Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia

The Mongolian rural economy is based on livestock reared by semi-nomadic herders. Agriculture contributes around 20 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, and herding accounts for more than 80 percent of agriculture. According to the 2008 livestock census, Mongolia has about 44 million hea...

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Main Authors: Mahul, Olivier, Belete, Nathan, Goodland, Andrew
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161887
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author Mahul, Olivier
Belete, Nathan
Goodland, Andrew
author_browse Belete, Nathan
Goodland, Andrew
Mahul, Olivier
author_facet Mahul, Olivier
Belete, Nathan
Goodland, Andrew
author_sort Mahul, Olivier
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The Mongolian rural economy is based on livestock reared by semi-nomadic herders. Agriculture contributes around 20 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, and herding accounts for more than 80 percent of agriculture. According to the 2008 livestock census, Mongolia has about 44 million head of livestock, consisting of goats, sheep, cattle, yaks, horses, and camels. Livestock provide sustenance, income, and wealth to nearly half the residents of Mongolia. Shocks to the well-being of livestock therefore have devastating implications for the rural poor and for the overall Mongolian economy. Major shocks are common because Mongolia has a harsh climate where animals are herded with limited shelter. From 2000 to 2002, harsh winters (dzud) killed 11 million animals. The Government of Mongolia has struggled with the obvious question of how to address this problem. Managing risk in the livestock sector requires a combination of risk mitigation and financial approaches. Pastoral risk mitigation, including winter shelters, fodder crop storage, and improved management of winter pastures, can help herders better prepare for moderate weather events. In extreme dzud events—that is, sudden-onset winter storms with very low temperatures, high winds, and heavy snow—high levels of livestock mortality are often unavoidable. Pastoral and herd management must therefore be complemented by financial mechanisms that provide herder households with immediate liquidity after a disaster. In 2001 the Government of Mongolia requested assistance from the World Bank to address the problem of frequent high death rates in the livestock population. Traditional indemnitybased livestock insurance (based on individual losses) has proved ineffective in Mongolia because of the high cost of covering animals spread across vast areas, ex ante moral hazard (herders failed to protect their livestock), and ex post moral hazard (herders falsely reported animal deaths). The World Bank recommended an index-based insurance program based on livestock mortality rates by species and soum (county), as well as a comprehensive riskfinancing strategy including self-insurance by herders, market-based insurance, and a social safety net. Index-based insurance can lower administrative costs and reduce moral hazard and adverse selection. Its main disadvantage is the presence of basis risk—that is, the index payout may not exactly match the individual livestock loss.
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spelling CGSpace1618872025-11-06T04:32:31Z Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia Mahul, Olivier Belete, Nathan Goodland, Andrew rural economy livestock pastoralists gross national product pastoral risk mitigation livestock management insurance The Mongolian rural economy is based on livestock reared by semi-nomadic herders. Agriculture contributes around 20 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, and herding accounts for more than 80 percent of agriculture. According to the 2008 livestock census, Mongolia has about 44 million head of livestock, consisting of goats, sheep, cattle, yaks, horses, and camels. Livestock provide sustenance, income, and wealth to nearly half the residents of Mongolia. Shocks to the well-being of livestock therefore have devastating implications for the rural poor and for the overall Mongolian economy. Major shocks are common because Mongolia has a harsh climate where animals are herded with limited shelter. From 2000 to 2002, harsh winters (dzud) killed 11 million animals. The Government of Mongolia has struggled with the obvious question of how to address this problem. Managing risk in the livestock sector requires a combination of risk mitigation and financial approaches. Pastoral risk mitigation, including winter shelters, fodder crop storage, and improved management of winter pastures, can help herders better prepare for moderate weather events. In extreme dzud events—that is, sudden-onset winter storms with very low temperatures, high winds, and heavy snow—high levels of livestock mortality are often unavoidable. Pastoral and herd management must therefore be complemented by financial mechanisms that provide herder households with immediate liquidity after a disaster. In 2001 the Government of Mongolia requested assistance from the World Bank to address the problem of frequent high death rates in the livestock population. Traditional indemnitybased livestock insurance (based on individual losses) has proved ineffective in Mongolia because of the high cost of covering animals spread across vast areas, ex ante moral hazard (herders failed to protect their livestock), and ex post moral hazard (herders falsely reported animal deaths). The World Bank recommended an index-based insurance program based on livestock mortality rates by species and soum (county), as well as a comprehensive riskfinancing strategy including self-insurance by herders, market-based insurance, and a social safety net. Index-based insurance can lower administrative costs and reduce moral hazard and adverse selection. Its main disadvantage is the presence of basis risk—that is, the index payout may not exactly match the individual livestock loss. 2009 2024-11-21T09:59:09Z 2024-11-21T09:59:09Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161887 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Mahul, Olivier; Belete, Nathan; Goodland, Andrew. 2009. Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia. 2020 Vision Focus Brief 17(9). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161887
spellingShingle rural economy
livestock
pastoralists
gross national product
pastoral risk mitigation
livestock management
insurance
Mahul, Olivier
Belete, Nathan
Goodland, Andrew
Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia
title Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia
title_full Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia
title_fullStr Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia
title_full_unstemmed Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia
title_short Innovations in insuring the poor: Index-based livestock insurance in Mongolia
title_sort innovations in insuring the poor index based livestock insurance in mongolia
topic rural economy
livestock
pastoralists
gross national product
pastoral risk mitigation
livestock management
insurance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/161887
work_keys_str_mv AT mahulolivier innovationsininsuringthepoorindexbasedlivestockinsuranceinmongolia
AT beletenathan innovationsininsuringthepoorindexbasedlivestockinsuranceinmongolia
AT goodlandandrew innovationsininsuringthepoorindexbasedlivestockinsuranceinmongolia