June 11, 2009

At War with the Weather

 

51dKFmtTwQL._SS500_  Four years in the making….

I just received my copy in the mail today from MIT Press.  It is available on Amazon
for $ 37.12.  What a bargain.
In the fine print on the cover you can see while I am not a primary author I do get the “with” treatment.   Other notables are Neil Doherty, bob Klein and Mark Pauly.
What is nice about the Amazon listing is that there are a ton of blurbs.
However, there is no Kindle edition yet.  Nor are there any free peeks. You’ll just have to wait.
 

June 19, 2008

What Florida Really Wants -- Other Peoples' Money

This IJ article points out that Mr. McCain and some governors (two of which are mentioned as possible running mates) are at odds over a national disaster fund.  If we just focus on one principle that is supposedly an important part of the flood insurance program and apply it to the potential federal disaster plan -- that we do not have subsidies between high risk and low risk consumers -- the benefit of a national disaster plan evaporates.

If there is no subsidization from low risk to high risks, then there is no need for a federal backstop. The private market behaves this way currently. So what Florida really wants is to be subsidized.  It is that simple as a subsidy will keep economic development going as it it makes commercial and residential development in the state more attractive. Realistically, there is no way that the relatively low risk states will want to be part of subsidizing Florida's residents.  However, because of Florida's electoral college votes we may end up subsidizing Florida anyway.

June 17, 2008

Iowa and Katrina Floods

One of the co-bloggers here at RP is confined to his house out (on a hill luckily for him) in Iowa City.  He spent the weekend making sandbags to protect the University.  I asked Ty why there isn't the Katrina-like hue and cry about this flood.  He said maybe it is because they had one in 93 that was pretty bad and people understood the risk.  Ty, being a professor of risk management,  chose to buy his house on the hill for that reason too.

However, at TigerHawk they are talking about differences between the GF08 (Great Flood of aught 8) and Katrina in the comments to this post.  The conversation ranges from Bush did it, to discussions of class and race, to self dependence v. government dependence, and to the differences between a levy burst and a river flood. It is pretty interesting.

N.B. Is is likely that there will be a strong need for private help as well as help for the University of Iowa if one is so inclined. 

February 29, 2008

All that You wanted to Know About Cat Markets but were Afraid to Ask

Wharton, III and GSU have just released a study of CAT risks.  It is an amazing 400+ pages, so download it if you are a speed reader.  The executive summary is only 23 pages long.   

December 28, 2007

Being a Good Samaritan is one thing, but ...

The 2005 hurricanes illustrated how many Americans are uninsured and underinsured for natural catastrophes and the federal government’s role in recovery from natural catastrophes. An analysis by HUD found that of the 192,820 owner-occupied homes with major or severe damage from Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma, approximately 78,000, or about 41 percent, did not have any insurance or did not have enough insurance to cover the damage incurred. Homeowners do not purchase natural catastrophe insurance for a variety of reasons, including financial reasons. Moreover, buying a natural catastrophe insurance policy does not guarantee complete coverage for a dwelling. For example, if the home’s replacement value is calculated inaccurately, the homeowner will buy too little insurance to cover all of the damage. More and more frequently, responsibility for supporting the needs of individuals who lack adequate insurance against natural catastrophe risk is falling to the federal government. We estimate that the federal government made approximately $26 billion available for homeowners and renters who lacked adequate insurance in response to the 2005 hurricanes.

11/07 GAO Report on Natural Disasters GAO-08-7 (p 25) (citations omitted and emphasis added).

Two points. First, I am not sure how the GAO came up with the estimates of $26 billion for 78,000 underinsured and non-insured homeowners and renters.  However, I am sure that it can withstand some scrutiny. So, based on these numbers the total per person payout was $333K to those with under insurance or no insurance.  To provide some comparison figures, the median home in New Orleans was worth 159.2 K and 130.5 in Mobile, AL in 2005 (from Nat'l Assn of Realtors (R)).  Admittedly, beach houses are more expensive than in-town houses, but they are also likely to be insured. Further, they are also more likely to be flooded by a storm surge, but the max payout from Federal Flood insurance program is $250K.   Finally, insurers will often pay for living expenses and the like if a home is no longer livable.  However, the given these numbers the Feds appear to pay well.

