1 / 20

Is Microinsurance Different? Microinsurance PPPs from a Social and Political Science Perspective

Is Microinsurance Different? Microinsurance PPPs from a Social and Political Science Perspective. Tabea Goldboom, Freie Universität Berlin 12 April 2012. Introduction. VidaAgrícola microinsurance scheme. Agricultural Insurance. Life Insurance. Goods Insurance. Bolivian Insurance Firms.

Download Presentation

Is Microinsurance Different? Microinsurance PPPs from a Social and Political Science Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Is Microinsurance Different?Microinsurance PPPs from a Social and Political Science Perspective Tabea Goldboom, Freie Universität Berlin 12 April 2012

  2. Introduction VidaAgrícola microinsurance scheme Agricultural Insurance Life Insurance Goods Insurance Bolivian Insurance Firms Government of Tarija (Departamento) PPP Fundación Profin

  3. Research problem and objective • Research question: In which ways do the perspectives and arguments that social and political scientists have developed with regard to PPPs facilitate research about the institutional processes and outcomes of microinsurance PPPs? • Basic assumption: Microinsurance PPPs are not so different from other PPPs. • Relevance: Understand under which circumstances PPP setups in the field of microinsurance are helpful/ problematic, and in which ways they influence the outcomes of projects.

  4. Content • Research material • Microinsurance PPPs – a brief typology • PPPs – four central themes of discussion • Analysis of the VidaAgrícola scheme • Conclusion • Three discussion points

  5. Research material • Qualitative data: Expert interviews, participant observation, individual and group interviews with the target groups • Fieldwork: in La Paz and Tarija (Bolivia) 2010-2012, total of eight months • Participant observation in detail: e.g. meetings between project partners, market research, discussions with target groups

  6. Microinsurance PPPs – a brief typology …based on primary actors/scope of activity Definition PPP: “… continuous and relatively institutionalized (…) interactions between public and private actors that formally strive for the provision of collective goods, whereas private actors can be for-profit and/ or civil society organizations.” (Schäferhoff et al 2009:10)

  7. PPPs – four central themes of discussion

  8. VidaAgrícola microinsurance scheme Agricultural Insurance Life Insurance Goods Insurance

  9. PPPs – some central lines of discussion

  10. Reasons for the creation/ work division • Specific interests of the private actors: • Seek political support of the farmers’ union • Seek support with regard to commercialization • Specific interests of the public actors: • Want to claim a political success in an overall difficult situation • Under conditions of low resources • Responsibilities of the public actor (Sedag): • Supports commercialization through its decentralized structure • Supports the evaluation of agricultural (yield) losses

  11. PPPs – some central lines of discussion

  12. Effectiveness of this PPP to date • Strengths: • Facilitation of regulatory approval • Facilitation of commercialization through Sedag • (…) • Weaknesses: • Commercialization could have received stronger support • Weak role of Sedag with regard to the evaluation of yield losses  Overall a mixed record. But…

  13. PPPs – some central lines of discussion

  14. Relationships within the PPP and legitimacy • Unequal relationships within the PPP: “You have to talk in the way the client wants you to talk to him. [At least] if you want to use marketing techniques (…). I don’t want you to speak in those very technical terms, don’t come with your watch, at least not your Rolex; come with your local watch. And don’t talk over the shoulder of Elvio [the representative of the farmers’ union]. You have to look into his eyes, even though he is small. Don’t talk with this self-sufficiency of a professional who believes he is superior because he is professional.” (representative of the Sedag, November 2011; own translation)

  15. Relationships within the PPP and legitimacy • This PPP is marked by inequalities on several levels: • Unequal possibilities to influence decision making (low degree of input legitimacy) • Resource differences • Unequal responsibilities • Perceived status differences • Diverging interests?

  16. Conclusion: VidaAgrícola scheme • The specific ways in which inequalities within partnerships are generated and sustained merit close attention: they can put project success at risk. • “Input legitimacy” can be decisive for the output. • It is not only interests and organizational cultures that should not differ too strongly within a PPP. • A look that goes beyond goal attainment (in the narrow sense) helps to explain the success of PPPs. • The overall social and political context matters as it impacts on the workings of the PPP.

  17. Conclusion: microinsurance PPPs • Social and political science perspectives can also be applied to other microinsurance PPPs: • Structure and systematize case studies • Raise questions that are currently not addressed in microinsurance research • Two aspects have received relatively little attention in microinsurance research so far: • Legitimacy of PPPs • Unintended effects of PPPs

  18. Thank you very much for your attention!

  19. Three discussion points • Do these findings mirror some kind of experience that other participants have made in the context of PPPs? • Which aspects of microinsurance PPPs seem to be most relevant from a practical point of view and should be studied in more detail? (motives of creation, effectiveness, unintended effects, legitimacy) • Are there important aspects of microinsurance PPPs that are not mirrored at all by the four strands of social and political science research exposed here?

  20. Institutional setup Who should take responsibility – and for what? Institutional structure of the VidaAgrícola project (Tarija, Bolivia) at the end of 2011 ILO (Microinsurance Innovation Facility) National Government (plans to introduce national agricultural insurance) Lobbying APS: Insurance Regulator La Paz Insurance Firms: Navi, Latina Seguros Fundación Profin PPP Tarija Departm. Govern-ment of Tarija Departmental Agro and Livestock Service: Servicio Departamental Agropecuario (Sedag) Tarija Farmers` Union: Federación Sindical Única de Comunidades Campesinas de Tarija (FSUCCT) „Channels“ = microfinance institutions (sell the microinsurance product) Maize and Potato Farmers in Tarija (are supposed to buy microinsurance) Legend - specific actors: Public institution Private institution with commercial objectives

More Related