Productivity, credit, risk, and the demand for weather index insurance in smallholder agriculture in Ethiopia

被引:77
|
作者
McIntosh, Craig [1 ]
Sarris, Alexander [2 ]
Papadopoulos, Fotis [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Diego, Grad Sch Int Relat & Pacific Studies, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA
[2] Univ Athens, Dept Econ, Athens 10559, Greece
关键词
Fertilizer; Weather index insurance; Ethiopia agriculture; C83; G22; Q12; TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION; FERTILIZER; MARKETS; ACCESS;
D O I
10.1111/agec.12024
中图分类号
F3 [农业经济];
学科分类号
0202 ; 020205 ; 1203 ;
摘要
The article explores the relationship between fertilizer use and the demand for weather index insurance (WII) among smallholder farmers in Ethiopia. We examine whether fertilizer use is profitable under current smallholder production conditions, whether risk-related factors affect fertilizer use, and we estimate the returns to inputs in the agricultural production function in the absence of insurance. We then study how these primitives of agricultural production functions relate to insurance demand. The study compares a survey-based estimate of willingness to pay with actual uptake for the weather insurance, finding the stated and actual demand to be almost completely uncorrelated. While those with high marginal returns to inputs say they would purchase insurance, only those with low marginal returns actually do, consistent with the stated purpose of the product as input insurance. Insurance demand proves to be highly responsive to the existence and amount of randomly allocated insurance vouchers.
引用
收藏
页码:399 / 417
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Risk Transfer Mechanism for Agricultural Products Supply Chain Based on Weather Index Insurance
    Fu, Hongyong
    Li, Jiawen
    Li, Yujie
    Huang, Shengzhong
    Sun, Xiangkai
    [J]. COMPLEXITY, 2018,
  • [42] Phenology Information Contributes to Reduce Temporal Basis Risk in Agricultural Weather Index Insurance
    Dalhaus, Tobias
    Musshoff, Oliver
    Finger, Robert
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
  • [43] Phenology Information Contributes to Reduce Temporal Basis Risk in Agricultural Weather Index Insurance
    Tobias Dalhaus
    Oliver Musshoff
    Robert Finger
    [J]. Scientific Reports, 8
  • [44] Adoption of weather-index insurance: learning from willingness to pay among a panel of households in rural Ethiopia
    Hill, Ruth Vargas
    Hoddinott, John
    Kumar, Neha
    [J]. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2013, 44 (4-5) : 385 - 398
  • [45] Enhanced Weather-Based Index Insurance Design for Hedging Crop Yield Risk
    Sun, Yan
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2022, 13
  • [46] Mitigating risk for floodplain agriculture in Amazonia: a role for index-based flood insurance
    List, Geneva
    Laszlo, Sonia
    Coomes, Oliver T.
    [J]. CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT, 2020, 12 (07) : 649 - 663
  • [47] Design of an index-based insurance for hedging the risk of hydrological drought in irrigated agriculture
    Antonio Gomez-Limon, Jose
    Dolores Guerrero-Baena, Maria
    [J]. AGUA Y TERRITORIO, 2019, (13): : 79 - 92
  • [48] The efficiency of composite weather index insurance in hedging rice yield risk: evidence from China
    Shi, Hong
    Jiang, Zhihui
    [J]. AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 2016, 47 (03) : 319 - 328
  • [49] Can Satellite-Based Weather Index Insurance Hedge the Mortality Risk of Pine Stands?
    Koelle, Wienand
    Buchholz, Matthias
    Musshoff, Oliver
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FOREST ECONOMICS, 2021, 36 (04): : 315 - 350
  • [50] Willingness to pay for weather index-based insurance in semi-subsistence agriculture: evidence from northern Togo
    Ali, Essossinam
    Egbendewe, Aklesso Y. G.
    Abdoulaye, Tahirou
    Sarpong, Daniel B.
    [J]. CLIMATE POLICY, 2020, 20 (05) : 534 - 547