4.5 Article

Weather risk and the viability of weather insurance in China's Gansu, Shaanxi, and Henan provinces

Journal

CHINA AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIC REVIEW
Volume 2, Issue 1, Pages 5-24

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LIMITED
DOI: 10.1108/17561371011017469

Keywords

Insurance; Rainfall; Farms; Agriculture; Risk assessment; China

Funding

  1. W.I. Myers Endowment
  2. JSL Endowment Funds for Research in China
  3. Cornell University
  4. China National Nature Science Fund [70873096]
  5. Humanities and Social Science Fund of China Education Department [07JA790027]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to investigate weather risks facing Chinese farmers, and to determine whether farmers would have a preference for weather insurance over other types of agricultural insurance Design/methodology/approach - The data are based on 1,564 farm households surveyed in Shaanxi, Henan, and Gansu provinces in Central China between October 2007 and 2008 Findings - Results suggest that the greater risk for farmers is drought followed by excessive rain Heat is less critical as a risk but more significant than cool weather Results suggest a strong interest in precipitation insurance with 50 and 44 percent of respondents indicating strong interest in the product. Supplementary results indicate that interest is equal between planting, cultivating, and harvesting Furthermore, results suggest that farmers are willing to adopt new ideas, and where possible action has already been taken to self-insure through diversification and other means. Research limitations/implications - This research is based on primary data gathered in China. However, the authors are limited in the access to Chinese weather station data to illustrate how weather insurance operates. Instead, the authors use weather data from the weather station in Ashland. Kansas which has similarities to the wheat growing regions of China While the example is for illustrative purposes only, the authors cannot claim that it actually represents premiums that might actually be found in China Practical implications - The Chinese Government has within the past year authorized an investigation into agricultural Insurance. The burst of research and applications of weather insurance in both developed and developing countries suggest that a wide array of applications could be feasible in China The results are encouraging because they suggest that farmers in China would have an Interest in purchasing weather insurance. Originality/value - The authors believe that this is the first study conducted on weather insurance in China. The survey instrument is designed to specifically determine what weather risks are important to Chinese farmers and the interest that farmers would have in using such a product.

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