(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) Dr. Carlos Arce, Senior Economist at the
World Bank, said on Thursday that the institution
was willing to function in a technical advisory
capacity in the Region’s efforts to develop a
disaster risk management strategy for the
agriculture sector.
Speaking at the Caribbean Agriculture Insurance
Symposium on Disaster Risk Management at the Jolly
Beach Resort in Antigua and Barbuda, Dr Arce said
that the Region would be best advised to pursue a
disaster management framework that was feasible,
efficient, and transparent, and one which could be
easily monitored.
The Symposium from June 16-19, has been
coordinated by the CARICOM Secretariat, the Ministry
of Agriculture of Antigua and Barbuda and the
Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on
Agriculture (IICA). The World Bank, the Caribbean
Development Bank, the Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations, the
Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA)
and Government of Australia Aid Programme have
supported the event.
Dr Arce said the World Bank, within the past
decade, had itself been seeking an optimal insurance
strategy for agriculture that was cost effective;
reached small farmers; covered a wide range of
risks; and was easy to administer and operate. In
this pursuit, he said, it had found the
index-insurance mechanism used in the energy sector
in the United States useful.
Index insurance is a mechanism which can be used
in the agriculture sector to measure the impact of
weather risks, using a weather index such as
rainfall to determine payouts rather than the
consequence of weather variability, such as crop
failure. Dr. Arce said that the World Bank had
piloted this mechanism in South Africa, in which
case, farmers needed coverage for drought.
The economist noted that the index-insurance
mechanism was region-specific and presently, the
model that had been developed by the World Bank was
limited, particularly to drought. He stated that he
could not say with certainty that it was the best
option for the Caribbean, but it should be
considered as part of the discourse so that decision
makers to be better informed.
Dr. Arce said index insurance was flexible and
applicable at the micro level to individual farmers;
at the aggregated level to farmers’ organisations;
and applied at the macro level with governments as
the policy holder, pooling the risks of small
farmers.
He said countries like India, Malawi and
Nicaragua had already “tested the waters” and had
recorded some success.
In terms of the applicability of index insurance
to the Caribbean Region, the economist said the
World Bank was willing to share its experience with
technical experts and policy makers, to complement
efforts currently underway towards the development
and management of an efficient agricultural
insurance scheme.
Dr. Arce said that the concept of index insurance
was “very simple”, but modeling it was technically
challenging and complex, and required huge technical
and financial support for its implementation
including significant buy-in by the public sector
for its sustainability.
They were a number of variables in the Region he
noted which would likely pose some challenges to its
implementation. These included the number of
varieties of agricultural crops, as each crop had
varying levels of resilience to weather events, and
the number of small farmers in remote areas.
In that respect, Dr Arce said that the mechanism
would be more viable at the aggregate level through
farmers’ ogranisations. However, he suggested that
small farmers could be covered through a public
sector initiative in which governments pool the
small farmers’ risks and function as the policy
holder.
The economist later pointed out that the
diversity of Region’s agriculture sector was not a
disadvantage, but is in itself a risk management
strategy, as in event of disasters farmers would
lose in some areas and not in others. However, with
a catastrophe, traditional farming coping mechanisms
was no longer an advantage.
Against this backdrop, Dr. Arce commended the
regional approach towards the mitigation of risks in
the sector. He stated that the World Bank will be
“very happy” to help find solutions toward this end.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org