Abstract

This paper is the first result of a policy study carried out for the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), to determine how micro-insurance can help Ethiopia’s poor become more resilient to negative financial shocks. This research focuses on the demand components of micro-insurance, and investigated two main research questions: Do lowincome households in Ethiopia need insurance? If so, would they be willing to buy it if it were made widely available? This study answered these two questions through the combination of a thorough literature review and original qualitative research in four socioeconomic systems of Ethiopia: lowincome urban workers in Addis Ababa; agro-pastoralists in Hagere Mariam, Oromia; pastoralists in Yabello, Oromia; and coffee farmers in the Southern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Region (SNNPR). In addition, this study drew upon original research from Oxfam America’s weather insurance pilot in Tigray. The results of this study indicate the answer to both research questions is affirmative, though the final outcome of the second question depends largely upon whether the eventual supply of insurance products is affordable and truly client-centered. Study recommend the Ethiopian government to take adequate consumer protection measures to ensure the healthy development of this infant industry.

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