Eakinomics: A
Contract Should Be A Contract
As is his wont, the president strays far afield in his briefings about the
coronavirus pandemic, including these remarks suggesting insurers
should cover business losses due to the pandemic. They sure caught my
attention.
As detailed by AAF’s Thomas Wade,
business interruption coverage is usually an add-on to property and
casualty contracts that covers losses in the event of an interruption in
business. The pandemic has certainly been that. Yet as Wade points out, “a
business interruption event is usually defined as physical loss
(perhaps destruction of merchandise) in response to a physical event
(natural disasters or theft).” The coronavirus pandemic certainly should
not qualify as such an event. Most business interruption contracts go
further by explicitly containing an exclusion for losses due to a
widespread viral disease like the pandemic.
One might wonder why property and casualty insurers would add such an
explicit exclusion. Wade points out that this was “a lesson learned from the SARS
epidemic,” when the courts forced insurers to pay millions in claims
despite the fact that there was no physical event. Clearly there is reason
to fear the same legal illogic in this moment.
But it is indefensible – or irresponsible or offensive or “words my editors
took out” – for the president to suggest that insurers should pay for
coronavirus losses not covered by an insurance policy. First, those
losses are so large that they would halve in a single
moment the reserves of the insurance industry, which would cease to
exist. But the larger issue is that forcing insurers to recognize such
claims as valid means that the contract is being re-written after
the fact, “fundamentally assaulting constitutional contract law” in Wade’s
words. Such legal niceties aside, the economic success of the United States
has been built upon enforcing contracts and the rule of law. A step away
from those principles is a step toward third-world status.
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