Second, if you, an average homeowner, knew that if there was a big disaster in your neck of the woods, the Feds would pay you $300K, would it have an effect on how you perceived the necessity for purchasing insurance?  Would you be less concerned about keeping your coverage limits consistent with the value of your property?  If you rented would you even buy insurance? It's human nature to behave this way and economists have a term for it: moral hazard. Moral hazard causes people to act less safe or take on more risk when they feel protected. This increased risk puts the costs of payment to either insurers or, in this case, the government. Thus, big payouts today mean bigger payouts tomorrow.

We want to help out people who are victims of disaster.  Its also our nature as Americans.  However, do we want to encourage bigger disaster bills in the future? A little tough love might go along way in reducing the future costs of disasters.

Here's what President Coolidge said after the Great Mississippi River Flood of 1927 (apparently in his State of the Union Address),

The Government is not the insurer of its citizens against the hazards of the elements. We shall always have flood and drought, heat and cold, earthquake and wind, lightning and tidal wave, which are all too constant in their afflictions. The Government does not undertake to reimburse citizens for loss and damage incurred under such circumstances. It is chargeable, however, with the rebuilding of public works and the humanitarian duty of relieving its citizens of distress.”

President Calvin Coolidge, “President’s Annual Message,” as reprinted in 69 Congressional Record 107 (1927) cited in a CRS study on the 1927 flood.

As a society, we no longer act as if we believe old dour Cal's values. If the President isn't there the minute after the winds reside with the debit cards, he (or she) just doesn't care or, in the alternative, he (or she) is incompetent. It is ironic that private insurance markets were not as well developed in '27 and the federal government stayed out of the the reimbursement business, when one might reasonably argue that it may have had had a greater role than today in post-disaster assistance.  Now, with much more developed private insurance markets, we see an even more important role being taken by the Feds.  This seems backwards and, as a result, the government's Good Samaritan specter will have a negative long-run effect on both private insurance markets and the Treasury.

December 22, 2007

It's a Hot Kitchen Moment

We need a word for when a public figure complains about something clearly non-libelous which is said in a blog. 

David Rosmiller has recently taken the the Mississippi AG's office to task for some of its decisions regarding its lawsuit against State Farm and its dealings with people related to civil suits against the company. The director of the insurance fraud unit (Ms. Courtney Schloemer) doesn't like the criticism of her and went out of her way to complain to the press.

"Maybe Mr. Rossmiller considers me collateral damage, but I have three investigators working with me who participated in the State Farm investigation and they deserve better than this. If you want to go after the people who put their names on the ballot or make millions of dollars every year, then have at it, but I would appreciate it if you would at least try to get our side of the story before you drag ordinary people through the mud."

Mr. Rossmiller responds in the link above (and by the way, never mentions any of her staff as he didn't know she had any), but it is apparent that Ms. Schloemer doesn't like the attention. So she probably needs to avoid those warm kitchens.

November 29, 2007

Change a Few Words ....

If one changes a few words from this Houston Chronicle piece, one sees almost the same charges Scruggs made against State Farm:  Lowballing claims and producing fake documents in support of the claims.

Scruggs created a legal team called the Scruggs Katrina Group to represent policyholders who sued their insurers after the hurricane.

In January, Scruggs' legal team reached a mass settlement of suits with State Farm Insurance Cos. that involved more than $26 million in lawyers' fees.

The lawsuit accuses Scruggs of trying to "freeze out" lawyers from the Jackson law firm, including senior partner John G. Jones, and pay it a "ridiculously low figure" for its "substantial" work.

