic non-life insurance market is more developed, should help the private insurance industry offer market-based catastrophe insurance solutions to homeowners and to small and medium enterprises, including the agricultural sector. This book offers a framework, with lessons drawn from recent experience, guiding principles for public intervention and potential roles for donors and International Financial Institutions (IFIs). These lessons are expected to be used in developing affordable, effective and sustainable country-specific catastrophe insurance programs.