In the United States, federal, state and local government share responsibility for paying for losses from disasters. Traditionally a state and local function, more responsibility has shifted to the federal government over time, and federal programs providing support to state and local entities for disaster response and recovery have proliferated. But as the frequency and severity of disasters has increased, so have the losses, and it is worth considering whether the current risk-sharing approach is appropriate.
To better understand the current situation, RAND undertook an analysis of the extent to which state and local governments rely on FEMA’s Public Assistance (PA) program to repair buildings, contents, vehicles and equipment that are damaged in presidentially declared disasters. With some exceptions, the PA program will pay for that part of the repairs that is not covered by the insurance purchased by state and local governments.
We found that a relatively large number of state and local government PA applicants had insurance — somewhere between 59 and 72 percent. But our analysis also showed that state and local insurance covered only 28 percent of overall repair costs.
When we drilled down into these numbers, we found that the percentage of repair costs covered by insurance differed in meaningful ways. For example, we found that the type of event causing the damage mattered. Earthquakes and floods had the lowest share of insurance — suggesting that these types of perils represent an important fiscal exposure to the federal government.
We also found that the size of the jurisdiction mattered. Jurisdictions with populations between 10,000 and 50,000 tend to have insurance that covers more of their repair costs than jurisdictions with smaller or larger populations. In the case of larger jurisdictions, this might reflect an increased use of risk-management tools that are less readily available to other communities. For example, large jurisdictions can more easily set up rainy-day funds, borrow from financial markets to repair damages or rely on tax increases to cover losses. Large applicants do not have to deduct these other potential sources of revenue from their PA applications.
According to the experts interviewed for the study, FEMA assistance reduces incentives for many state and local governments to purchase insurance. Some entities buy only for facilities that they believe are critical to repair quickly and rely on FEMA to replace the rest. Others buy policies with lower limits or deductibles than they would otherwise. If FEMA were to eliminate its PA for buildings, contents, vehicles and equipment, some experts predicted that there would be little change in the risk management practices of some public entities. But a more common view was that state and local governments would take more responsibility for managing their disaster risk.
Shifting more responsibility to state and local governments could encourage more resilient planning and building practices and encourage them to transfer some of that risk to the insurance market. After all, it is local governments that decide where buildings can be located and the resilience level to which they should be built — two factors that greatly influence the vulnerability of a community’s and residents’ assets. However, there are limits on the amount of risk it makes sense to keep at the state and local level. The potentially enormous losses that can result for floods, earthquakes, hurricanes and other natural and human-caused hazards create challenges for private insurance markets, and insurance may not always be available at prices that are thought to accurately reflect risk. It is appropriate to share risk with the federal government in such cases.
The experts we spoke with identified four approaches for encouraging state and local governments to take more responsibility for their disaster losses:
- Involve Credit Rating Agencies: Encourage credit rating agencies to evaluate communities’ financial preparedness for disasters. In assessing a community’s creditworthiness, credit rating agencies do not generally evaluate this, and encouraging them to do so could create an incentive for communities to adopt better financial risk-management practices, such as the use of insurance.
- Raise state and local awareness of risks: Require state and local governments to more fully analyze and disclose the broad economic consequences of the hazards they face. Such a requirement could increase their awareness and appreciation of their risks, promoting better mitigation and enabling the private sector to develop appropriate solutions.
- Require state and local government to cover more losses: Hold state and local governments responsible for the first layer of loss and suggest that communities obtain coverage for up to 1-in-100 or 1-in- 200-year events. FEMA funding would be available only for losses over this threshold, creating strong incentives for state and local governments to mitigate their risks while still providing a federal economic backstop for large losses.
- Eliminate FEMA funding for some repairs: The president’s fiscal year 2021 budget proposed ending eligibility for the category of PA funding that covers buildings, contents, vehicles and equipment. State and local governments would become responsible for bearing all the costs of repairing or restoring buildings, contents, vehicles and equipment, which could encourage mitigation and potentially lower the overall risk that communities face. However, eliminating PA would leave state and local governments responsible for managing the largest incidents, which can be difficult and expensive to insure.
Each of these alternatives would shift the balance of risk away from the federal government and toward state and local governments. There can be drawbacks to this. State and local governments can lack the capacity to address significant disasters, and options for transferring risk to the private sector can be limited. But these alternatives could give state and local governments more of a stake in ensuring that they avoid or mitigate risk.
Jason Thomas Barnosky is a senior political scientist, Noreen Clancy is a senior policy analyst and Lloyd Dixon is director of the RAND Center for Catastrophic Risk Management and Compensation and a senior economist at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation.