The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage community-level flood mitigation and increase household-level flood insurance uptake through the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Using historical data of policies-in-force and flood damage claims from 1998-2014 for all NFIP communities in Alabama and Mississippi, we estimate the relationship between community participation in the CRS and the number of policies-in-force, as well on flood damage claims. We find a significant, positive, and generally increasing effect of CRS participation on insurance uptake. Reduced flood damage claims are found to be limited to communities with a very high level of CRS participation (Class 5) only
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Between 1996 and 2019, a flooding event affected 99 percent of U.S. counties. Nonetheless, insurance...
A basic proposition of 'agency theory' is that output-based performance incentives encourage greater...
The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage flood mitigation and increase particip...
The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage community-level flood mitigation and i...
Flooding events including coastal estuarine and riverine floods cause considerable losses to individ...
The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage flood mitigation and increase National...
Residents of south Louisiana face a range of increasing, climate-related flood exposure risks that c...
FEMA, National Flood Insurance Program\u27s Community Rating System, and Local Government Liability ...
Author's manuscript.In 1990 the US Federal Emergency Management Agency created the Community Ratings...
The NFIP’s Community Rating System (CRS) adopted in the early 1990s is an incentive program that rec...
We employ a two-stage random utility model (RUM) to estimate people’ marginal willingness to pay (WT...
The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) introduced the Community Rating System (CRS) to encourag...
To incentivize more community flood risks mitigation, the US Congress implemented the community rati...
Given that floods cause the greatest economic impact and affect more communities annually than any o...
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Between 1996 and 2019, a flooding event affected 99 percent of U.S. counties. Nonetheless, insurance...
A basic proposition of 'agency theory' is that output-based performance incentives encourage greater...
The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage flood mitigation and increase particip...
The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage community-level flood mitigation and i...
Flooding events including coastal estuarine and riverine floods cause considerable losses to individ...
The Community Rating System (CRS) was introduced to encourage flood mitigation and increase National...
Residents of south Louisiana face a range of increasing, climate-related flood exposure risks that c...
FEMA, National Flood Insurance Program\u27s Community Rating System, and Local Government Liability ...
Author's manuscript.In 1990 the US Federal Emergency Management Agency created the Community Ratings...
The NFIP’s Community Rating System (CRS) adopted in the early 1990s is an incentive program that rec...
We employ a two-stage random utility model (RUM) to estimate people’ marginal willingness to pay (WT...
The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) introduced the Community Rating System (CRS) to encourag...
To incentivize more community flood risks mitigation, the US Congress implemented the community rati...
Given that floods cause the greatest economic impact and affect more communities annually than any o...
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Between 1996 and 2019, a flooding event affected 99 percent of U.S. counties. Nonetheless, insurance...
A basic proposition of 'agency theory' is that output-based performance incentives encourage greater...