Litcius/Paper detail

The perception of climate change and the demand for weather-index microinsurance: evidence from a contingent valuation survey in Nepal

Veeshan Rayamajhee, Wenmei Guo, Alok K. Bohara

2021Climate and Development10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Despite donor assistance and government subsidies, the uptake of microinsurance products to insure against extreme climate events remains low in many climate vulnerable economies. Emerging evidence indicates that various non-price factors such as lack of knowledge, trust in institutions, beliefs, and perceptions about climate change partly explain the low uptake. This study uses the CVM approach to investigate the effect of one such factor – farmers’ climate change perceptions – on the adoption of weather index micro-insurance. We introduce two hypothetical weather index microinsurance products to farming households in Nepal: the first one (basic) insures paddy only, whereas the second one (comprehensive) also insures livestock. We use bivariate probit models with order effects for empirical estimation. We find that households’ ex ante perception of future climate change as well as their ex-post perceptions of past climate change impacts have significant effects on their microinsurance purchase decisions. Mean WTP-values for the basic and comprehensive products are NRs. 3096 and NRs. 13209 respectively. We also find some evidence of crowding-out effects on private risk transfer markets by other public and donor climate adaptation programmes. Our findings suggest that public policies should focus on increasing climate awareness, accountability and the development of competitive microinsurance markets.

Topics & Concepts

MicroinsuranceClimate changeBusinessPublic economicsEmpirical evidenceWillingness to payIndex (typography)Contingent valuationSubsidyEconomicsNatural resource economicsFinanceRisk managementEcologyMarket economyComputer scienceWorld Wide WebPhilosophyBiologyMicroeconomicsEpistemologyAgricultural risk and resiliencePoverty, Education, and Child WelfareIncome, Poverty, and Inequality