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Thursday December 4, 2008

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Past Event

A Brookings Institution Urban Markets Initiative Forum

The Credit and Insurance Consequences of Natural and Man-Made Catastrophes

Natural Disasters, New Orleans, Community Development, Cities


Event Summary

One year after Hurricane Katrina and five years after the terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington, DC, these communities are still struggling with the financial fallout of the disasters. Survivors of such catastrophes face significant credit and insurance consequences and uncertainty about how to respond is widespread. Borrowers are unsure of the scope of their obligations and creditors, struggling to craft policies that are compassionate, also want to avoid widespread default and foreclosure.
On September 7, a panel of experts from consumer credit, municipal bonds rating and insurance industries joined public policy analysts to examine these concerns and present recent findings. The forum addressed credit and insurance implications for families, community groups, government agencies, and small businesses hit by disaster, and considered whether credit bureaus should provide a different credit score to catastrophe victims.

Participants

Moderator

Alyssa Stewart Lee

Assistant Director, Urban Markets Initiative, Metropolitan Policy Program, The Brookings Institution

Panelists

Alex Fraser

Managing Director, Public Finance Ratings, Standard & Poor's

Chet Wiermanski

Vice President, Analytical Services, TransUnion Corporation

Dan Meder

Senior Director, Commercial Credit Risk Solutions, Experian Business Information Solutions

Eugene N. Gurenko, Ph.D., CPCU, ARE

Lead Insurance and Risk Management Specialist/Capital and Risk Markets, World Bank

Michael Turner, Ph.D.

President and Senior Scholar, Political & Economic Research Council


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