Why do the poor need insurance?
2.4 billion people around the world live on $2 a day or less.
They face daily hardships like poor nutrition, short life
expectancy, poor education, and substandard housing. In areas where
HIV/Aids and malaria are prevalent, they often cannot afford the
healthcare they desperately need. When there is a death in the
family, the cost of a funeral can amount to several months' wages.
In rural areas, drought can cause crop failure that brings
starvation and even death.
It is estimated that only eighty million of the poor are now
covered by some form of micro insurance. Most remain without access
to this critical financial service. In India and China, where
organizations are estimated to serve nearly 30 million micro
insurance clients each, the percentage of poor lives insured hovers
below 3%. In Africa this figure is much lower - just 0.3% of the
continent's poor are insured. According to recent data, in 23 of
the poorest 100 countries in the world, there is currently no
identified micro insurance activity, representing an unserved
population of 370 million.
It comes as a surprise to
many people, but microinsurance is an important tool in the
alleviation of poverty. Without access to appropriate low-cost
insurance products, the poor are without a safety net. And a single
setback can cost them what little savings or capital they have.
Yet today, 97% of the world's poor are excluded from formal
insurance. They do seek ways to mitigate risk, but these are often
informal and are not sustainable or scaleable. With microinsurance,
the poor can mitigate those risks that would otherwise cause them
to slide back into the poverty they seek to escape. Microinsurance
seeks to provide those on the lowest incomes with the insurance
products they need and demand.