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Drawing from Lessons Learned on Index Insurance to Consider Financing Famine Relief Efforts

Drawing from Lessons Learned on Index Insurance to Consider Financing Famine Relief Efforts. Dr. Jerry Skees HB Price Professor, U of KY President, GlobalAgRisk, Inc jskees@qx.net www.GlobalAgRisk.com. Defining the Problem.

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Drawing from Lessons Learned on Index Insurance to Consider Financing Famine Relief Efforts

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  1. Drawing from Lessons Learned on Index Insurance to Consider Financing Famine Relief Efforts Dr. Jerry Skees HB Price Professor, U of KY President, GlobalAgRisk, Inc jskees@qx.net www.GlobalAgRisk.com

  2. Defining the Problem • Famine & Hunger are complex social problems created by numerous interrelated factors • Low incomes • Bad governments • Chronic vs Transitory • Crop failures (weather driven) • High prices due to local shortages

  3. Defining the Problem • The solutions today can help with: • Crop failures (weather driven) • High prices due to local shortages • Transitory shortages Less clear that they can help with: • Low incomes • Bad governments • Chronic shortages

  4. The most common response • Emerging food aid has limitations • Storage problem • Transport problem • Dependency problem • Timing problem • Bad government problem • Political issue among the developed countries

  5. Proposition: • Getting cash to market participants before a transitory food shortage problem emerges is a superior food assistance program • Cash is fungible it can be used for any food stuffs to mitigate the problem

  6. Searching for Solutions that get cash into the country “Food Insecurity in the Least Developed Countries and the International Response” By Michael Trueblood and Shahla Shapouri This paper compares 3 alternatives • Grain options • Revolving import compensation fund • Import insurance Conclusion: All would cost significantly less $300-$600 million per year vs $2.9 Billion

  7. ‘Insurance’ based solutions from Trueblood and Shapouri • All involve protecting the cost of imports at some level • Each is focused on the price side • We consider insurance that protects the supply side

  8. Insuring crop/pasture failures Issues: Traditional crop insurance is a failure Crop failures represent correlated losses; in a classic sense they are not insurable Financial innovations are creating new opportunities Technological innovations enhance those opportunities

  9. Traditional Crop Insurance • A failure Moral hazard/ adverse selection / high monitoring and administrative cost No successful crop insurance in the world when one measures the total cost of the program versus the transfers Have we targeted the wrong level?

  10. Cost Always Exceed Premiums

  11. Consider Drought Insurance • A frequent event (1 in 5 / 1 in 7) with high correlated losses.. Everyone can have a wreck at the same time • Loss function has a thick tail to the right with frequent-heavy losses much more likely than with earthquakes • Classically NOT an insurable risk! • Cause of loss is not easy to verify as a combination of events can cause a crop loss

  12. Financial and Technological Innovations Pave the Way Financial Innovations • Weather markets • Index based insurance • Catastrophe bonds • Blending capital markets with reinsurance markets Technological Innovations • Satellites are measuring weather • Satellites images on vegetative cover • Ground level real-time weather • Computer models to give early warning (LEWS)

  13. Recent Market Innovations for Catastrophes • Catastrophic Bonds in the equity markets • Catastrophic Insurance options on the CBOT • Crop Insurance Yield contracts on CBOT • Over the Counter index trades • Temperature Contracts on the CME • Weather markets and agriculture

  14. Catastrophic BondsDebt instrument or Equity instrument? • Those at risk have a contingent claim on the Bond if the catastrophe occurs • You give me your capital .. I give you a high rate of return unless the catastrophe hits… then I either reduce your return or take your capital • Since 1994..over $10 Billion in deals • Fund managers like CAT Bonds as they are not correlated to other equity markets

  15. Area Yield Insurance • Essentially, an option on county yield. • Indemnity does not depend on farm-level yield! • No moral hazard. • No adverse selection. • Low transactions costs. • Geographic basis risk!

  16. Area Yield Insurance • Need: • County yield history. • Independent party to measure county yield for insured crop year. • Don’t need: • Farm yield history. • Farm yield for insured crop year. • Compliance officers. • Loss adjusters to measure farm-level losses.

  17. US Group Risk Plan • Payments are strictly based on estimates of county yields

  18. Need historic data to develop the PDF

  19. Paying on Index Contracts • Expected county yield =100 • Payment is based on percentage below a trigger yield • EX: Payments begin yields of 90 or less • Actual yield = 70 • Percentage = (90-70)/90 = 22.2% • Payment = Liability Selected x .222% • Premium= Premium rate x Liability

  20. Changing the Loss Function

  21. Alternatives to Area Yields • Is there an objective index that is highly positively correlated with area yields and farm yields? • Weather variables: • Rainfall. • Temperatures. • Satellite images

  22. Romanian Summer Rainfall

  23. Romanian Rain (drought or excess rain) • Strike for drought at 100 mm or below • Strike for excess rain 100 mm or above Simple contract We will pay for every 1 mm of rainfall below 100 mm. You decide where to stop payment and the maximum level of insurance value

  24. Premium • Premium rates are driven by the PDF and actuarial procedures for loading rates • Premium payment = Liability x Premium rate • Question: How does one determine how much liability to purchase? What is at risk?

