Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum"Death Spiral" For Financial Sector Increasingly Likely In Some Parts Of US As Insurance Rates Spike, Coverage Shrinks
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Last December, the U.S. Treasurys Federal Insurance Office issued a report which found that from 2018 through 2022, the annual number of major disaster declarations for climate-related events was almost double the annual average in the 50 years from 1960 to 2010. Over the same time period, home insurance rates outpaced inflation by nearly 9 percenteven before Hurricanes Helene and Milton, Appalachian flooding in Kentucky and the most recent western wildfires. In the first three quarters of 2024, natural catastrophes caused the United States to suffer an estimated $145 billion in economic losses, of which nearly $80 billion was insured, according to the report.
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Current homeowners are more likely to become delinquent on their mortgages after an insurance premium increase. Prospective buyers cant find or afford homes. Developers cant bring new units to market. And operating costs for landlords can reach an unsustainable level, Edelman said, with effects trickling down to real estate agents, the lenders, mortgage servicesthe entire housing ecosystem.
Insurers are not transparent about what data they use to justify raising rates. And when rates become unaffordable, people often turn to insurers who are fly-by-night operators or are very small and will go bankrupt the next time there is a major event, said Anne Perrault, senior policy counsel for the Climate Program at Public Citizen. And they just leave property owners high and dry. Compounded by climate change, the insurance crisis could destabilize the entire financial system, Perrault said. In some ways, its just the beginning of a death spiral for some regions of our country.
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Other moves by the Trump administration will make it more difficult for local and state governments to mitigate against future disasters, which otherwise could lower insurance costs. The Trump administration recently slashed jobs at the U.S. Forest Service, which fights fires and manages debris, and eliminated the FEMA Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities program. Also known as BRIC, it funds improvements for wastewater and water treatment plants, building elevations and backup power systems to help communities survive floods. Without resiliency measures, local and state governments, as well as homeowners, will pay higher insurance rates to try to offset the risk.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/01052025/insurance-crisis-threatens-united-states-economy/

markodochartaigh
(2,757 posts)Woodwizard
(1,169 posts)All of the subject matter is about climate change and it's effects now and for the future.
https://www.marketplace.org/shows/how-we-survive
cachukis
(3,142 posts)WSHazel
(376 posts)1) People shouldn't live in areas that get frequent severe weather events if people want low insurance rates. Put another way, raise your hand if you want to help cover the insurance costs of some oligarch's beach front mansion.
2) Climate Change is very real, and is affecting people in a very tangible way through rapidly increasing insurance rates. I am seeing more and more Republican deflection to blaming insurance companies for skyrocketing insurance costs.
Property insurance company combined ratios ((losses + expenses)/premiums) were over 100% in 2024. Insurance companies are losing money in most markets, and getting killed in homeowners, especially in certain states like Florida and most of Texas. Every time I hear a finance MAGA claim Climate Change is a hoax, I ask them why insurance companies are not pouring into Florida to insure properties. If Climate Change is a hoax, it should be easy money, yet there are no takers.
3) NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program, i.e. federal flood insurance) loses money hand over fist, the vast majority of which goes to three red states, Florida, Louisiana and Texas. We are all subsidizing MAGAs to live in the path of hurricanes.