Skip to main content
Article
Terrorism Risk in a Post-9/11 Economy: The Convergence of Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government Action
Faculty Scholarship
  • Robert J. Rhee, University of Maryland School of Law
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-1-2005
Keywords
  • Terrorism,
  • Terrorism Risk,
  • Insurance,
  • Insurance Securitization,
  • Natural Catastrophe Securitization
Comments

Published in Arizona State Law Journal, v. 37, no. 2, summer 2005, p. 435-533.

Abstract

September 11 changed the American economy and the global insurance market. The insurance industry no longer covers terrorism risk for "free." The traditional insurance mechanism alone cannot spread the risk of repeated catastrophic losses. Beyond the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 lingers the questions of a longterm solution and government's role therein. Government can assume different roles: reinsurer, wealth (re)distributor, regulator, or a combination thereof. This article suggests that the government should foster a regulatory and tax environment in which the private sector can develop a capital market solution for terrorism risk. Securitization is an alternative to reinsurance and can transfer risk to the global capital markets. Presently, this concept is just a theoretical possibility. Legal reforms must first reduce the cost of securitization and enhance the investment appeal, making terrorism bonds more price competitive with reinsurance. Even if such reforms are sown, a bond market will take many years to grow. Such a market, however, is impossible without the regulatory precursors, which are needed now.

Disciplines
Citation Information
37 Arizona State Law Journal 435 (2005).