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InsuranceSubmitted by Rob Katz on December 23, 2008 - 12:21.
Press Release
Microfinance Leader Makes Multi-Million Dollar Investment in Microinsurance Companies
WASHINGTON, Dec. 23 -- ACCION(R) International, a pioneer and leader in global microfinance, today announced that it plans to expand its investments to support the development and marketing of microinsurance services to the poor.
Click "Read More" for details. add new comment | 926 reads
Submitted by Rob Katz on December 1, 2008 - 10:39.
Published in: Insurance | TheNext4Billion
Forbes
From Microfinance to Microinsurance
By Andrew Kuper
The financial services industry is facing unprecedented challenges worldwide due to excessive risk-taking. Complicated investment vehicles, insufficient transparency and excessive swapping of credit default risk have had a severe and pervasive impact on confidence. The world's most advanced markets for financial services are reeling in uncertainty. Standing in stark contrast to these perilous markets is the largest, most underserved market per capita in existence today: the low-income population in developing countries. According to the International Finance Corporation in a joint report with the World Resources Institute, this population of low-income consumers "at the base of the pyramid" has $5 trillion in annual purchasing power globally. add new comment | 997 reads
Submitted by Manuel Bueno on February 19, 2008 - 07:08.
Financial services can be a fiendishly hard thing to measure, but is at the same time a crucial tool to develop markets for BoP customers. In fact, financial markets often help other BoP markets flourish. Data measuring access and efficiency in financial markets are notoriously hard to come across in emerging countries, because most of these markets lie under the cover of informal economies. A new publication by the World Bank, Finance for All? Policies and Pitfalls in Expanding Access, tries to give an overview of the most recent advances and conclusions about the improvement of access to financial services for the poor. It is a superb report. Superb, but very hard to read. For those who want to avoid the econometrics and statistical analysis, I would suggest reading only the Overview. The study analyzes how financial access provides opportunities for the poor and for small to medium sized enterprises (SMEs). Since a defining characteristic of BoP markets is their non-integration with global markets and their subjection to higher prices (monetary or not) for most of their goods, building inclusive financial systems means equalizing opportunities between BoP and non-BoP markets. (This post continues past the break; click "Read More" to continue) Submitted by Rob Katz on December 20, 2007 - 09:09.
Published in: Insurance
Press Release
ILO and Gates foundation join forces to develop range of insurance products in developing countries
The International Labour Organization (ILO) today announced a partnership with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that aims to develop new kinds of insurance and improve existing products to promote decent work for tens of millions of low-income people in the developing world.
The US $34 million Gates Foundation grant will help create the Microinsurance Innovation Facility, a one-of-a-kind, five-year initiative that will provide grants and technical assistance to dozens of organizations serving the poor. Over the course of the next three years, the facility will issue bi-annual requests for proposals and provide funding to pilot new insurance products, improve efficiency in the field, and use technology to create new products that better meet people’s needs. The facility will also train technical specialists to help replicate successful models. add new comment | 1543 reads
Submitted by Abigail Keene-B... on December 17, 2007 - 12:33.
Published in: Business Development | Financial Services | Housing | Insurance | Microfinance | Strategy | Latin America
BusinessWeek
Compartamos: From Nonprofit to Profit
Banco Compartamos portrays itself as the gentler lender to Mexico's poor. Compartamos means "let's share," reflecting the philosophy of its founder, José Ignacio Avalos Hernández. The scion of a cosmetics business family, Avalos, 48, is a devout Catholic who in 1990 converted a nonprofit donating food and clothing to the deprived into one that made loans guaranteed by borrowers' neighbors.
Clients, mostly women, gather weekly in groups of 12 or more. They can borrow only for small businesses, not consumer purchases, and they agree to see that the creditor gets its money back, even if the group has to make up the difference when a member falters. Peer pressure substitutes for motorcycle-mounted collection agents. In 2000, Compartamos sought greater scale by becoming a for-profit, which led to the founding of the bank in 2006. 1 comment | 1400 reads
Submitted by Ana Escalante on September 24, 2007 - 09:33.
Published in: Insurance | Latin America
Jamaica Gleaner
LOJ Launches New Protector Policies: Targeted at Persons with Small Incomes
Life of Jamaica (LOJ) has launched a new insurance product, the 'Protector Series', targeting a mass market of small and micro businesses as well as persons in lower-income groups.
add new comment | 1360 reads
Submitted by Ana Escalante on August 10, 2007 - 10:04.
