Swiss Re Public Sector Solutions, the arm of the global reinsurer that works with governments, international institutions, and the broader public sector on risk transfer solutions, has suggested now is the time to invest more boldly in insurance-linked loans.

According to Dr. Gerry Lemcke, Head of Technical Sales, and Maria Zou, Technical Sales Lead for Public Sector Solutions at Swiss Re, nations that depend on loans from multilateral institutions and donors to finance infrastructure and economic growth often find that debt repayment obligations that persist after a disaster can drain vital financial resources.
“A paradox emerges, as the very loans that enable development become an obstacle to recovery,” the co-authors explained.
They continued, “Recently, the ability to defer loan repayments has offered select countries a lifeline. Climate-resilient debt clauses (CRDCs) let them temporarily redirect interest and principal payments to catastrophe recovery.
“When Hurricane Ivan hit Grenada in the Caribbean in 2004, the storm destroyed nearly all of the island’s housing, precipitating a humanitarian emergency that led to a sovereign debt default. Fast forward 20 years: when Hurricane Beryl struck in 2024, the country made history as the first to leverage a deferral to postpone debt repayments.
“Absent debt deferral, still-fragile Grenada would have faced millions in payments during the coming months; with it, the island won much-needed financial breathing room to meet residents’ pressing post-disaster needs. The rub, of course, is that deferrals are only that – a postponement.
“The overall debt obligations remain unchanged, while recovery efforts will go much beyond a short payment holiday; when they resume, they will come on top of an economy still facing distress from the storm.
“This is why it’s worth examining further options to address post-disaster sovereign debt stress, especially when finances are tight, donors want to magnify their impact yet manage their risks, and as natural catastrophes grow more frequent and intense.”
With this in mind, Lemcke and Zou observed that insurance-linked loans have “great potential” as part of a broad risk-reduction portfolio that already includes parametric insurance, catastrophe bonds, and contingent lines of credit.
“These financing instruments include protection to cover debt repayments in the event of a triggering catastrophe, a powerful way to achieve catalytic outcomes where every dollar of donor funding can drive more than a dollar’s worth of long-term impact,” the co-authors added.
Elsewhere in the report, Swiss Re Public Sector Solutions further noted the financial mechanics of insurance-linked loans, saying, “Catastrophe insurance for sovereign debt does come with a premium. However, Swiss Re has explored plausible scenarios that identify an attractive ‘sweet spot’ where insurance can help meet immediate post-disaster relief needs, save countries millions of dollars after a catastrophe, and bolster creditor confidence.
“An added cost of between 20 to 60 basis points may appear expensive in relative terms, if compared to conditions, particularly of concessional loans. In absolute terms, however, the costs are fully comparable with commitment or standby fees of many contingent loan instruments with an active deferral estimated to cost upwards of 25 basis points; hence, premium cost of an insurance-linked loan with permanent debt relief should not be seen as prohibitive.
“We also examined counterarguments that loan insurance might not provide sufficient recovery relief, especially considering the often-enormous financial burden that materialises following disasters like hurricanes or earthquakes.
“But when you do the simulations, the unencumbered liquidity that insurance can unlock is much more powerful than you’d first expect.
“Take Grenada: an insurance-linked loan, had it been in place when Hurricane Beryl made landfall in 2024, could have freed up money sufficient to cover a significant part of the country’s immediate emergency liquidity needs, based on benchmarks factoring in total recovery costs and GDP.
“Unlike a deferral, there would be genuine risk transfer with permanent debt relief, with no need to modify repayment schedules or increase future installments.
“Insurance-linked loans are not designed to replace risk transfer instruments of larger capacity, such as traditional dedicated insurance solutions like insurance-linked securities, including catastrophe bonds, but they do offer a powerful complement within a strong disaster resilience strategy.”
Thus, drawing on lessons of the past two decades, Swiss Re Public Sector Solutions emphasised that having a range of risk-management options is essential, noting that insurance-linked loans allow borrowers to secure swift, permanent debt relief.
At the same time, all parties to sovereign debt transactions can reportedly benefit from more stable payment schedules and the predictable risk management made possible when loans and insurance coverage are arranged together in a streamlined process.
The co-authors continued, “Such certainty can create a virtuous cycle, as well: safer credit attracts more investors to sovereign lending, while more investors can help improve interest rates and loan terms.
“Collaboration between governments, development banks, and private investors can facilitate greater lending capacity for countries that struggle to access global finance.”
Swiss Re Public Sector Solutions noted that it has been delivering public sector risk-transfer solutions since 2011, and that Insurance-linked loans, as another tool in its resilience-building toolbox, are an ideal fit in this continued effort.
The co-authors concluded, “The concepts behind them are actually not new. Particularly in agriculture, multiperil insurance is often directly bundled with loans necessary to offer the farmers both access to funding and crop protection.
“Still, insurance can play an even larger role in sovereign lending as part of a multi-layered resilience strategy that is scalable and replicable.
“After all, private-sector infrastructure projects would be unthinkable without covers to protect stakeholders from the worst. Risk transfer scaled for sovereign loan programmes offers similar benefits: swift financial support, lower long-term costs, more stable credit relationships, and greater investor confidence.
“By going beyond debt deferrals, insurance-linked loans can create lasting stability, enabling borrowers and creditors to manage growing disaster risks while concurrently building a sturdier, more inclusive global financial system.”

