Flood Insurance and Government: "Parasitic" and "Symbiotic" Relations

Abstract
To be effective, flood insurance appears to require a partnership between the insurers and government: interdependence rather than independence. Relations between government and the insurance industry appear to lie on a continuum from the "parasitic" to the "symbiotic". Changing circumstances appear to be pushing insurers and government apart, including the competition regulations that outlaw standard products. At the same time, insurers are making more demands on government for flood defence investment, so as to limit their liabilities. In parallel, government is becoming more and more concerned that insurance is not universal, and the socially excluded are those who suffer. As the insurance industry increases its demands for greater government intervention and policy change, it is in danger of becoming more like a parasitic extension of government, rather than retaining its autonomy and the ability to maximize its profitability within a more carefully crafted symbiotic relationship.
Volume
Vol. 29, No. 3, July
Page
518-539
Year
2004
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Enterprise Risk Management
Risk Categories
Hazard Risks
Practice Areas
Governmental Agencies
Business Areas
Homeowners
Practice Areas
Private Entities
Practice Areas
Public Entities
Practice Areas
Risk Management
Publications
Geneva Papers on Risk & Insurance Issues and Practice
Authors
Colin Green
Edmund Penning-Rowsell