4.1 Article

Explaining the Failure to Insure Catastrophic Risks

Journal

Publisher

PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD
DOI: 10.1057/gpp.2012.14

Keywords

catastrophe; insurance; fat tails; dependence

Funding

  1. Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie
  2. Divn Of Social and Economic Sciences [0960865] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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It has often been observed that homeowners fail to purchase disaster insurance. Explanations have ranged from behavioural biases to information search costs. We show that the decision to forego disaster insurance may be quite rational. Solvency-constrained insurers are required to have access to enough capital to cover a particular percentile of their aggregate loss distribution. When insuring risks with loss distributions characterised by fat tails, micro-correlations or tail dependence, insurers need to charge a price that is many times the expected loss in order to meet their solvency constraint. Homeowners, facing a budget constraint and a constraint that their utility with insurance exceeds that without it, may find the required loadings too high to make insurance purchase an optimal decision. The Geneva Papers (2012) 37, 206-227. doi:10.1057/gpp.2012.14

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