Build the Insurance & Cyber Skills You Need to Advance Your Career

2020s — The Governance–Risk Gap

Category: Risk Management • Infrastructure • Systemic Failure Date: 2010s–2020s (emerging pattern)

Summary

Across the 2010s and 2020s, a pattern emerged in major catastrophes — from the Texas grid collapse (2021) to the Maui wildfires (2023) to the Los Angeles wind‑driven urban fires (2023–2024). These events revealed a widening gap between modern risk and the institutional systems responsible for managing it. Aging infrastructure, fragmented authority, slow adaptation, and unclear accountability created conditions where predictable hazards escalated into systemic failures.

This governance–risk gap is now one of the most important underlying drivers of catastrophe severity in the United States.

Background

Modern risk has changed faster than the institutions built to manage it:

But governance structures — city, county, state, utility, emergency management — still operate on 20th‑century assumptions.

What Happened (The Pattern)

1. Infrastructure designed for a different climate

Systems built for 1970s–1990s conditions now face:

2. Fragmented responsibility

Wildfire risk touches:

No single entity owns the whole risk.

3. Slow institutional adaptation

Agencies often:

4. Emergency‑response gaps

Repeated across events:

5. Public awareness only after catastrophe

Failures accumulate quietly for years, then become visible all at once.

Claims Impact (Cross‑Event)

Regulatory / Legal Impact

But reforms often lag behind risk evolution.

Market Impact

Why It Matters

The governance–risk gap is now a systemic driver of catastrophe severity. It explains why:

This is not about partisan politics. It’s about institutional capacity in an era of accelerating risk.

Related Entries

%nbsp;

Thanks for Visiting Us!
Would you mind answering 3 quick questions so we can better serve insurance professionals?

How useful have you found Insurance Designation Lookup to be as a way to explore insurance designation options?

Would anything make it more helpful to you or a colleague?

Would you recommend it to a colleague?