4.6 Article

How basis risk and spatiotemporal adverse selection influence demand for index insurance: Evidence from northern Kenya

Journal

FOOD POLICY
Volume 74, Issue -, Pages 172-198

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2018.01.002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK Department for International Development (DfID)
  2. Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
  3. Agriculture and Rural Development Sector of the European Union through DOD accountable grant [202619-101]
  4. DfID through FSD Trust Grant [SWD/Weather/43/2009]
  5. United States Agency for International Development [EDH-A-00-06-0003-00]
  6. World Bank's Trust Fund for Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development Grant [7156906]
  7. CGIAR Research Programs on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security and Dryland Systems

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Weather-related shocks are a major threat to the health and livelihoods of vulnerable farmers and herders in low risk faced by an insured individual is widely acknowledged as the Achilles heel of index insurance, and yet direct measurements of basis risk have never been used to study its role in determining demand for index insurance. Further, client knowledge of season-specific environmental information and spatial variation in basis risk introduces the possibility of adverse selection, a feature often presumed to be absent for index products. We used longitudinal household data to determine which factors affected demand for index based livestock insurance (IBLI). While both price and the non-price factors studied previously are indeed important, our findings indicate that basis risk and spatiotemporal adverse selection also play a major role in determining demand for IBLI.

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