Flood Insurance Flashcards

1
Q

NFIP policy goals (2)

A
  • provide access to primary flood insurance, transferring some risk from property owners to the federal government
  • mitigate and reduce the nation’s comprehensive flood risk through floodplain management standards
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2
Q

NFIP social goals (2)

A
  • provide flood insurance in flood-prone areas to property owners who otherwise would not be able to obtain it
  • reduce government’s cost after floods
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3
Q

NFIP non-insurance activities (5)

A
  • disseminate flood risk information through flood maps
  • require communities to adopt land use and building code standards in order to participate in the program
  • reduce the need for other post-flood disaster aid
  • contribute to community resilience by providing a mechanism to fund rebuilding after a flood
  • protect lending institutions against mortgage defaults due to uninsured losses
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4
Q

when flood insurance is mandatory

A

properties in a Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA) with a federal mortgage; enforced by the lender

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5
Q

three categories of NFIP subsidies

A
  • pre-FIRM – properties built/improved before 1975, or before FEMA published the first Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM)
  • newly mapped – properties newly mapped into a SFHA
  • grandfathered – properties that have policies in effect when remapped into a new flood rate class and maintain continuous coverage
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6
Q

NFIP arrangements with private insurers (2)

A
  • Direct Servicing Agent - insurers act as private contractors on behalf of FEMA
  • Write-Your-Own (WYO) Program - private insurers are paid to write and service policies
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7
Q

why flood insurance has historically been considered uninsurable by the private market (4)

A
  • catastrophic nature of flooding
  • difficulty of determining accurate rates
  • risk of adverse selection
  • unable to provide adequate rates that consumers find affordable
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8
Q

barriers of entry for private market to compete with NFIP (7)

A

[CARS CAN = continuous coverage / at least a broad /
regulatory uncertainty / subsidized rates / cannot assess risk / adequate consumer participation / non-compete clause]

  • continuous coverage is required for property owners to retain subsidies in NFIP
  • coverage must be “at least as broad” as coverage by NFIP in order to fulfill mortgage requirements
  • would require increased state regulatory oversight
  • may not be able to compete with FEMA-subsidized rates
  • private insurers cannot assess risk accurately
  • adequate consumer participation is necessary to maintain a sufficiently large risk pool
  • until 2019 “non-compete” clause restricted WYO carriers in selling their own flood policies
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9
Q

benefits of increased private sector participation in flood insurance (2)

A
  • increased consumer choice

* cheaper flood insurance for some risks

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10
Q

concerns with increased private sector participation in flood insurance (3)

A
  • variable consumer protections
  • adverse selection for NFIP
  • less NFIP revenue will be generated for flood mapping and floodplain management, and enforcement will be more difficult
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11
Q

potential expansions of mandatory coverage requirement for flood insurance (3)

A
  • expand to more types of mortgage loans
  • require all properties in SFHA to carry flood insurance
  • include flood coverage on homeowner insurance policies
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