A
report by the broker showed early estimates for U.S. and UK
business interruption, contingency, U.S. Directors & Officers,
U.S. employment practices, liability, U.S. general liability,
U.S. mortgage, trade credit and surety and U.S. workers'
compensation.
An "optimistic" scenario or a return to a pre-COVID-19 state
following 3 months of social distancing, would mean $11 billion
of insured losses, while a "moderate" scenario, a gradual return
following 6 months of social distancing, would mean a bill of
$32 billion to insurers.
Social distancing for a year under a "severe" scenario - a
health impact approaching the scale of the 1918 flu pandemic -
will mean $80 billion in COVID-19 insured losses, Willis said.
Willis also said it has modeled an extreme pandemic scenario,
which could result in $140 billion of losses.
"Beyond its devastating human cost, the COVID-19 pandemic has
swiftly upended economic activity around the world," said Alice
Underwood, global leader, insurance consulting and technology,
at Willis.
"At this point, it appears that the industrywide level of
general insurance loss could exceed that resulting from the 2001
World Trade Centre event."
Given the potential scale and systemic nature of pandemic loss,
talks about the need for some sort of government backstop to
address future pandemic risks have already begun, Underwood
said.
(Reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru; Editing by
Shinjini Ganguli)
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