Skip to main content

Will rural people be insured, insulated from the 'risks' that make their life vulnerable?

By RR Prasad* 

There have been several major transitions in our thinking about the way Indian villages can be made vibrant laboratories for innovations, entrepreneurship and social and economic change. Historically, policies in relation to rural development in India have been sectorally based. The emphasis has been on the development of a particular sector of the economy, rather than on the development of a particular area.
However, the changed socio-political scenario in the country has now led to the emergence of a new approach – a spatial approach which focuses strides n a particular geographical area, and which seeks integrated development of that area.
The programmes like Saansad Adarsh Gram Yojana (SAGY), Pradhan Mantri Adarsh Gram Yojana (PMAGY), Smart Villages, Five Star Villages Scheme, Lakhpati villages (Jharkhand) etc. are testimonies to this trend. And now the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has planned for setting up model insured villages across the country to increase insurance penetration in rural areas with a special focus on agriculture and allied activities.
In its discussion paper on the concept of setting up model insured villages, the IRDAI has suggested to implement the concept in a minimum of 500 villages in different districts of the country in the first year and increase to a minimum of 1,000 villages in subsequent two years.
Emphasis has been laid on careful selection of the villages considering various relevant aspects and parameters in order to implement the concept successfully for a period of three to five years.
The draft proposal of the IRDAI envisages that insurance for rural people should cover the entire population in villages and their property, farms/crops, farm machinery, vehicles, different village-level services, manufacturing enterprises and other specific insurance needs of the particular village through targeted efforts in a few selected villages.
Thus the challenge lies in selection of the villages where this ambitious and a pioneering programme of promise can be begun to create model insured villages with sustainable outcomes.
How is a village metamorphosed into a model village and what are salient features of a model village? If one takes the literal meaning of a model – it is a design of activity or situation which is considered as an excellent example for replication.
It helps in determining the positive aspects of any given situation, which can be considered for its replication to show an impact at a wider scale. This means that there is no one universal model of a model village. Each village may have its own unique model which will be different from other model villages.
Majority of people, who are living in rural areas, are poor and agriculture is the main source of their income. The main risk for rural farmers in this country is crop failure due to unexpected variations in weather condition. Weather risk, in particular, is pervasive in agriculture. High propensity to natural disasters such as floods, droughts, torrential rains and cyclones pushes agricultural sector into vulnerable position.
Various research studies have highlighted that traditional risk management mechanisms like conventional micro-insurance, crop insurance, and other formal methods such as savings, loans, or informal measures like donations, gifts, mutual insurance networks with neighbors, safety nets, and covariant weather shocks are less effective in covering farmers' losses.
Weather shocks can trap farmers and households in poverty. Accordingly, it is often debated that Weather index-based insurance (WII) for development can be used as a tool to promote agricultural and rural development and can help households, financial service institutions (FSIs) and input suppliers manage low-to-medium frequency risks such as drought or excess rainfall.
The triple dividend of resilience framework seeks to improve the business case for investing in disaster risk management (DRM), suggesting that such investments could yield significant and tangible benefits, even in the absence of a disaster. It highlights three types of benefits (or dividends):
(i) avoiding losses when disasters strike;
(ii) stimulating economic activity by reducing disaster risk; and
(iii) social, environmental and economic benefits associated with specific DRM investments.
The use of the triple dividend framework also helps to pinpoint the added value of insurance schemes by highlighting the nature of the costs and benefits. One of the most direct benefits of well-functioning insurance mechanisms is to compensate policy holders for economic losses determined through physical assessment or according to a predefined index trigger.
Insurance is all about making good the financial loss that occurs due to the death/destruction of an income-generating asset on account of natural or accidental factors. In the context of the rural areas, the income-generating assets may include the rural people and their farm and farm products, agricultural produce, tools and implements like tractors, pump sets and other equipment, livestock and cattle.
In selection of villages for making them insured villages, priority must be given to villages with higher risks and vulnerabilities
The rural people in their villages need to be insured and insulated from all such risks and eventualities which make their life vulnerable in the absence of assured coping strategies. Insurance operates best where it forms part of an integrated approach to risk management, where constraints such as lack of access to finance, improved seed, inputs and markets can be addressed.
In selection of villages for making them insured villages, priority must be given to such villages where the risks and vulnerabilities index profile is highest and then gradually move to the other villages as per the risk profile index. It is also necessary that the outcome indicators of the model insured villages are well developed and monitored so that the processes leading to metamorphosis of the villages into the model insured villages are visible, sustainable, replicable and scalable.
It would be desirable that the proposed model insured village programme (MIV) aligns its objectives with the ongoing similar programmes like SAGY, PMAGY, Smart Villages, Lakhpati Villages (Jharkhand) etc. so that already available institutional and financial support get extended to MIV also in a natural way.
It has also to be ensured that in the selected villages, all ongoing schemes like Atal Pension Yojana, Ayushman Bharat Yojana, Prime Minister Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana. Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana, Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima etc. get converged and implemented in conjunction with the MIV programme so that villagers derive optimum benefits.
The Covid-19 pandemic has undoubtedly strained public budgets in states and cities across the country. The pandemic is putting added emphasis on accelerating the need for institutional capital to become a part of reviving our economy in a more equitable and sustainable manner.
We have to innovate new ways to unlock untapped private capital through sound national policy. The impact investing community can play crucial role in identifying opportunities that will meaningfully transform marginalized groups. Insurance companies are uniquely suited to engage in investing that addresses social and environmental goals.
---
*Formerly with the National Institute of Rural Development & Panchayati Raj, Hyderabad

