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Communitybased risk management arrangements: Implications for Social Funds

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Title: Communitybased risk management arrangements: Implications for Social Funds


1
Community-based risk management arrangements
Implications for Social Funds
  • Ruchira Bhattamishra, World Bank
  • Christopher B. Barrett, Cornell University
  • November 10, 2008

2
Motivation I
  • There is growing recognition in the development
    community that
  • vulnerability to adverse shocks is a defining
    characteristic of poverty
  • risk management is central to poverty reduction
    policy because uninsured risk exposure is both
    cause and consequence of poverty.

Uninsured risk
Poverty
3
Motivation II
  • There is also growing recognition in the
    development community that
  • community-based and community-driven development
    can be effective in filling key gaps between
    national- and household-level strategies.
  • But theres a major gap in the literature on
    community-based risk management arrangements
    (CBRMAs) hence this survey.

4
Objectives
  • Convey importance of social protection to
    economic growth and poverty reduction
  • Provide catalog of existing community-based risk
    management arrangements (CBRMAs)
  • Discuss strengths and weaknesses of CBRMAs
  • Stimulate discussion of implications for SP
    projects, especially as implemented by Social
    Funds

5
Essential Role of Social Protection
  • Insuring downside risk can stimulate significant
    technology uptake, investment and other behaviors
    that foster growth, especially among the poorest
    and most risk averse subpopulations.
  • Effects of social protection are especially
    pronounced in places characterized by poverty
    traps with multiple welfare equilibria
  • Ex post effectprevents the numbers of
    chronically poor from growing in the wake of a
    shock that destroys productive assets
  • Ex ante effectimproves incentives, crowds in
    private asset accumulation and new technology
    uptake, making sustainable escape from poverty
    more feasible.
  • Both effects reduce the number of households
    needing assistance, which lets true humanitarian
    assistance go further.
  • Lets look a bit more at the economics that
    underlie these claims



6
The Potential of Social Protection
  • Barrett, Carter and Ikegami (2008)
  • offer simulation-based evidence on the impacts of
    social protection.
  • (Solid blue is with social protection, green is
    autarky, red is targeted transfers.)

7
Typology of risks I
  • Covariate risk vs. Idiosyncratic risk
  • Covariate risk affects households in the same
    locate at the same time (e.g., weather,
    disasters, war, prices, financial crises, etc.).
  • Idiosyncratic shocks are (the component) specific
    to one household (e.g., illness, crop yield
    shocks, property loss due to fire or theft,
    etc.).
  • CBRMAs can help households cope with
    idiosyncratic shocks, less so with covariate
    shocks, unless risk is reduced or transferred
    outside the community.
  • The empirical literature suggests that
    idiosyncratic risk is considerable, implying
    significant scope for risk pooling within
    communities.
  • Even covariate risk can be managed within
    communities through risk reduction efforts (e.g.,
    through NRM) and external risk transfer (e.g.,
    through index-based insurance).

8
Typology of risks II
  • Asset risk (loss of human capital, livestock,
    land, etc.) vs. income risk (loss of current
    period revenue)
  • Long-term (structural ) vs. one-off (transitory)
  • Stunting due to drought in Zimbabwe in 1980s
    caused 14 percent reduction in lifetime earnings
    (Alderman et al.2006).
  • Implications for poverty persistence poverty
    traps or at least very slow recovery and thus
    high persistence of shock-induced poverty.
  • CBRMAs can not only address one-off income risk
    but also, and perhaps more importantly,
    longer-term asset risk by developing community/
    individual capabilities.

9
Risk management
  • Typology of strategies under SP Social Risk
    Management (SRM) framework (Holzmann and
    Jorgensen 1999)
  • 1) Risk reduction ex ante reduce exogenous
    income variability and/or probability of asset
    loss (e.g., water control, EGS).
  • 2) Risk mitigation ex ante reduce endogenous
    income variability and/or probability of asset
    loss through portfolio diversification,
    insurance, hedging, etc.
  • 3) Risk coping ex post behavioral adjustment
    (investment and consumption adjustment, asset
    sales, borrowing) and/or risk transfer.
  • Households employ a combination of strategies.
    But poor households typically have limited
    recourse to 1 and 2 and resort to 3, often
    through transfers (gifts, food aid, etc.).

10
Importance of risk sharing
  • Incomplete financial markets leave uninsured
    risk.
  • Sale of assets restricted to those that have
    assets, typically not the poorest, and may seek
    to asset smooth.
  • In the event of common shock, assets and income
    may move together, limiting ability to
    consumption smooth.
  • The poorest (such as disabled, female-headed
    households) often unable/unwilling to access
    public works programs.
  • Informal risk sharing often the only avenue open
    to poor households, but social invisibility/exclus
    ion a problem for the poorest and most marginal
    populations (e.g., Santos and Barrett (2008) in
    Ethiopia, Vanderpuye-Orgle and Barrett
    (forthcoming) in Ghana).

11
Definitions
  • Community based risk management arrangements
    (CBRMAs)
  • Define community loosely in order to include
    agents whose relations have an informal and
    non-market character
  • Include all coordinated strategies used and
    managed by social groupings of individuals for
    the purpose of protection against the adverse
    effects of various types of risk.
  • Include both indigenously developed, informal
    and externally-initiated, semi-formal
    arrangements.