After the suit was filed, Balducci is accused of having several meetings and conversations with Lackey in which Balducci agreed to pay the judge for ruling in favor of Scruggs in the case, according to the indictment.

Scruggs allegedly tried to cover up the scheme by falsely creating documents that showed he hired Balducci to work on an unrelated case, when he was actually reimbursing him for the cash bribes, the indictment said.

See also David Rosmiller's excellent posts on the matter.  Start with this one and just scroll down.

One thing that I thought of, and it is echoed in David's piece, is what about the real contract disputes.  I know the III claims that 99.99% of the claims have been settled.  However, there were many claims and some non-trivial number of them must have legitimate disputes between the insurer and the homeowner.  Does the misbehavior (this alleged bribe and the real possibility of a contempt of court citation) of the most aggressive Katrina plaintiffs lawyer poison the jury pool against claimants?  The trial bar's (oops ... the justice bar's) self-administered black eyes may be a bar to justice.

               

September 06, 2007

The Language of the Law (Plaintiff's version))

I haven't read the briefs, but this AP report states that the Tuepkers are asserting in their appeal brief of their slab case that State Farm's contract language was "craftily ambiguous" and is "woven so as to not give away their true intent."  I love this.

Our fellow insurance blogger David Rosmmiller is also quoted in the ultimate paragraph saying the writing is on the wall.  I, however, am still glad that State Farm sends me my contract on paper.  I know I may have the option of obtaining it electronically, but I didn't know I could get it on the wall too!  David's real point is that we are now seeing a number of cases interpreting the contract as non-ambiguous.

By now everyone except Adam Scales, David Rossmiller and myself is likely tired of the ambiguity debate, but it has had real effects.  I heard from numerous sources that gulf coast redevelopment is stagnant.  People have money to rebuild, but they have difficulties in obtaining insurance and so there is little rebuilding.  The reason insurers won't provide is because of uncertainty about future liabilities.  If one can't write a certain contract, one won't write many contracts.  Hopefully, some of the certainty will be resolved.

August 13, 2007

Katrina Claims 2 Years Later

After Katrina the state of Louisiana increased the time to file a legal challenge to a claim from one year to two.  The argument being that there were delays and people, arguably,  weren’t ready to settle after just one year.  I don’t have a problem with that as many states have two year statutes of limitation for many types of litigation.  A group called Katrina Justice is suing the state to get the limitation extended once again.

According to Rebecca Mowbray at the NO Times Picayune (reg. req),

A New Orleans nonprofit group has filed lawsuits urging Gov. Kathleen Blanco and Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon to extend the deadline for resolving hurricane insurance claims beyond Aug. 29.

Katrina Justice filed the suits last week in Baton Rouge and New Orleans because it says that with the recovery going slowly, contractors in short supply and many people still waiting on Road Home money, most homeowners are not far enough along in rebuilding to know if their insurance checks were adequate.
(emphasis mine).

This type of thinking is a big problem for the insurance industry in the short-run.  Insurance payments are almost never adequate.  Can money ever properly replace a dead loved-one or a lost family home full of fond memories?  No.  The question is whether the claim is paid properly according to the contract.

By now, just short of the two year anniversary, one should know if one has a true legal dispute over a claim.  If one doesn’t, it is easy to sue to preserve rights. 

In the long-run, this type of thinking is a big problem for consumers of insurance.  If insurers are supposed to pay “adequate compensation” in addition to their contractual obligations, then they will just mosey on down the road.  (How’s that for a technical insurance term?)

June 22, 2007

Blah blah blah RICO blah blah blah blah RICO blah blah blah, yadda yadda yadda, RICO blah blah blah RICO yadda yadda

That is exactly what I thought after reading Mr. Scrugg's diatribic (sic) complaint against State Farm.  Actually, now that I think of it ... I think I had fewer yadda yaddas and some more blah blahs.

via David Rossmiller  (who is doing an excellent job of covering the Katrina Cases.)

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