Insurance exists to mitigate risk; this is the cornerstone of our industry.
Insurers pool and redistribute risk to provide protection against unforeseen events, enabling individuals and organizations to pursue their interests with the added assurance that potential threats are covered financially. According to a new report from the Geneva Association, however, the very nature of risk is changing amid a shifting cultural, geopolitical, and environmental landscape, and insurers will need to adapt their traditional business model to keep pace.
If the past few years are any indication – and we expect they are – the rate of overall global change is only increasing. A worldwide pandemic, wars in Ukraine and Israel, record-setting temperatures, an economic slowdown, political instability, and the emergence of generative artificial intelligence have all highlighted the many systemic risks inherent to our fast-moving, interconnected world. With potentially even more turbulent times and widespread volatility ahead, systemic risks may test aspects of the traditional insurance business model of risk pooling and redistribution in some areas. The industry must be cognizant of such threats and take steps now to adapt services and develop protection products that best serve our customers’ current and future needs.
I encourage you to read the Geneva Association report, The Value of Insurance in a Changing Risk Landscape. RGA is a long-standing partner and supporter of the Geneva Association. We fully endorse the Association’s mission to advance the work of the insurance industry in building more resilient and prosperous economies and societies as we work to advance RGA’s own purpose to make financial protection accessible to all.
Here are a few of the main takeaways from the report:
1. The risk landscape is changing.
Many emerging risks are increasingly systemic, a reality brought into focus by the COVID-19 pandemic, which affected virtually the entire world at the same time. As noted above, systemic risks can become so large and so widespread that they challenge insurance’s core mechanism of pooling and redistributing risk – the scale and cost of such risks can be too great for insurers to tackle alone. The global customer survey included in the Geneva Association report found that customers are particularly concerned about the future insurability of natural catastrophes (due to climate change), cyber risk, and longevity.
The report provides a framework for evaluating emerging risks and their future insurability, based on four categories: novelty of risks, changing characteristics of existing risks, knowledge gaps, and governance issues. It also explores tangible risks (human lives, infrastructure, etc.) vs. intangible risks (reputation loss, instability, etc.). The result is an approach that may prove useful for monitoring factors shaping the risk environment and those areas where insurance can bring value.
At RGA we have developed our own framework that integrates emerging risks into RGA’s strategy planning and review cycle. We rank emerging risks by frequency, impact, and velocity to develop a scorecard. A group of cross-functional experts partner with the business to build an understanding of these risks through a number of activities, such as pre-mortem exercises, surveys, and education sessions via an online forum for enterprise-wide collaboration and information sharing.