Consumers tend to purchase too little insurance or purchase it too late. Consequently, taxpayers wind up bearing substantial burdens for paying reconstruction costs from extreme events. The 2005 and 2012 hurricane seasons alone cost taxpayers nearly $150 billion. There is much that can be done to better facilitate the role that insurance can play in addressing losses from extreme events, both natural and man-made.https://repository.upenn.edu/pennwhartonppi/1002/thumbnail.jp
As Harvey, Irma, Maria and other major 2017 storms washed upon the shores of the United States, mill...
Natural disasters have adverse consequences. A combination of effective mitigation strategies and ap...
The combined influences of a change in climate patterns and the increased concentration of property ...
Consumers tend to purchase too little insurance or purchase it too late. Consequently, taxpayers win...
Catastrophes from severe weather are perhaps the costliest accidents humanity faces. While we are st...
The United States has entered a new era of catastrophes, of which floods have been the most devastat...
The U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastal states, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Island...
Abstract: Catastrophic risks associated with natural disasters have been increasing in many countrie...
As a result of its hurricane exposure, Florida is probably the part of the industrialised world most...
This paper studies the evolution of hurricane insurance in Florida over the last decades. Hurricanes...
Hurricane Katrina exposed the nation’s ongoing vulnerability to large-scale losses from natural disa...
The insurance industry can play a material role indecreasing the vulnerability of developing countri...
Flood is the most frequent and costly of U.S. natural disasters with losses expected to increase due...
The devastation caused by hurricanes during the 2004 and 2005 seasons has been unprecedented and is ...
Local, national, and global catastrophes entail significant risk for landowners. The governmentspons...
As Harvey, Irma, Maria and other major 2017 storms washed upon the shores of the United States, mill...
Natural disasters have adverse consequences. A combination of effective mitigation strategies and ap...
The combined influences of a change in climate patterns and the increased concentration of property ...
Consumers tend to purchase too little insurance or purchase it too late. Consequently, taxpayers win...
Catastrophes from severe weather are perhaps the costliest accidents humanity faces. While we are st...
The United States has entered a new era of catastrophes, of which floods have been the most devastat...
The U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastal states, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Island...
Abstract: Catastrophic risks associated with natural disasters have been increasing in many countrie...
As a result of its hurricane exposure, Florida is probably the part of the industrialised world most...
This paper studies the evolution of hurricane insurance in Florida over the last decades. Hurricanes...
Hurricane Katrina exposed the nation’s ongoing vulnerability to large-scale losses from natural disa...
The insurance industry can play a material role indecreasing the vulnerability of developing countri...
Flood is the most frequent and costly of U.S. natural disasters with losses expected to increase due...
The devastation caused by hurricanes during the 2004 and 2005 seasons has been unprecedented and is ...
Local, national, and global catastrophes entail significant risk for landowners. The governmentspons...
As Harvey, Irma, Maria and other major 2017 storms washed upon the shores of the United States, mill...
Natural disasters have adverse consequences. A combination of effective mitigation strategies and ap...
The combined influences of a change in climate patterns and the increased concentration of property ...