Advances in modeling and sensors can help farmers and insurers manage risk
2021 FEB 08 (NewsRx) -- By a
While the insurers fixed the issues resulting in that error, the incident remains a cautionary tale about the potential failures of agricultural index insurance, which seeks to help protect the livelihoods of millions of smallholder farmers across the globe. Recent advances in crop modeling and remote sensing - especially in the availability and use of high-resolution imagery from satellites that can pinpoint individual fields - is one tool insurers that can help improve the quality of index insurance for farmers, report a team of economists and earth system scientists this week in Nature Reviews Earth & Environment.
“The enthusiasm for agricultural insurance needs to be matched with an equally well-founded concern for making sure that novel insurance products perform and help, not hurt, farmers exposed to severe risk,” said
The review was co-led by Benami, an assistant professor in Agricultural and Applied Economics from
“Improvements in earth observation are enabling new approaches to assess agricultural losses, such as those resulting from adverse weather,” said Zhenong.
Index insurance in agriculture triggers payments when certain environmental conditions - seasonal rainfall, for example - stray from thresholds for a typical harvest. Unlike policies that require costly and time-consuming field visits to assess claims, index insurance uses an indicator of losses to cover a group of farmers within a given geographical area. This approach offers the promise of inexpensive, quick coverage to many people who would otherwise be uninsured.
Lack of other types of coverage is due, in part, to the cost involved in verifying small claims on the ground. As the
In non-technical terms, “painful coping strategies” for smallholder households include skipping meals, removing children from school, and selling off what little productive assets they have.
“Shocks that destroy incomes and assets have been shown to have irreversible consequences,” said
Insurance has been shown to push the poverty needle in the other direction. By protecting assets after bad seasons, insurance payments also build the confidence farmers have to invest in their farms and progress toward better wellbeing, secure in the knowledge they will not need to pursue painful coping if bad times fall. Despite a few decades of experimentation with the idea of index insurance, however, serious quality issues have plagued implementation on the ground and place the otherwise promising concept of index insurance itself at risk.
“With the technology of remote sensing changing rapidly, we wrote this review to call attention to the quality problem and to highlight ways to harness those technological advances to solve that problem. Our immodest hope is that this article will make more, high-quality insurance products available to small-scale farmers across the globe,” said Carter.
Better models, coverage
Governments and insurers in sub-Saharan Africa have enrolled millions of farmers in index insurance programs. Programs have met with varying degrees of success and generally focus on livestock, in part because weather-related losses on rangelands are relatively easier to quantify. The authors say enhanced satellite imaging can potentially increase coverage and include more cropland. But improving the effectiveness of insurance is a bigger goal.
“We’re trying to encourage the insurance community to move towards not just how many people you have enrolled but how many people you protected well when they suffered,” said Benami.
To that end, the researchers discuss a minimum quality standard in their review, which is akin to a medical doctor’s oath to patients: A minimum quality standard is based on the premise of doing no harm to farmers. Poor insurance coverage can make farmers worse off than they otherwise would have been without insurance.
“The criteria that insurance regulators have told us that they want is good value for money - meaning that farmers get effective risk reduction and asset protection for the premia that are paid,” said Benami. “As we understand it, insurers are looking for ways to reduce cost and encourage uptake while meeting regulatory requirements for their roll-out.”
To improve the quality, reliability, affordability and accessibility of index insurance, the authors make five concrete recommendations in their study.
In implementing these recommendations, the Alliance’s
“Overall, evaluating and designing programs to successfully manage risk is a problem with both technical and social dimensions,” the authors conclude. “Although index insurance instruments will not solve all agricultural risk-related problems, they offer a useful form of protection against severe, community-wide shocks when done well.”
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