Comments

DR.A.Venkata Rayudu said…
It's a well thought out Article, wherein a Model Insured Village (MIV)is proposed to be aligned with the existing Schemes like SAGY,PMAGY,SMART villages etc.,
As per the central theme of the Article,priority may be given to the villages located in the specified areas of Integrated Tribal Development Projects/Agencies (ITDPs/ITDAs)to satisfy both Area approach as well as Vulnerability index approach.
DR. A.Venkata Rayudu,Ph.D.,LLB.
Formerly faculty member, Andhra University, Visakhapatnam, AP & Joint Director(Retd),Tribal Welfare Dept, Govt of AP.
Pravin Sharan said…
This lucidly written article made an interesting reading for an insurance professional that I was for 35 years. Penetration of insurance in India, including life insurance, which is better known, is still less than 4% despite opening of the sector some 25 years ago. Hence talking about a village where everyone and everything is insured is a far cry. Therefore, any discussion which promotes deeper penetration of insurance in villages needs to be welcomed by all particularly IRDAI. I remember underwriting animal driven vehicle and agricultural pump set insurance policies in the late eighties. Cattle insurance flourished when Indira Gandhi as PM launched integrated rural development programme (IRDP) and banks were freely advancing cattle loans. Health insurance policies for the less privileged were launched by PSU insurers as early as in 2003 @ Rs 25/- only. Although these products, with the exception of cattle insurance, were never popular. IRDAI must first commission studies to evaluate our past experience with products targeted at rural areas to be able to guide better products and marketing efforts in future. Some of these old products are still available. However IRDAI does not publish company wise data on rural & social sector insurance for public consumption, though it regulates minimum percentage of business to be done in these sectors by companies. Schemes like PMFBY and Ayushman Bharat have given much needed boost to rural insurance, yet as the article points out, much remains to be done.
Pravin Bihari Sharan, former insurance professional and independent researcher. pravinsharan@gmail.com, Bengaluru

TRENDING

Adani coalmine delayed? Australian senate fails to pass crucial "reform" amendment for project's financial closure

Adanis' Mundra power plant, controversial in Australia By  A  Representative In what is being described as a new “new hurdle”, the proposed Adani coalmine in the Queensland state of in Australia failed to get the crucial Australian Parliamentary nod, essential for financial closure for one of the biggest coalmining projects in the world. The government lost the Senate vote 35-33, meaning the legislation won't pass until the Senate returns in mid-June.

Paul Newman wasn't just remarkably talented, he was anti-war activist, disdained Hollywood excesses

By Harsh Thakor*  On January 26th of this year, we celebrated the birth centenary of Paul Newman, one of the finest actors of his era. His passing on September 26, 2008, after a prolonged battle with lung cancer, was met with an outpouring of tributes and remembrances from artists across the film industry, all sharing their thoughts and memories of the legendary actor.  

