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Security, crisis-related services
and corporate governance see budget increases at the expense of
'traditional' loss control categories: Chubb Survey.
In an apparent move to drive down the cost
of risk, US risk managers are spending an average 17 percent more
on loss control services while their organisations confront budgetary
constraints and the difficult economic environment. Those organisations
that increased loss control spending on security, crisis-related
services or corporate governance in 2002 shifted budget dollars
away from traditional loss control categories such as workers compensation
and product liability. These are among the major findings of a survey
of nearly 400 risk managers released by the Chubb Group of Insurance
Companies at the Risk & Insurance Management Society's annual
conference.
"Our research provided an in-depth understanding
of how risk managers manage the cost of risk through loss control
and how various trends and drivers affect their current spending
on such services," said Jimmy Deaderick, managing director,
Chubb & Son, and worldwide loss control manager of Chubb Commercial
Insurance, Whitehouse Station, NJ. "Our results indicate that
the hard insurance market has had a major impact on risk managers'
spending decisions. Many respondents noted that reducing exposures
to obtain better insurance coverage terms and pricing was the top
reason for increased loss control spending in 2002."
"We also found that many risk managers
may be robbing Peter to pay Paul by shifting loss control dollars
from traditional areas of concern to emerging risks. There is a
tendency to divert funds away from programmes to help control workers
compensation, property and product liability exposures and to spend
it on addressing topical and pressing issues such as corporate governance
and terrorism," added Deaderick. "While I applaud the
response in these volatile areas, we must not forget that workers
compensation and product liability remain significant long-term
exposures that face escalating costs."
Nearly 50 percent of respondents to the survey
increased their loss control spending in the past year; 34 percent
held their budgets constant; and 5 percent decreased their loss
control spending. As a group, companies with loss control budgets
of $200,000 or more were the most likely to increase their loss
control spending. Those companies that increased their loss control
spending tended to have annual sales revenues of $500 million and
more. Loss control spending for this group increased by 21 percent
over 2001.
"The greatest increase in loss control
spending reflected the effects of the recent corporate scandals
and the threat of terrorism on the business marketplace," said
Deaderick. 58 percent of respondents increased loss control spending
on security, followed by disaster preparedness (54 percent) and
corporate governance (52 percent). Among those who increased loss
control spending, the top three reasons were "the reduction
of exposures to obtain better (insurance coverage) terms/pricing"
(44 percent), "an increase in loss activity" (39 percent)
and "the threat of terrorism" (30 percent).
Chubb's survey was conducted over the Internet
in February 2003 and received 385 responses from risk management
professionals almost entirely from the United States and Canada.
The full survey can be found at www.chubb.com/rims/2003survey.pdf

•Date:
8th April 2003 •Region: North America •Type:
Article •Topic: BC
statistics
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