Improving Farmers’ Access to Agricultural Insurance in India

India's crop insurance program is the world's largest with 25 million farmers insured. However, issues in design, particularly related to delays in claims settlement, have led to 95 million farmer households not being covered, despite significant government subsidy. To address this and other problems, the Government of India is piloting a modified National Agricultural Insurance Scheme, a market-based scheme with involvement from the private sector. Compared with the existing scheme, the new program has a design that can offer more timely, claim settlement, less distortion in the allocation of government subsidies and cross-subsidies between farmer groups, and reduced basis risk. Implementation and technical challenges lie ahead which can be addressed but will require a comprehensive strategy, innovative solutions, and timely roll out. This paper describes and analyzes both programs, and discusses lessons learned in developing and implementing the new program.

Topics
Sovereign for Country
DRF on Homeowners and Small Businesses
DRF on Analytics
DRF on Natural Disasters
DRF Training and Knowledge
DRF on Sovereigns
DRF on Agriculture
Regions & Countries
South Asia
India
Date of Publication
Jan 2012