Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh

Most index-based insurance products have been developed without giving explicit attention to gender. However, there is ample evidence that shocks affect men and women differently and that they allocate resources in different ways. In Bangladesh it is often assumed that women are less involved in agr...

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Main Authors: Clarke, Daniel J., Kumar, Neha
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149858
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author Clarke, Daniel J.
Kumar, Neha
author_browse Clarke, Daniel J.
Kumar, Neha
author_facet Clarke, Daniel J.
Kumar, Neha
author_sort Clarke, Daniel J.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Most index-based insurance products have been developed without giving explicit attention to gender. However, there is ample evidence that shocks affect men and women differently and that they allocate resources in different ways. In Bangladesh it is often assumed that women are less involved in agriculture, and therefore agricultural insurance might not be of interest to rural women. However, this assumption has not been tested in the field. This paper draws from a field research experiment to examine the gendered aspects of willingness to pay for index-based insurance in Bangladesh. Participants were presented with risky lotteries and a specific insurance contract and were asked to choose how much (if any) of the insurance they wanted to buy at a given price. The probability structure (whether the risk was catastrophic or moderate and whether there was high or low basis risk) varied within sessions. The price of the insurance varied across sessions. Each participant was also administered a short questionnaire, which collected information on demographic characteristics, risk preferences, agricultural risks, knowledge of insurance products, and asset ownership. Ninety-seven percent of the participants in the study decided to buy agricultural insurance, with no significant differences between men and women, even though women are less involved in agricultural decisionmaking. We find a small decrease in take-up for the low-probability event, driven by the women in the sample. When we examine the number of units bought, we find that men were likely to buy more units than women. Total wealth, as captured by total land owned, had no effect on units bought. However, among women total wealth mattered and had a positive correlation. Finally, we find that women had less education and lower financial literacy than their male counterparts, as well as less background in understanding agricultural risk. This placed them at a disadvantage when making insurance purchase decisions.
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spelling CGSpace1498582025-11-06T05:02:19Z Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh Clarke, Daniel J. Kumar, Neha insurance economic shock gender agricultural insurance risk analysis risk finance women capacity building Most index-based insurance products have been developed without giving explicit attention to gender. However, there is ample evidence that shocks affect men and women differently and that they allocate resources in different ways. In Bangladesh it is often assumed that women are less involved in agriculture, and therefore agricultural insurance might not be of interest to rural women. However, this assumption has not been tested in the field. This paper draws from a field research experiment to examine the gendered aspects of willingness to pay for index-based insurance in Bangladesh. Participants were presented with risky lotteries and a specific insurance contract and were asked to choose how much (if any) of the insurance they wanted to buy at a given price. The probability structure (whether the risk was catastrophic or moderate and whether there was high or low basis risk) varied within sessions. The price of the insurance varied across sessions. Each participant was also administered a short questionnaire, which collected information on demographic characteristics, risk preferences, agricultural risks, knowledge of insurance products, and asset ownership. Ninety-seven percent of the participants in the study decided to buy agricultural insurance, with no significant differences between men and women, even though women are less involved in agricultural decisionmaking. We find a small decrease in take-up for the low-probability event, driven by the women in the sample. When we examine the number of units bought, we find that men were likely to buy more units than women. Total wealth, as captured by total land owned, had no effect on units bought. However, among women total wealth mattered and had a positive correlation. Finally, we find that women had less education and lower financial literacy than their male counterparts, as well as less background in understanding agricultural risk. This placed them at a disadvantage when making insurance purchase decisions. 2015-11-04 2024-08-01T02:50:06Z 2024-08-01T02:50:06Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149858 en https://doi.org/10.1177/0971852416639784 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149857 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Clarke, Daniel J.; Kumar, Neha. 2015. Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1465. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149858
spellingShingle insurance
economic shock
gender
agricultural insurance
risk analysis
risk
finance
women
capacity building
Clarke, Daniel J.
Kumar, Neha
Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
title Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
title_full Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
title_fullStr Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
title_short Microinsurance decisions: Gendered evidence from rural Bangladesh
title_sort microinsurance decisions gendered evidence from rural bangladesh
topic insurance
economic shock
gender
agricultural insurance
risk analysis
risk
finance
women
capacity building
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/149858
work_keys_str_mv AT clarkedanielj microinsurancedecisionsgenderedevidencefromruralbangladesh
AT kumarneha microinsurancedecisionsgenderedevidencefromruralbangladesh