Published in: Insurance
Business Wire
Visa Credit Cards Issuance Grew 37%
The Demand for Credit Payment Solutions by Entry-Level Consumers Was a Significant Driver for Growth.
2 comments | 1544 reads
Submitted by Julia Tran on April 26, 2007 - 12:01.
Cheikh Mbengue, an expert from Abt Associates on community-based health insurance (CBHI) schemes in Africa, said something that perked my ears last Wednesday at a USAID After Hours Seminar on microinsurance. He said that he thinks CBHIs can't function effectively without subsidies. No one has really talked about subsidies in the BOP space. The message is always, "get prices down low enough, quality up high enough, distribution wide enough, and you've got a market at the BOP." In some instances, especially in fields with higher R&D, manufacturing, management, and labor costs like healthcare, extending the necessary suite of services to lower-income BOP may require government involvement, possibly with donor backing, in addition to entrepreneurialism, innovation, and investment. Mbengue began the discussion by giving a brief history of CBHIs in Africa. In the 1990s, governments built up their health infrastructure, but facilities stood empty because people were too poor to pay for services. So individual communities resorted to creating their own insurance schemes, taking care of collection, management and disbursement on the community level. In 11 West and Central Africa countries, there were 76 schemes in 1999. By 2003, the total jumped to 366 schemes. Rwanda has been most successful in scaling insurance to the national level, and had 228 CHBIs by 2004 covering approximately 20% of the population. Submitted by Nitin Rao on March 23, 2007 - 08:19.
Published in: Insurance | Microfinance
Submitted by Rob Katz on February 12, 2007 - 16:00.
Published in: Insurance
Wall Street Journal
Insurers Seek Growth in Developing Markets
Seeking potential sources of future growth, AIG and its international rivals are racing to sell insurance in the developing world, from sprawling markets like India to smaller ones like Romania and Nicaragua. In remote areas, insurers must teach the concept of insurance to populations who have never bought any. Sometimes, as in parts of northern Uganda, the local language doesn't even have a word for it.
To penetrate these markets, insurers are devising unusual policies, charging as little as 50 cents to insure everything from television sets to burial costs. They're forgoing traditional documentation requirements, sometimes selling life insurance to people who don't know when they were born. add new comment | 2216 reads
Submitted by Rob Katz on January 3, 2007 - 10:43.
Published in: Insurance | Latin America
BusinessWeek
Mexican insurers go for 'microinsurance'
Just as Mexico's microfinance lenders have carved out a lucrative niche making tiny loans to some of the country's smallest entrepreneurs, a handful of insurers are proving that it can be profitable to sell life insurance to the country's working poor and lower-middle class.
add new comment | 2807 reads
Submitted by Seema Patel on November 9, 2006 - 16:31.
Published in: Business Development | Consumer Products | Financial Services | General Banking | Health | Insurance | Microfinance | Strategy
NextBillion’s news section contains 4 new items, all of which pertain to “risk” in relation to the BOP community. But this risk I am referring to is two-fold. These news items address the wrongly perceived notion by commercial banks and insurance companies that the poor are 'high risk.' But the flip side, the newsworthy aspect, is that now these companies are seeing opportunity instead of risk. In fact, they are making it their job to reduce the risk to the poor using multiple approaches. Click "Read More" to read about these approaches... Submitted by Rob Katz on November 9, 2006 - 13:01.
Christian Science Monitor
Micro health insurance hedges risk for India's poorest
Nandakumar Rajeshirke was suspicious of health insurance when he first heard about the idea three years ago. He had trouble understanding why it made sense to gamble on an unforeseen illness or accident when there was no guarantee he would ever see any money in return.
3 comments | 5905 reads
Submitted by Rob Katz on October 11, 2006 - 09:49.
Published in: Insurance | South Asia
The Economic Times of India
Kalam unveils LIC's micro iinsurance product add new comment | 1798 reads
Submitted by Derek Newberry on September 8, 2006 - 10:05.
Published in: Insurance | Asia Pacific
China Daily
Rural life insurance rules to be tightened
"Comparatively high premiums, inflexible payment terms and incomprehensible policy clauses are the major problems," said Zhou Fuping, a researcher at the CIRC, adding most insurers made little or even no changes to policies in rural areas.
"To give farmers more choices, insurers are encouraged to offer more affordable policies and easy to understand clauses when entering the rural market," said Gong. "We will soon embark on a pilot programme that differentiates premiums in different regions." add new comment | 2284 reads
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