Climate Change and Risk Management: Challenges for Insurance, Adaptation, and Loss Estimation
38 Pages Posted: 27 Feb 2009 Last revised: 21 Sep 2009
Date Written: March 23, 2009
Abstract
Adapting to climate change will not only require responding to the physical effects of global warming, but will also require adapting the way we conceptualize, measure, and manage risks. Climate change is creating new risks, altering the risks we already face, and also, importantly, impacting the interdependencies between these risks. In this paper we focus on three particular phenomena of climate related risks that will require a change in our thinking about risk management: global micro-correlations, fat tails, and tail dependence. Consideration of these phenomena will be particularly important for natural disaster insurance, as they call into question traditional methods of securitization and diversification.
Keywords: tail dependence, micro-correlations, fat tails, damage distributions, climate change
JEL Classification: Q54, G22, C02
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Climate Change, Insurability of Large-Scale Disasters and the Emerging Liability Challenge
-
Spatial and Temporal Aggregation in the Estimation of Labor Demand Functions
By José Varejão and Pedro Portugal
-
The Re-Building Effect of Hurricanes: Evidence from Employment in the US Construction Industry
By Eric Strobl and Frank Walsh
-
The Role of Transfer Payments in Mitigating Shocks: Evidence from the Impact of Hurricanes
-
Managing the Risk of Natural Catastrophes: The Role and Functioning of State Insurance Programs
-
The Role of Economic Policy in Climate Change Adaptation
By Kai A. Konrad and Marcel P. Thum
-
Reducing the Cost of Ex Post Bailouts with Ex Ante Regulation: Evidence from Building Codes