Insurers Paid Billions in Catastrophe Claims Over Past Two Decades

U.S. P/C insurers cumulatively paid $408 billion in catastroph- related claims to their auto, homeowners and business policyholders between 1990 and 2011, yet the overwhelming majority remain well-capitalized in 2012, according to Dr. Robert Hartwig, CPCU, an economist and president of the Insurance Information Institute (I.I.I.).

“I am confident the residents of Tuscaloosa, Alabama and Joplin, Missouri, as well as other disaster-stricken communities, are glad their insurers had the resources last year to meet their financial commitments,” Dr. Hartwig stated.

Besides causing significant losses of life, the Tuscaloosa/Birmingham tornadoes in April 2011, and the one which struck Joplin in May 2011, generated insurance claims totaling about $2 billion in each instance. The Joplin tornado set into motion the biggest insurance event in Missouri’s history, according to Missouri Insurance Director John Huff.

The I.I.I. cited the following U.S. historical data involving insurance and natural catastrophes in challenging assertions made in a report from the Consumer Federation of America:

“The premium an auto, home or business insurer charges must be commensurate with the risk they are assuming on behalf of the policyholder,” Dr. Hartwig said. “Insurers remained solvent, met their financial commitments, and some even grew their businesses during one of the most challenging economic downturns since the Great Depression. The industry’s business model was put to the test, and passed with flying colors.”

Source: I.I.I.