Can Financial Markets be Tapped to Help Poor People Cope with Weather Risks?

Poor households in rural areas are particularly vulnerable to risks that reduce incomes and increase expenditures. Most past research has focused on risk-coping strategies for the rural poor, specially on micro-level and household actions. These are risks that can been shared within a community or extended family. These strategies are effective for independent risks, but ineffective for covariate or systemic risks. The authors focus on private and public mechanisms for managing covariate risk for natural disasters. When many households within the same community face risks that create losses for all, traditional coping mechanisms are likely to fail. Such covariate risks are not uncommon in many developing countries, especially where farming remains a major source of income. The authors focus on risks related to weather events (such as excess rain, droughts, freezes, and high winds) that have a severe impact on rural incomes. Weather insurance could cover the covariate risk for a community of poor households through formal and informal risk-sharing arrangements among households that are purchasing these weather contracts. Given recent Mexican innovations targeted at helping the poor cope with catastrophe weather events, the authors use Mexico as a case study. In Mexico, poor households are exposed to systemic risks, such as droughts and floods, that affect the economic livelihood of their region. Catastrophic insurance is useful for small farmers, although commercially oriented small farmers may wish to obtain coverage for less catastrophic events. Weather insurance could meet this need. It pays out according to the frequency and intensity of specific weather events. Because weather insurance depends on the occurrences and objective measure of intensity of a specific event, it does not require individual farm inspection that can be very costly for small farm. The authors argue that a key issue of delivering insurance to small farmers is the existence of producer organizations. In Mexico, the farmer mutual insurance funds provide a good example. These funds provide insurance to their members by pulling together resources to pay for future indemnities and reinsures itself from major systemic risks that could hurt simultaneously all their members.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Skees, Jerry, Varangis, Panos, Larson, Donald, Siegel, Paul
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2002-03
Subjects:ADVERSE SELECTION, AGRICULTURAL INSURANCE, AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, APPLICATIONS, BANKS, CAPITAL MARKETS, CATASTROPHES, CATASTROPHIC INSURANCE, COMMODITIES, COVERAGE, CROP INSURANCE, DEBT, DISASTER AID, DISASTER ASSISTANCE, DISASTER RELIEF, DISASTERS, DROUGHTS, EARTHQUAKE INSURANCE, EARTHQUAKES, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC INCENTIVES, ECONOMICS, ECONOMISTS, EMPLOYMENT, ENTREPRENEURS, EXPENDITURES, FARMERS, FARMS, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL SERVICES, FLOODING, FLOODS, FOREIGN AFFAIRS, GAMBLING, GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, HURRICANES, INCOME, INCOME RISKS, INDEMNITY, INSPECTIONS, INSURANCE, INSURANCE CONTRACTS, INSURANCE FUNDS, INSURANCE MARKETS, INSURANCE PRODUCTS, INSURED EVENTS, INTEREST RATES, INVESTIGATIONS, LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS, LOW INCOME, MORAL HAZARD, NATURAL DISASTERS, NUTRITION, PERVERSE INCENTIVES, POLICY RESEARCH, POOR FARMERS, PREMIUMS, PRICE RISK, PRIVATE INSURANCE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTIVITY, PUBLIC POLICY, REINSURANCE, REINSURANCE MARKETS, REINSURERS, RELIEF, RISK, RISK AVERSION, RISK EXPOSURE, RISK MANAGEMENT, RISK MITIGATION, RISK REDUCTION, RISK SHARING, RURAL COMMUNITIES, SALES OF ASSETS, SAVINGS, SOCIAL CAPITAL, SUSTAINABILITY, SYSTEMIC RISK, TRANSACTION COSTS, UNDERWRITING, VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS, WELFARE GAINS NATURAL DISASTERS, WEATHER DISASTERS, POOR FAMILIES, PRODUCERS ASSOCIATIONS, RURAL POVERTY, COVARIATE RISKS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/03/1751124/can-financial-markets-tapped-help-poor-people-cope-weather-risks
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14816
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