Aurangzeb’s last will recorded by his Maulvi: Allah shouldn't make anyone emperor

By Mohan Guruswamy  Aurangzeb’s grave is a simple slab open to the sky lying along the roadside at Khuldabad near Aurangabad. I once stopped by to marvel at the tomb of an Emperor of India whose empire was as large as Ashoka the Great's. It was only post 1857 when Victoria's domain exceeded this. The epitaph reads: "Az tila o nuqreh gar saazand gumbad aghniyaa! Bar mazaar e ghareebaan gumbad e gardun bas ast." (The rich may well construct domes of gold and silver on their graves. For the poor folks like me, the sky is enough to shelter my grave) The modest tomb of Aurangzeb is perhaps the least recognised legacies of the Mughal Emperor who ruled the land for fifty eventful years. He was not a builder having expended his long tenure in war and conquest. Towards the end of his reign and life, he realised the futility of it all. He wrote: "Allah should not make anyone an emperor. The most unfortunate person is he who becomes one." Aurangzeb’s last will was re...

Chhattisgarh's CFR management plan implementation under PM-DA JGUA: A promising start

By Dr. Manohar Chauhan*  Chhattisgarh is poised to benefit significantly from the Pradhan Mantri Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Uttkarsh Abhiyan (PM-DA JGUA) Mission, launched by the Prime Minister on October 2, 2024.  This mission aims to support 400 gram sabhas in the state in developing and implementing Community Forest Resource (CFR) Management Plans.

Health expert Dr Amitav Banerjee on commercialization of healthcare and neglect of natural immunity

By AK Shiburaj  In an interview with me, eminent health expert Dr. Amitav Banerjee has examined the impact of privatization on the healthcare sector, the implications of the World Health Organization (WHO) becoming a commercially driven entity, and the consequences of a pharmaceutical industry prioritizing profit over public health. He argues that an approach ignoring the importance of natural immunity fosters a drug-centric system that undermines the benefits of modern medicine.

Haven't done a good deed, inner soul is cursing me as sinner: Aurangzeb's last 'will'

Counterview Desk The Tomb of Aurangzeb, the last of the strong Mughal emperors, located in Khuldabad, Aurangabad district, Maharashtra, has this epitaph inscribed on it: "Az tila o nuqreh gar saazand gumbad aghniyaa! Bar mazaar e maa ghareebaan gumbad e gardun bas ast" (the rich may well construct domes of gold and silver on their graves. For the poor folks like me, the sky is enough to shelter my grave).

Hyderabad seminar rekindles memories of the spark lit 50 years ago by students

By Harsh Thakor*  History is something we constantly remember and reflect upon, but certain moments and events bring it back to our memory in a special way. For the Telugu people, and Telangana in particular, the memorial seminar held on February 20–21 was a significant occasion to recall the glorious events, transformations, leaders, and heroes of past struggles. Thousands of students rewrote the history of people's movements in Andhra Pradesh, carrying revolutionary zeal and the spirit of self-sacrifice to levels comparable to the Russian and Chinese Revolutions.

Trust, we (from People to PM and President) did not take a Holy Dip in some Holy Shit!

By Dr Mansee Bal Bhargava  I could see two deeply interlinked aspects between human and water in #MahaKumbh2025. Firstly, the HOPE that a ‘holy dip’ in the River Ganga (colloquially referred as dubki and spiritually as ‘Snan’) will cleanse oneself (especially the sins); and secondly, the TRUST that the water is pure to perform the cleansing alias living the hope. Well, I consider hope to be self-dependent while, trust is a multi-party dependent situation. The focus here is on the trust and I shall write later on hope.

Democratic Front Against Operation Green Hunt condemns alleged extrajudicial killings in Chhattisgarh

By Harsh Thakor*  The recent encounter in Indravati National Park, Bijapur district, in which 31 Maoists were killed, has brought the total Maoist casualties in Chhattisgarh this year to 81. Following this incident, Union Home Minister Amit Shah reiterated the government’s objective of eliminating "Left-wing extremism" in India by March 2026. This was the second-largest reported Maoist casualty in a single security operation, following the deaths of 38 Maoists in Narayanpur’s Thulthuli on October 3, 2024.

Operation Kagar represents Indian state's intensified attempt to extinguish Maoism: Resistance continues

By Harsh Thakor Operation Kagar represents the Indian state's intensified attempt to extinguish Maoism, which claims to embody the struggles and aspirations of Adivasis. Criminalized by the state, the Maoists have been portrayed as a threat, with Operation Kagar deploying strategies that jeopardize their activities. This operation weaves together economic, cultural, and political motives, allegedly with drone attacks on Adivasi homes.