The European Commission, insurance regulator EIOPA, and the industry have started discussing options to better ensure the protection of businesses affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, as the withdrawal of state support measures is expected to reveal the real damage caused by the crisis in the private sector.
Following the work done by the European Insurance and Occupational
Pensions Authority (EIOPA), and calls from the industry, the Commission
is exploring with all the parties options for sharing the costs and
responsibilities to respond to the impact of pandemics.
But the discussions are in a preliminary phase, as the Commission
wants to see how the health and economic crisis evolves before deciding
on possible actions, a Commission spokesperson told EURACTIV on Thursday (29 April).
Finance ministers, EU institutions, and financial watchdogs are
concerned about the scenario that could emerge once member states’
emergency support for companies ends.
“The threat of a wave of insolvencies looms large, unless member
states manage a smooth transition from liquidity support towards more
targeted solvency support and successful corporate debt restructuring
for viable firms,” the European Systemic Risk Board said on Wednesday
(28 April).
The board warned that the support measures in this crisis may have
just postponed corporate insolvencies, and if the transition is
mismanaged, we could face a new recession.
“The current low rate of insolvencies would then be similar to the
sea retreating before a tsunami,” the ESRB said in its report.
The European Commission is preparing a series of proposals to drive
the capital markets union to facilitate the recovery from the COVID-19
pandemic. One of the most difficult battles will be reducing the
differences between national insolvency frameworks.
EU finance ministers (ECOFIN) are already discussing how to help
viable companies with their debt burden and better deal with
insolvencies.
In a parallel effort, the insurance sector is exploring how to
improve the protection against the potential losses caused by the
pandemic and the contention measures.
Last July, EIOPA put forward options for “shared resilience
solutions” involving not only insurance companies but also the public
sector.
“While it is clear is that insurance cannot cover the full costs of
pandemics – insurers and reinsurers should be part of the solution and
not part of the problem,” said Gabriel Bernardino, Chairman of EIOPA,
said at that time.
The issue lies in the scope of the current insurance coverage and
calls from the industry to share the burden in the case of pandemics.
According to industry estimates, less than 1% of the estimated $4.5
trillion global pandemic-induced GDP loss for 2020 will be covered by
business interruption insurance.
In the limited cases where pandemic coverage for business
interruption was offered (more concretely non-damage business
interruption, when there is no physical damage), insurers are
considering excluding in the future pandemic-related protection, given
the impact.
One of these companies is Munich Re, after experiencing a €1.5bn loss
in the first half of 2020 related to the cancellation or postponement
of major events because of the virus.
EIOPA kept working on this direction by proposing in February
measures to improve the insurability of business interruption risk.
“The challenges posed by the pandemic crisis require the sharing of
costs and responsibilities across the relevant parts of the private and
public sector in a meaningful manner, as well as some central
coordination across public and private entities,” said its staff paper
released in February.
The paper covered various aspects, such as prevention measures to
reduce losses, and challenges related to modelling and triggers for
claims in the context of pandemics.
“EIOPA gathered views from all interested stakeholders to this paper
until end-March 2021 and is now analysing this feedback,” a spokesperson
of the institution told EURACTIV.
The regulator, the spokesperson added, is in contact with the Commission to assess the next steps.
But these discussions are still in a preliminary stage.
A Commission spokesperson told EURACTIV on Thursday that “we will
need more time to learn from the ongoing pandemic and to conduct further
analysis on the feasibility of possible actions.”
The Commission is in contact not only with EIOPA but also with the
industry. From the insurance sector, some proposals are more ambitious,
including the idea of creating an international pandemic fund to cover
the losses caused by the virus, and supported by the industry, member
states and EU institutions.
EURACTIV
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