I.I.I. offers analysis of Haiti’s private insurance market; touts need for earthquake coverage in U.S.:
Within the past week, the I.I.I. issued news releases on Haiti’s membership in the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF) and U.S. vulnerability to earthquakes, which generated interest from National Public Radio (see item below). The I.I.I.’s Terms + Conditions blog has featured numerous reports on Haiti, also. The Insurance Industry Charitable Foundation (IICF) awarded grants last year to two organizations that are now providing relief in Haiti. Large numbers of insurers and reinsurers have contributed to the effort as well. The I.I.I. distributed the release on the IICF’s behalf.I.I.I., Swiss Re interviewed for Haiti-related NPR piece on microinsurance:
National Public Radio’s (NPR) Marketplace looked at the insurance repercussions of the Haiti earthquake, and spoke with I.I.I. president Robert Hartwig and Swiss Re’s Nikhil da Victoria-Lobo. The segment was broadcast on Friday, January 15.Wall Street Journal story offers historical perspective on ‘Rising from the Ruins’:
The author of The Culture of Calamity: Disaster and the Making of Modern America, an associate professor of American studies at Smith College, explained in a Wall Street Journal Weekend piece (January 16-17, 2010; subscription required) that throughout history natural disasters have spurred development and economic growth, but that Haiti may be an exception because of all the problems the country faced before the Tuesday, January 12, earthquake.
Haiti’s reconstruction will include earthquake-resistant housing, New York Times reports:
Non-profit groups such as Build Change, which helped communities construct earthquake-resistant housing after devastating quakes in India (2001), Indonesia (2004), and China (2008), are looking to do the same in Haiti in 2010, according to a Tuesday, January 19, 2010, New York Times article.Election of Republican U.S. Senator from Massachusetts changes Capitol Hill dynamic:
U.S.Senator-elect Scott Brown’s victory in the Tuesday, January 19, Massachusetts special election gave Republicans a 41st vote in the U.S. Senate, thereby ending the Democrats’ filibuster-proof majority.Obama administration tax proposal could cost insurers who own banks millions of dollars a year:
Companies owning insured depository institutions, a group that includes a handful of large U.S. insurers, would have to make significant annual payments to the government under the Financial Crisis Responsibility tax proposed by President Obama on Thursday, January 14, although most of these same insurance companies did not receive federal bailout funds, according to a Tuesday, January 19, Wall Street Journal story (subscription required).Federal Reserve chairman says he welcomes GAO audit of Fed actions taken to save AIG:
On Tuesday, January 19, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke sent a letter to Acting Comptroller General Gene Dodaro in which Bernanke defended the Fed’s decision to rescue American International Group (AIG) and agreed that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) should review the Fed’s AIG-related actions, according to a story at CNNMoney.com.Treasury Secretary to testify January 27 on federal government’s 2008 decisions regarding AIG:
‘Factors Affecting Efforts to Limit Payments to AIG Counterparties’ is the title of a Wednesday, January 27, 10 a.m. public hearing, to be held in Washington, D.C., by the U.S. House of Representatives’ committee on Oversight and Government Reform. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is the lead witness, according to this agenda.AIG may sell Alico to MetLife for almost $15 billion, Wall Street Journal reports:
Market Watch did a follow-up piece to the WSJ’s story on Tuesday, January 19.USA Today story chronicles growing legislative backlash to red-light cameras:
Maine, Mississippi and Montana banned the installation of red light cameras last year, joining at least four other states, Nevada, New Hampshire, West Virginia and Wisconsin, according to this Monday, January 18, USA Today, article. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) has compiled a wide variety of research papers indicating red-light cameras improve public safety.


