Ferma and other buyer representatives have welcomed a new paper from the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (Eiopa) that puts forward a potential pan-European pandemic insurance solution with EU funding at the very top.
Ferma and other buyer representatives have welcomed a new paper from the
European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (Eiopa) that puts
forward a potential pan-European pandemic insurance solution with EU funding at
the very top. Eiopa adds that such a scheme could be adapted to cover other
systemic risks.
Ferma has also stressed that organisations of all sizes, including large
ones that make up much of its membership , must be able to access any solution.
Eiopa’s issues paper on shared resilience solutions for pandemics states
that private insurance solutions alone will not be enough to protect society
and business against the financial consequences of future pandemics. It notes,
for instance, that current business interruption (BI) premiums in some markets
would need to be collected for more than 100 years to cover two months of
Covid-19-related BI costs.
Any solution will therefore require public-private partnership and need
to build on four key elements, adds Eiopa. These are: proper risk assessment,
risk prevention and adaptation measures, appropriate product design, and risk
transfer.
The paper is based on the European insurance regulator’s discussions
with representatives from across the risk management and transfer spectrum,
including Ferma, Marsh & McLennan, Insurance Europe, Bipar, AMICE and the
Reinsurance Advisory Board.
It does not aim to set out a specific course of action, but highlights
options that could be explored at national and European level, with comments
invited until 25 September.
The options put forward in the paper include different insurance models
and coverage. For example, whether insurance should be mandatory and whether
payouts should be based on a pre-agreed parameter or index. The options also
include different ways the public and private sectors could work together, for
example establishing an EU expert group for data sharing and risk modelling,
and creating a platform for public and private coordination on prevention
measures. Different potential roles are considered for how the European Union
can contribute towards solutions.
When it comes to risk transfer, the paper suggests four layers of cover.
The first layer is via insurance or an insurance pool. The second layer would
be in the form of reinsurance, alternative risk transfer or a reinsurance pool.
The third layer comes via national government support in excess of private
market participation. The final layer would be an “overarching” EU support
mechanism in excess of national support.
“A layer including an EU-wide intervention could be justified by the
pan-European nature of the pandemic crisis. The type of involvement could range
from encouraging or promoting risk prevention and incentivising and
coordinating national measures, to providing financial support for the recovery
from the pandemic, through a funding-type mechanism or based on a
reinsurance-type mechanism,” states Eiopa.
Adding: “A mechanism by which the EU would act as reinsurer above a
certain threshold of accumulated losses at national level, in return for a
percentage of premiums collected by (re)insurers and funded by member state
guarantees, could provide a solution, which builds on the steps taken in the
first and second layer to increase insurance capacity. The solution would
require insurance-based risk assessment and modelling tools, in turn
incentivising the role of risk-based solutions. Objective triggers for
involving this fourth line of defence could be – a fixed percentage of GDP, to
be covered by an EU guarantee sourced from EU member states’ committed
guarantees.”
Eiopa’s paper adds that a choice needs to be made between the type of
funding for pandemic risk transfer solutions.
“Public subsidy may pose a risk
of moral hazard, by reducing incentives for risk assessment and risk prevention
and development of private market solutions. By reflecting risks in the cost of
(re)insurance, (re)insurance-based solutions can counter this moral hazard.
Public reinsurance solutions may be less costly, but also depend on the
willingness of the private insurance market to insure in the first place. In
return, the capacity and willingness of (re)insurers to take on part of the
risk may depend on the extent of public intervention,” the paper states.
“By involving all layers of risk
owners, the risk of moral hazard – assuming that the next level will cover the
risk – can be reduced (‘skin in the game’). The appropriate level of risk
retention at each level of the transfer mechanism therefore needs to be clear,
as well as the trigger for involving the next layer of risk transfer. Some
retention of risk by businesses, for example by limiting sum insured and
applying an adequate waiting period, may also help to prevent moral hazard and
create the right incentives for risk prevention,” it adds.
“A risk transfer mechanism is not
necessarily static: private risk appetite may start off at a limited level
requiring considerable public participation; as risk assessment and reinsurance
capacity from the private sector improve over time, public intervention may
decrease over time. Through public-private co-insurance, governments can also
take part of the risk, from the moment losses arise, for a given percentage.
