Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers

The Kenyan economy relies heavily on its agricultural sector. Agriculture contributes 22.4 percent of the country’s GDP, with a majority of the producers being smallholder farmers (KNBS, 2022). This leaves both the economy and the farmers who make up the economic base facing significant risk. Shock...

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Autores principales: Kramer, Berber, Waweru, Carol, Malacarne, Jonathan G.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131471
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author Kramer, Berber
Waweru, Carol
Malacarne, Jonathan G.
author_browse Kramer, Berber
Malacarne, Jonathan G.
Waweru, Carol
author_facet Kramer, Berber
Waweru, Carol
Malacarne, Jonathan G.
author_sort Kramer, Berber
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Kenyan economy relies heavily on its agricultural sector. Agriculture contributes 22.4 percent of the country’s GDP, with a majority of the producers being smallholder farmers (KNBS, 2022). This leaves both the economy and the farmers who make up the economic base facing significant risk. Shock events in the recent past underscore this truth. Notably, Kenya experienced significant drought events in 2008-2011 (MOALF, 2021), 2016-2017 (Uhe et al., 2018), and 2020-2022 (FAO, 2021). Such shocks have immediate and lasting effects on farmer well-being (Rosenzweig and Binswanger, 1993; Carter, 1997; Morduch, 1995; Hoddinott, 2006; Janzen and Carter, 2019; Malacarne and Paul, 2022), underscoring the pressing need to strengthen the resilience of smallholder farmers. The increased incidence of drought has made it even more crucial that farmers have tools to transfer the risks they face to financial markets. Financial inclusion (e.g. bank account ownership, access to formal credit markets, access to insurance markets, mobile money coverage) among vulnerable rural populations, however, is often low (Lotto, 2022). Innovations in the design and provision of financial technologies have sought to make tools more accessible to smallholder farmers for whom existing products were not available or were prohibitively expensive. These efforts often make use of information and communications technologies to reduce the cost of offering products and to extend their reach into more distant communities (Benami and Carter, 2021).
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spelling CGSpace1314712024-11-07T09:48:59Z Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers Kramer, Berber Waweru, Carol Malacarne, Jonathan G. agriculture economy smallholders risk shocks drought resilience finance access markets insurance technology rural populations gross national product The Kenyan economy relies heavily on its agricultural sector. Agriculture contributes 22.4 percent of the country’s GDP, with a majority of the producers being smallholder farmers (KNBS, 2022). This leaves both the economy and the farmers who make up the economic base facing significant risk. Shock events in the recent past underscore this truth. Notably, Kenya experienced significant drought events in 2008-2011 (MOALF, 2021), 2016-2017 (Uhe et al., 2018), and 2020-2022 (FAO, 2021). Such shocks have immediate and lasting effects on farmer well-being (Rosenzweig and Binswanger, 1993; Carter, 1997; Morduch, 1995; Hoddinott, 2006; Janzen and Carter, 2019; Malacarne and Paul, 2022), underscoring the pressing need to strengthen the resilience of smallholder farmers. The increased incidence of drought has made it even more crucial that farmers have tools to transfer the risks they face to financial markets. Financial inclusion (e.g. bank account ownership, access to formal credit markets, access to insurance markets, mobile money coverage) among vulnerable rural populations, however, is often low (Lotto, 2022). Innovations in the design and provision of financial technologies have sought to make tools more accessible to smallholder farmers for whom existing products were not available or were prohibitively expensive. These efforts often make use of information and communications technologies to reduce the cost of offering products and to extend their reach into more distant communities (Benami and Carter, 2021). 2023-05-17 2023-08-08T09:33:08Z 2023-08-08T09:33:08Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131471 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134938 Open Access Kramer, Berber; Waweru, Carol; and Malacarne, Jonathan G. 2023. Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers. Presented at the 2023 Agricultural & Applied Economics Association Annual Meeting, Washington DC on July 23-25, 2023. https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/335632
spellingShingle agriculture
economy
smallholders
risk
shocks
drought
resilience
finance
access
markets
insurance
technology
rural populations
gross national product
Kramer, Berber
Waweru, Carol
Malacarne, Jonathan G.
Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers
title Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers
title_full Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers
title_fullStr Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers
title_full_unstemmed Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers
title_short Control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance: Experimental evidence from Kenyan farmers
title_sort control over future payouts and willingness to pay for insurance experimental evidence from kenyan farmers
topic agriculture
economy
smallholders
risk
shocks
drought
resilience
finance
access
markets
insurance
technology
rural populations
gross national product
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/131471
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AT malacarnejonathang controloverfuturepayoutsandwillingnesstopayforinsuranceexperimentalevidencefromkenyanfarmers