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Loss and Damage from Climate Change - Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
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21 InsuranceasaResponse toLossandDamage? 489 Lacking insurance, vulnerable households andother local actors have tradition- allyfinancedpost-disaster recoverywithacombinationof savingsandcredit, infor- mal kinship arrangements, government relief and international donor support. Sav- ings can take the form of stockpiles of food, grains, seeds andmarketable assets, whichserve tosmoothconsumptionduringcrises.Themostcommonformofassis- tance is remittances, which aremore than three times the size of official develop- ment assistance (WorldBank 2016), and can be a significant contribution to post- disasterrecovery.Banks,insurersandothermonetaryfinancialinstitutions(MFIs),as intermediary-scaleactors,canalsoprotect theirpost-disaster liquiditybypurchasing reinsurance, relyingonbail outs from thegovernment, or support from institutions like theAfricanEmergencyLiquidityFacility (OMTRIX2005)or theWorldBank. Governments as national operators can meet their obligations to repair public infrastructure and support needy householdswith ex post and ex ante instruments. Typically, and as detailed inTable 21.2, public authorities seekfinancing after dis- asters occur, for instance, by issuing tax increases, re-allocating funds fromother budgeted activities, or borrowing through issuing bonds. Governments of highly exposed countries may also rely on assistance from the international community. An example of the latter is the significant support provided by theWorld Bank, andinEuropetheEuropeanUnionSolidarityFundprovidespost-disastersupport to governments to support their recovery (Hochrainer-Stigler et al. 2017). Inaddition to theseexpost instruments,governments increasinglyanticipatedis- aster events with ex ante financing or risk transfer as shown in Table 21.2. Risk financing at sovereign level includes awide rangeof tools such asnational reserve funds,sovereigninsurance(alsoofferedthroughregionalpools),andcreditandcap- ital market products, such as catastrophe bonds, where bond purchasers agree to forfeit interest or principle if a pre-definedhazardor disaster occurs (seeCardenas etal.2007).Suchacatastrophebond(150MillionUSD),forexample,wastriggered bythe2017Oaxacaearthquake(ARTEMIS2017b).Insurersmakeuseofothertypes Table21.2 Financing instruments forprotectinggovernmentbudgets Financial andbudgetary instruments Goal Exante instrument [arrangedbeforeadisaster] Expost instrument [arrangedafteradisaster] Risk retention [changinghoworwhenone pays] Contingency fundor budget allocation Budget reallocation Lineofcontigent credit Tax increase Post-disaster credit Risk transfer [removing isk fromthe balancesheet] Traditional insuranceor reinsuranceIndexed insurance, reinsurance,orderivatives Discretionarypost-disaster relief Capitalmarket instruments SourceClarkeandDercon (2016)
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Loss and Damage from Climate Change Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
Titel
Loss and Damage from Climate Change
Untertitel
Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
Autoren
Reinhard Mechler
Laurens M. Bouwer
Thomas Schinko
Swenja Surminski
JoAnne Linnerooth-Bayer
Verlag
Springer Open
Datum
2019
Sprache
englisch
Lizenz
CC BY 4.0
ISBN
978-3-319-72026-5
Abmessungen
16.0 x 24.0 cm
Seiten
580
Schlagwörter
Environment, Climate change, Environmental law, Environmental policy, Risk management
Kategorien
International
Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima
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Loss and Damage from Climate Change