  25. Index-Based Insurance Products • Example: • Farmer purchases an insurance policy that will pay an indemnity if cumulative precipitation measured at a given location is below a specified level over a period of time. • Indemnities are not based on farmer’s yield; they are paid on an independent source of information

  26. Index-Based Insurance Products • Advantages: • No moral hazard. • No adverse selection. • Low administrative costs (no individual farm loss adjustments). • Easy to understand. • Protects against correlated risk

  27. Weather Index Insurance • Need: • Reliable historical weather data for a given weather station. • Secure and objective source of current weather measurements. • Don’t need: • Farm yield history. • Farm yield for insured crop year. • Compliance officers. • Loss adjusters to measure farm-level losses.

  28. Potential Applications • Weather index insurance can be: • Sold to households at risk • Sold to importers • Sold to governments for disaster aid • Sold to groups of households • Sold to agribusinesses • Used for commercial risk and for emergency assistance

  29. Mexico • Same infrastructure can be used • To sell direct to farmers • To reinsure the crop insurance program • Sold to collective groups (Fondos) • Used for natural disaster relief (Funden) Wider Press Chapter Can Financial Markets be Tapped to Help Poor People Cope with Weather Risks?

  30. Mexico Case Study • December 2001, Agroasemex was the first emerging economy ever to use weather derivatives to reinsure the Mexican crop insurance program • Motivation: Obtain a price for the upper layer of reinsurance (the biggest risk) was lower than other alternatives in the market • Much more activity in Mexico now to use weather measures for disaster payments and insurance

  31. Countries • Argentina (use area yield for disaster pay) • Morocco (rainfall insurance this fall) • Mexico (first reinsurance with weather) • Canada (Alberta & Ontario use rain) • Mongolia (to use mortality rate of animals) • Ukraine (progress toward using rain) • Romania (recommended area yield)

  32. Linking Rainfall Insurance and Water Markets • Rain feeds the system of reservoirs • Rainfall insurance sold to the Irrigation Authority (IA) offers new opportunities • IA could sell quota rights to water with 3 characteristics: 1) ownership and right to use water; 2) right to lease water; and 3) a guarantee that replaces lost water with insurance payments

  33. Linking Rainfall Insurance and Water Markets • How does a quota with these characteristics change the political economy of water markets? • IA sells these quotas to obtain the capital needed to make infrastructure improvements • Burden is on IA to ‘fix things’ and make certain that they can deliver water to quota owners • The IA reinsures the indemnity payments with the rainfall insurance

  34. Moving to a Proposal for Famine • Use the early warning systems to index emerging problems and offer index insurance • Issues Who will pay premium? Who should purchase? How might such a system be implemented?

  35. Global Livestock CRSP - LEWS Livestock Early Warning System for East Africa. …..blending monitoring/modeling and spatial technologies to improve food security of pastoral communities in East Africa Lead Institution:Texas A&M University System Dr. Jerry Stuth, PI

  36. Biophysical Models, Technologies and Spatial Analysis Tools Currently Used in the LEWS Project Process • PHYGROW- hydrologic based, spatially explicit multiple-species plant growth/hydrology/animal grazing model. • NUTBAL- nutritional balance analyzer used to assess nutrient requirements, nutrient intake, milk production, and performance in cattle, sheep, goats and horses with least cost mediation solutions.. • Near Infrared reflectance spectroscopyof (NIRS) – Allows fecal profiling of livestock to determine the quality the forage recently consumed prior to defecating. • Spatial Characterization and GIS tools - GPS units, ACT, ArcView, GS+ • Satellite Imagery - NOAA RFE weather and EROS NDVI data

  37. Systems can focus on local problemsGrid of 12 x 12 km

  38. Using Early Warning Systems for Insurance Contracts • These systems index the deviations from normal • These systems give early warning (up to 90 days) • Insurance model could be indexed with deviations from normal and the early warning information • Insurance would likely have layered payment structure (1 early payment with another payment should certain excess conditions be meet)

  39. Who Could Purchase? • Governments • NGOs who want resources when there is a serious problem • Importers within the country (remember.. If they are concerned about price increases they should purchase more liability) • Microfinance entities within the country for local problems • Villages / households

  40. Who will pay? • Some level of payment could come from the G-8 (for the worst catastrophes) • Some level should come from the end-users • Some payments could be in the form of food stamps • Some payments could come from NGOs • Charity Catastrophe Bonds

  41. Who will supply these index contracts? • A consortium of international reinsurers • Investment banks via famine CAT Bonds • Charity CAT Bonds Keeping some market base is important! Relative risk pricing.. Proper design of contracts Pooling of global risk to make undiversifiable risk diversifiable

  42. Is this doable? • Yes.. I have visited with some key market makers: there is an interest • Developing such a system helps them spread global risk / helps them with an enhanced social image • What is needed?

  43. Rules for Successful Indexes • Easy to understand • Replication • Frequency of Publication • Representative of True Economic Value • Break-down of alternative hedging (Drs. Richard Sandor and Joseph Cole)

  44. Benefits • Gets cash to important stakeholders in the developing country: BEFORE the problem gets too serious • Paves the way for more risk management instruments by providing the important infrastructure for a variety of commercial and social risk problems • Enhances the opportunity to spread global risk

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