The World Bank’s pandemic bonds have failed to release funds in its three-year history as the recent outbreak has not met conditions for a payout according to the insurance policy against virus outbreaks?

Back in 2017, the World Bank unveiled its first insurance-like pandemic bond, trumpeting it as a feat of financial innovation that showed how private investors could partner with the public sector to combat global health emergencies.

But with the facility having yet to disburse any funds in its almost three-year history, a period marked by several global health scares and the recent outbreak of COVID-19, some public health experts have argued that the bond did not work as intended and has unduly benefited investors.

Catastrophe bond investors and reinsurance consultants, however, say the lack of a payout was not an indictment of the World Bank’s pandemic bond in itself, and more of a reflection of the bond’s strict conditions.

However, the fact the bond had yet to release funds did not mean it would not do so in the future, they mentioned?

The World Bank said the pandemic bond was designed to swiftly funnel funds from the deep-pocketed financial sector to health authorities in poorer countries before international assistance could be mobilized.

Early response efforts are seen as crucial among public health experts as a vigorous and swift containment response can help limit the growth hit from a pandemic.

With this goal in mind, the World Bank sold $320 million of these securities which are set to mature in July 2020.

Structured as a catastrophe bond, the World Bank could offer double-digit yields, a level hard to find in a world of ultra-low interest rates. An additional bonus was that the bond’s returns were not correlated with broader financial markets.

But if a pandemic did strike, investors could lose their entire investment, including their principal, and the bonds would automatically funnel funds to the virus-afflicted countries.

The class A bond targeting influenza flu raised $225 million worth of funds, but it’s the class B issue that has drawn the lion’s share of attention as it covers non-flu diseases like COVID-19 and Ebola.

The bond’s conditions aren’t triggered when the World Health Organization classifies a virus outbreak as a pandemic, but only when they meet a set of written conditions, much like an insurance policy.

On the face of it, the class B bond should have incurred losses during the 2018 Ebola crisis in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the recent Corona-virus from Wuhan, China, as both have resulted in deaths north of 250 people, the primary condition for a payout.

More than 76,000 cases of the Corona-virus have been reported, and at least 2,200 deaths attributed to the disease, based on the latest figures provided by the World Health Organization, which has not declared it a pandemic. And Ebola caused more than 2,000 deaths in the DRC.

But an important secondary condition states that there must be at least 20 deaths in a second country for the bond to release any funds, a requirement that has not been met by the Corona-virus or the Ebola outbreak.

The good thing that happened was that the spread was limited because of the quick actions that were taken. What is going on now is worse, the number of cases have surpassed Sars, but the spread has not stabilized yet.

The 2013-2016 Ebola outbreak that ravaged Sierra Leone, Liberia, Guinea and other African nations would have wiped out investors if the World Bank’s pandemic bond had existed back then.

The pandemic bond should be understood as an insurance product, and not as a source of reserves that would send funds through to a donor country at the behest of World Bank officials.

It was a financial instrument designed for the benefit of the public health sector, while spreading out the risk from owning the bond across investors.

The issue is that people are thinking of the World Bank as a relief agency, when it’s not?

But regardless of whether the bond ends up paying out, public health experts say it was not superior to existing mechanisms for disbursing funds swiftly to countries reeling from deadly viruses, and therefore fell short of its original intentions.

Olga Jonas, a Harvard researcher and a former World Bank economist who has monitored the pandemic bond, likened the debt issue to “casino banking,” a piece of unnecessary financial engineering whose benefits mostly accrued to investors.

In contrast, the pandemic bond had not sent any funds to combat the virus, the World Bank does not need to buy exotic insurance to finance its responses to outbreaks in poorest countries,” said Jonas.

Market Watch / ABC Flash Point News 2020.

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Seven Deadly Sins
Member
13-06-20 20:27

The World Bank, as many other institutions are in the game to make money and control the global financial flows.

Less is More
Member
14-06-20 02:22

The official article from MW was written before march 2020, but now it definitely shows how this insurance scam was never mentioned anymore in the media?