Study finds insurance pricing shapes household investment in climate resilience
This paper provides causal evidence of how insurance pricing shapes households’ decisions to invest in making their homes more resilient to weather damage.
Read the full articleYou might also wanna read

Climate Risks Drive Homeowners Insurance Costs to Crisis Levels in Disaster-Prone Cities
A new housing report shows these U.S. cities have the highest homeowners insurance burdens in the U.S., as climate risks drive up costs and

What Millions of Homeowner’s Insurance Contracts Reveal About Risk Sharing
Housing is the largest component of assets held by households in the United States, totaling $48 trillion in 2025. When natural disasters st
Study examines Miami-Dade County resilience plans
A University of Miami study has developed a new approach to evaluate how multiple climate resilience plans work together—or fail to do so—in
9.5 How Can Policymakers Protect Policyholders in a World on Fire?
Home insurance is one of those things you need to have and hope to never need. But as risk from climate disasters increases, many homeowners

What Is Natural Disaster Clustering—and Why Does It Matter for the Economy?
Understanding the economic and financial consequences of natural disasters is a major concern for researchers and policymakers. The way in w

Credit risk frameworks need to respond to rising physical climate damage, report says
Credit risk frameworks should be overhauled to account for exposure to accelerating physical climate risk, increasing insurance inadequacy,

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.