8.5. Special Issues in Developing Countries
8.5.1. Statistics on Disasters
Although the vast majority of weather-related insurance losses occur in wealthy
countries, most of the human suffering occurs in poor countries (Figure
8-6). Whereas 45% of the natural disaster losses between 1985 and 1999 took
place in wealthy countries (those with per capita income of more than US$9,360),
these countries represent 57% of the US$984 billion in total economic losses
and 92% of the US$178 billion in insured losses (Munich Re, 1999b). In contrast,
25% of the economic losses and 65% of the 587,000 deaths took place in the poorest
countries (those with per capita income below US$760).
Other literature sources, using slightly different definitions and different
time periods, conclude that about 90% of deaths from natural disasters from
1973 to 1997 occurred in Africa and Asia (IFRC-RCS, 1999a). Figures from the
World Disasters Report 1999 (IFRC-RCS, 1999a) indicate that, in the period from
1973 to 1997, on average nearly 85,000 persons were killed each year by natural
disasters; the number of otherwise affected (impoverished, homeless, injured)
was more than 140 million annually. The record of disasters (see Figure
8-6) is a further illustration of the geographic distribution of weather-related
disasters.
As indicated in Chapter 3, climate change comes with
changing frequencies and intensities of extreme weather events. The most vulnerable
regions and communities are those that are both highly exposed to hazardous
climate change effects and have limited adaptive capacity. Countries with limited
economic resources, low levels of technology, poor information and skills, poor
infrastructure, unstable or weak institutions, and inequitable empowerment and
access to resources have little capacity to adapt and are highly vulnerable
(see Chapter 18). The regional chapters in this volume
(Chapters 10-17) indicate that developing
countries, because of their limited or nonexistent financial buffers, are particularly
vulnerable to the effects of climate change. Human-induced climate change is
expected to result in a further upward trend of disaster losses.
Developing countriesespecially those that are reliant on primary production
as a major source of incomeare particularly vulnerable because these countries
and their communities hardly have any financial buffer and there is very little
penetration of insurance (see also Figure 8-6).
The conditions facing private insurance markets and government disaster relief
differ considerably in developing countries. The penetration of private insurance
is extremely low in most cases, although it is growing quickly. The degree of
preparedness also is low. The government sector is far less able to operate
as a surrogate insurer, even in areas such as crop and flood insurance where
governments traditionally are essential in the developed world. In developing
countries, the economic and social impacts of catastrophic weather events can
pose a material impediment to development. Increased frequency or intensity
of such events as a result of climate change could render these markets less
attractive than they are at present for private insurers, in turn compounding
the adverse impact on development. Thus, developing countries tend to have greater
vulnerability and less adaptive capacity than developed countries.
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