12
Definitions (cont.)
  • Key similarities between indigenous and
    externally-driven CBRMAs Use of interpersonal
    relations in management contract enforcement.
  • Key differences see below

13
Contextualizing CBRMAs in the SRM matrix
14
Contextualizing CBRMAs in the SRM matrix (cont.)
15
Role for Social Protection
  • Limitations of indigenous CBRMAs
  • Exclusion of poorest or other marginalized
    sub-populations
  • Inability to manage covariate risk
  • Role for SP intervention
  • SFs can potentially build on existing
    institutional networks to support CBRMAs
  • Can use large size of networks for risk pooling
    purposes
  • Can build on experience with participatory
    approaches to develop innovative, demand-driven
    risk management products.

16
Range of possible approaches
  • Promote inclusion by provision of subsidies
  • Support start-up of viable MFIs
  • Expand menu of projects
  • Support provision of risk-reducing public goods
  • Support risk coping after covariate shocks via
    intermediaries

17
Enabling inclusion
  • Identify cleavages in existing CBRMAs.
  • Can design safety nets schemes explicitly aimed
    at reducing costs of social interaction between
    different social groups.
  • E.g., Macedonia Community Development Project.
  • Can subsidize cost to poorest households to
    enable their inclusion.
  • E.g., subsidize ex ante contributions for health
    insurance associations.

18
Provision of subsidies (community-level)
  • Cover start-up costs of viable financial
    institutions.
  • E.g., microfinance institutions.
  • Some relevant insights from behavioral economics
  • Cognitive difficulties in assessing risk choice
    bracketing representativeness etc.

19
Expanding menu
  • Include innovative programs.
  • Can go beyond thinking of SF as instrument for
    primarily developing brick-and-mortar outputs
    and providing basic services.
  • Design safety nets schemes explicitly aimed at
    creating behavioral change and supporting risk
    management, both for one-off income risk as well
    as long-term asset risk.
  • E.g., can develop PTAs in addition to building
    schools.

20
Reducing exposure to covariate shocks
  • Provision of risk-reducing public goods and
    services through community arrangements
  • Builds longer-term capacity of community.
  • Addresses not only one-off income risk but also
    more long-term asset risk.

21
Supporting risk coping after covariate shocks via
intermediaries
  • Build capacity of communities to tap into
    reinsurance markets
  • Emphasize risk management rather than crisis
    management.
  • Underwrite start-up costs associated with
    creating risk-transfer products
  • E.g., underwrite cost of developing data series
    for pricing index-based insurance products. These
    are non-manipulable, suitable for risk-layering.
    In addition, they can support risk coping for
    both slow-onset (e.g., drought) as well as
    sudden-onset risk (e.g., earthquake).
  • Use community information for effective two-tier
    allocation of disaster assistance (Alderman
    2001).

22
Potential problems
  • Specific problems affecting Social Fund
    intervention for risk-management
  • Administrative concerns
  • Other problems (which affect community
    initiatives in general)
  • Scalability, crowding-out, etc
  • Manipulation by local elites
  • Corruption
  • Limits of community decision-making
  • See also Mansuri and Rao (2004), Conning and
    Kevane (2002), Ensminger (2007).

23
Administrative concerns
  • Differences in administering periodic investment/
    preparing proposal vs. overseeing regularly
    running program.
  • Expanding menu to include innovative programs
    implies need for new training for program
    managers.

24
Scalability concerns
  • Range of CBRMAs
  • Differences in membership and leadership
    structure, the nature of activities, history,
    longevity, etc.
  • Differences in political economy and
    socio-economic environment.
  • Differences between informal and semi-formal
    arrangements in level of technical/financial and
    accounting assistance required.
  • CBRMAs will have different abilities to
    effectively absorb external assistance, depending
    on the nature of activities, history, etc
  • Lack of existing evidence on impact of scaling
    up

25
Crowding-out concerns
  • Disruption of existing CBRMAs
  • Rockefeller effect external assistance can
    change characteristics of a previously
    effectively functioning group.
  • E.g., Gugerty and Kremer (2008) study in Kenya.

26
Vulnerability to manipulation
  • Project benefits captured by local elites
  • Corruption
  • Decentralized, community-led approaches can
    result in rampant misappropriation of project
    benefits, given the absence of well-functioning
    checks and balances, remote governance
    structures, absence of media, and low levels of
    education.
  • E.g., Ensminger (2007) study in Kenya.

27
Limitations of community management
  • Limitations in technical decision-making and
    management
  • Positive impact of community participation in
    non-technical decision-making (such as
    targeting/project choice) but not so for
    technical decision-making.
  • E.g., Khwaja (2004) study in Pakistan.
  • More complex accounting/financial knowledge
    needed for semi-formal versus informal
    CBRMAs.

28
Moving forward.
  • Need for econometric or experimental evidence
    comparing community-based models with other
    models (e.g., social marketing, public-private
    partnerships, etc.) that do not use community for
    project design or project delivery.
  • Compare impact, cost-effectiveness Social Funds
    can provide valuable crucible for such analyses.
  • Address key questions
  • What are some of the main constraints and
    opportunities for SF programs supporting risk
    management?
  • How can these interventions achieve the right
    scale of implementation?
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