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Journal ArticleOpen Access

The influence of gender and product design on farmers’ preferences for weather-indexed crop insurance

Author Affiliations
National University of Singapore, International Rice Research Institute, International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
Published InGlobal Environmental Change
Year2016
Citations142

Abstract

Theoretically, weather-index insurance is an effective risk reduction option for small-scale farmers in low income countries. Renewed policy and donor emphasis on bridging gender gaps in development also emphasizes the potential social safety net benefits that weather-index insurance could bring to women farmers who are disproportionately vulnerable to climate change risk and have low adaptive capacity. To date, no quantitative studies have experimentally explored weather-index insurance preferences through a gender lens, and little information exists regarding gender-specific preferences for (and constraints to) smallholder investment in agricultural weather-index insurance. This study responds to this gap, and advances the understanding of preference heterogeneity for weather-index insurance by analysing data collected from 433 male and female farmers living on a climate change vulnerable…
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