Unpacking barriers to socially inclusive weather index insurance: towards a framework for inclusion
Mohamed Aheeyar,
Sanjiv de Silva,
Sonali Senaratna Sellamuttu and
Indika Arulingam
Papers published in Journals (Open Access), 2019, 11(11):1-19. (Special issue: Selected Papers from 2019 World Water Week)
Abstract:
Floods account for a majority of disasters, especially in South Asia, where they affect 27 million people annually, causing economic losses of over US1 billion. Climate change threatens to exacerbate these risks. Risk transfer mechanisms, such as weather index insurance (WII) may help buffer farmers against these hazards. However, WII programs struggle to attract the clients most in need of protection, including marginalized women and men. This risks re-enforcing existing inequalities and missing opportunities to promote pro-poor and gender-sensitive development. Key questions, therefore, include what factors constrain access to WIIs amongst heterogeneous communities, and how these can be addressed. This paper contributes to that end through primary data from two WII case studies (one in India, the other in Bangladesh) that identify contextual socio-economic and structural barriers to accessing WII, and strategies to overcome these. More significantly, this paper synthesizes the case study findings and those from a review of the literature on other WII initiatives into a framework to promote a systematic approach to address these challenges: an important step forward in moving from problem analysis to remedial action. The framework highlights actions across WII product design, implementation and post-implementation, to minimize risks of social exclusion in future WII schemes.
Keywords: Weather hazards; Agricultural insurance; Flooding; Climate change; Resilience; Gender equity; Gender equality; Women; Smallholders; Farmers; Socioeconomic environment; Landlessness; Strategies; Microfinance; Nongovernmental organizations; Case studies; Villages; India; Bangladesh; Bihar; Sirajganj (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:iwt:jounls:h049374
DOI: 10.3390/w11112235
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