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Time versus State in Insurance: Experimental Evidence from Contract Farming in Kenya
Lorenzo Casaburi and Jack Willis
American Economic Review. Dec 2018, Vol. 108, No. 12: Pages 3778-3813

Time versus State in Insurance: Experimental Evidence from Contract Farming in Kenya†

Lorenzo Casaburi1 and Jack Willis2

1University of Zurich, Schönberggasse 1, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland (email: )

2Columbia University, 1022 IAB, 420 W 118th Street, New York, NY 10027 (email: )

Abstract

The gains from insurance arise from the transfer of income across states. Yet, by requiring that the premium be paid up front, standard insurance products also transfer income across time. We show that this intertemporal transfer can help explain low insurance demand, especially among the poor, and in a randomized control trial in Kenya we test a crop insurance product which removes it. The product is interlinked with a contract farming scheme: as with other inputs, the buyer of the crop offers the insurance and deducts the premium from farmer revenues at harvest time. The take-up rate for pay-at-harvest insurance is 72 percent, compared to 5 percent for the standard pay-up-front contract, and the difference is largest among poorer farmers. Additional experiments and outcomes provide evidence on the role of liquidity constraints, present bias, and counterparty risk, and find that enabling farmers to commit to pay the premium just 1 month later increases demand by 21 percentage points. (JEL G22, I32, O13, O16, Q12, Q14)