This may improve alignment of interest between public and private actors,” the
paper continues.
Eiopa also goes a step further and says the scope of any shared
resilience framework for pandemics could be expanded to cover other systemic
risks such as cyber, climate change impacts on natural catastrophes and
terrorism.
Gabriel Bernardino, chairman of Eiopa, commented: “While it is clear
that insurance cannot cover the full costs of pandemics, insurers and
reinsurers should be part of the solution and not part of the problem. Furthermore,
I strongly believe that shared resilience solutions can play an important role
in mitigating economic fragmentation throughout the European Union and should
be part of the recovery efforts towards a European Union that protects its
businesses and its citizens. We invite views on the options raised in the
paper.”
It is no surprise that Ferma has backed the paper. Some of its
suggestions very closely mirror the federation’s proposed Resilience Framework
for Catastrophic Risks (RFCR).
The RFCR aims to tackle the fact there is currently little or no
insurance coverage available for non-damage business interruption (NDBI) losses
resulting from catastrophic risks in Europe. It would therefore cover all
catastrophic, systemic NDBI risks, including pandemics, a massive cyberattack
or climate change threats.
Almost identical to ideas put forward in Eiopa’s paper, the RFCR would
function at four levels to offer pan-European protection. Ferma president Dirk
Wegener explained to CRE that the framework’s funding could operate as follows:
First layer – risk management/loss prevention and insurance premiums
paid by insured companies
Second layer – private (re)insurance markets, possibly including
alternative risk transfer mechanisms
Third layer – national member-state pool guarantees where available
Top layer – European Union protection funded largely by public
resources, with some premium ceded from (re)insurers.
Ferma CEO Typhaine Beaupérin told Commercial Risk Europe that the
federation welcomes the paper from Eiopa. “We believe that a mixed
public-private insurance-based solution, based on a sound foundation of risk
management, will increase the resilience of the European internal market to
pandemics. It should be part of the recovery efforts of the EU and we call on
the European institutions to consider this solution in their discussions,” she
said.
“We are convinced that only such
a partnership can ensure that there are appropriate incentives for companies to
apply modern risk management/loss prevention tools. This, in turn, will support
economic sustainability,” she added.
Ferma said that Eiopa’s principal aim is to address the “near total
absence of risk transfer for non-damage business interruption losses for
systemic risks”.
It said that for such a scheme to work, the EU must be involved.
“It needs to coordinate and
insure minimum standards of national schemes across member states. The EU
should also establish an expert group for the necessary data sharing and risk
modelling, as Eiopa suggests. Ultimately, a European financial backstop is
likely to be necessary,” said Ferma.
It also want the EU to promote risk management at company and national
level. “Only by doing this, will we strengthen our resilience to catastrophic
risks,” it said.
Ms Beaupérin also made clear that Ferma wants companies of all sizes to
be able to access any pandemic insurance pool. Currently, a lot of Eiopa’s
thinking seems aimed at SMEs.
“We believe that we need a
solution for the whole business community. A multi-layer scheme with strong
risk management and insurance participation would benefit all businesses, from
SMEs facing immediate liquidity issues to the largest transnational
corporations concerned with supply chain disruptions or other disturbances. The
insurance mechanism would allow the scheme to adjust the level of support
according to the degree of impact on each company,” she told CRE.
David Priebe, chairman of Guy Carpenter, said Marsh & McLennan
commends Eiopa for initiating discussions at EU-level on public-private
partnerships to address pandemic risks.
“As a member of Eiopa’s Shared Resilience Solutions Exploratory Group,
we have heavily contributed to and are fully supportive of the issues paper.
This paper is a step in the right direction to ensure conversations across the
EU are coordinated and bring together all stakeholders,” he said.
“Moreover, discussions around public-private solutions to cover pandemic
risk are taking place around the world, including in a number of member states,
and the issues paper is a useful roadmap for policymakers navigating the
complexities of setting up these types of solutions,” Mr Priebe added.
Late last week, Ferma and German and Spanish
national risk management associations told Commercial Risk Europe they would
support a pan-European pandemic insurance solution announced by Italian insurer
Generali, which it is developing with the European Chambers of Commerce and
Industry.CRE
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