Insurance for the Poor?

Uninsured risk has substantial welfare costs, not just in the short run, but also in terms of perpetuating poverty. This paper discusses the scope for extending insurance to the poor, drawing mainly on examples from Latin American and Caribbean countries. It is argued that insurance provision to the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dercon, S, Bold, T, Calvo, C
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: GPRG 2007
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author Dercon, S
Bold, T
Calvo, C
author_facet Dercon, S
Bold, T
Calvo, C
author_sort Dercon, S
collection OXFORD
description Uninsured risk has substantial welfare costs, not just in the short run, but also in terms of perpetuating poverty. This paper discusses the scope for extending insurance to the poor, drawing mainly on examples from Latin American and Caribbean countries. It is argued that insurance provision to the poor could play an important role in a comprehensive system of protection against risk, including other ex-ante measures such as promoting credit and savings as insurance, as well as a credible overall ex-post safety net. Insurance provision is best promoted via a partner-agent model, in which a local finance institution with close links to relatively poor communities teams up with an established insurer to deliver low-cost, tailored products, such as life, health, property and weather insurance. An essential role of the government would be to promote insurance provision to the poor by a relevant regulatory framework favouring MFIs within a partner-agent setup, and to provide overall credibility to the overall system of social protection. The paper also argues for the involvement of local indigenous risk-sharing and finance institutions as intermediaries to maximize the ability to reach the poor and the overall welfare benefits.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7c751f3c-8d39-4e75-b1c2-184083ceb3162022-03-26T20:57:15ZInsurance for the Poor?Working paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:7c751f3c-8d39-4e75-b1c2-184083ceb316EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsGPRG2007Dercon, SBold, TCalvo, CUninsured risk has substantial welfare costs, not just in the short run, but also in terms of perpetuating poverty. This paper discusses the scope for extending insurance to the poor, drawing mainly on examples from Latin American and Caribbean countries. It is argued that insurance provision to the poor could play an important role in a comprehensive system of protection against risk, including other ex-ante measures such as promoting credit and savings as insurance, as well as a credible overall ex-post safety net. Insurance provision is best promoted via a partner-agent model, in which a local finance institution with close links to relatively poor communities teams up with an established insurer to deliver low-cost, tailored products, such as life, health, property and weather insurance. An essential role of the government would be to promote insurance provision to the poor by a relevant regulatory framework favouring MFIs within a partner-agent setup, and to provide overall credibility to the overall system of social protection. The paper also argues for the involvement of local indigenous risk-sharing and finance institutions as intermediaries to maximize the ability to reach the poor and the overall welfare benefits.
spellingShingle Dercon, S
Bold, T
Calvo, C
Insurance for the Poor?
title Insurance for the Poor?
title_full Insurance for the Poor?
title_fullStr Insurance for the Poor?
title_full_unstemmed Insurance for the Poor?
title_short Insurance for the Poor?
title_sort insurance for the poor
work_keys_str_mv AT dercons insuranceforthepoor
AT boldt insuranceforthepoor
AT calvoc insuranceforthepoor