Paper
The Third Way in Social Protection: Group-Based Schemes and the Potential of Micro-Insurance
Micro-insurance as a tool for self-help groups to manage risks
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48 pages
This presentation discusses the importance of micro-insurance in the context of managing risks by self-help groups through group-based schemes. The presentation:
- Identifies an income-based gap in social protection between the formal and informal sectors;
- Lists 3 ways to improve the social protection of low-income groups:
- To extend coverage of social insurance,
- To broaden the outreach of social transfers such as social assistance, public health, etc,
- To support groups in managing their members' risks.
- Supports the third option and states that many societies are very imaginative in developing group-based strategies of social protection that are well adapted to local needs;
- Describes the features of this way and calls it a bottom-up approach;
- Outlines the tasks performed by the government in the bottom-up approach.
The presentation also discusses various methods by which traditional and self-help groups support individuals in managing risks. It then outlines measures by which risk-managing groups can be supported to be more effective; one of these is promoting networking of groups and linkages to formal schemes.Identifying micro insurance as an important concept in this context, the presentation describes:
- The various features of micro-insurance;
- The partner-agent model of micro-insurance;
- Ways in which micro-insurance can be linked to formal social protection.
The presentation also:
- Discusses the reasons for, and the methods by which, the state can offer support to risk-managing groups;
- Provides the example of crop-insurance as a case for sustainable, self-financing schemes;
- Concludes with pointers on how the state could liberalize legislation.
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