U.S. Senate panel hears from Chubb, others on insuring pandemic risk
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[July 23, 2021]
By Alwyn Scott
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New Jersey business
owner Adenah Bayoh told a U.S. Senate committee hearing on Wednesday she
paid about $275,000 a year to insure her group of restaurants, only to
discover the limits of her policy during the coronavirus pandemic.
"When the pandemic hit and the governor ordered my businesses to close,
I was shocked that my insurance company and coverage was not there for
me," said the Liberia native who immigrated to the United States at age
13 and now owns seven restaurants.
Insurers have largely denied claims for business interruption caused by
the pandemic, saying the virus did not cause the physical damage that
policies require.
The hearing, spurred by hundreds of thousands of experiences like
Bayoh's, highlighted the challenges of insuring overwhelming risks like
coronavirus, and drew on industry leaders for possible solutions.
"Shutting entire economies down for an extended period and spending the
kinds of trillions of dollars we've spent as a way of managing a
pandemic is not a future solution," Chubb Ltd Chief Executive Evan
Greenberg told the subcommittee that deals with insurance.
Preparation and better response would shorten shutdowns and may allow
insurers and government to share the risk, he added.
Other ideas ranged from adapting the system used to insure terrorism
risk after 9-11, also being discussed by House members, allowing
insurers to cover initial losses and government to cover longer-term
claims. Insurers also could help distribute government support without
covering risk.
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A worker clears and cleans a table along the sidewalk outside "Eat
at Joes'' restaurant that continues to remain open following new
coronavirus restrictions limiting restaurants to take-out only in
Los Angeles County, during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) in Redondo Beach, California, U.S., November 30, 2020.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
One proposal would do nothing, noting that in
hindsight, government support and stimulus largely healed the
economy.
"A reasonable assessment is that no program is needed," said Robert
Hartwig, a professor at the University of South Carolina.
Bayoh, who struggled to get a paycheck protection program loan,
disliked that solution. "I hope that I'm not sitting here in the
next pandemic hoping for another PPP," she said.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; editing by Richard Pullin)
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