Agric insurance brings stability to farmers
Lazarus
Sauti
EVERY
time climate-induced drought wrecks Zimbabwe, the media is saturated with
pictures of wilting crops and dry pastures strewn with carcasses of livestock.
These pictures confirm that
climate change is real and farmers are losing their crops and livestock.
Armyworms invasions, pests,
and diseases are further compounding the problem for farmers, especially
smallholder ones who contribute over two-thirds of the total agricultural
output in the country.
Unfortunately, they are more
vulnerable to climate risks since they do not have the resources to take
preventive measures or absorb shocks.
“Rainfall variability, harsh
weather conditions, and chronic droughts have badly affected most families here
in Hwedza,” said Sarah Makoni, a smallholder farmer in Gonese, a village in
Hwedza District in Mashonaland East Province of Zimbabwe.
She added that most
smallholder farmers in her area, just like others in semi-arid provinces such
as Manicaland, Masvingo, Mashonaland Central, Matabeleland North, and
Matabeleland South, depend on rain-fed agriculture, and as such climate change
is rapidly threatening sustained agricultural productivity, food security, and
inclusive development.
“We have lost our livestock,
thanks to climate-induced droughts. Our livestock was exposed to diseases.
Though we used various indigenous knowledge techniques like sanitation,
vaccination, and early treatment of diseases, we failed to handle catastrophic
losses,” Makoni said, adding that the Covid-19 pandemic has worsened the food
insecurity situation in her area.
In its recently published 2020 Rural Livelihoods Assessment Report,
the Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee (ZimVac) said the economic
recession and Covid-19 have also pushed more than 5 million Zimbabweans in
rural areas into abject poverty.
ZimVac, in partnership with
the World Food Programme (WFP), United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF), as well
as Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) added that these people require 807
232 tonnes of grain to be food secure.
For the Joint Meeting of the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) Ministers responsible for Agriculture
and Food Security, Fisheries, and Aquaculture, Covid-19 and climate-induced
droughts have pushed fragile member-states closer to the abyss of famine.
The Council of Ministers,
therefore, urged member-states to work towards the implementation of resilience-building
initiatives, improving early warning and response mechanisms, and contingency
planning to lessen the impacts of human security threats such as Covid-19
and food shortages.
“SADC member-states should
expand social safety nets and social protection measures for the poor and
vulnerable, as well as adopt and embrace risk transfer strategies in form of
agriculture insurance for crops and livestock,” said the Council of Ministers.
Launching a virtual Insurance and Pensions Journalists Mentorship
2020 Programme organised by the Insurance and Pensions Commission
(IPEC) and National Social Security Authority (NSSA) recently, IPEC
Commissioner, Grace Muradzikwa said agriculture insurance for crops and
livestock brings stability in production by protecting farmers from the
vagaries of the weather and climate.
“Agriculture insurance for
crops and livestock helps to allay the impact of systemic risks by providing
the much-needed protection and also contributing to the timely recovery in case
a disaster strikes,” she said.
“This would help keep
smallholder farmers out of poverty and enable them to invest in their future.”
Muradzikwa further said her
organisation approved Prescribed Asset (PA) status – an investment in projects
of national importance – towards agriculture financing worth Z$250 million this
year.
“This approval is consistent
with the government’s policy to increase crop and livestock production and help
Zimbabwe to become an Upper Middle Income Economy by 2030,” she added.
Muradzikwa said despite the
significance of insurance in stimulating inclusive development, a recent
baseline survey by IPEC showed that only 34 percent of Zimbabweans have
insurance of some sort, 76 percent of which are in respect of funeral insurance
policies.
"The prevailing low
uptake of insurance products stems from the current Covid-19 pandemic,
retrenchments, company closures, high unemployment levels, hyperinflation, high
levels of premium debtors, liquidity challenges, and insurance fraud," she
added.
Insurance Council of
Zimbabwe (ICZ) Executive Officer, Tendai Karonga said although Zimbabwe’s
economy is agro-based, with agriculture contributing about 17 percent to the
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and about 60 percent of raw materials to the
manufacturing industry, the low uptake of agriculture insurance for crops and
livestock is exposing citizens to food shortages.
“Despite the agricultural
sector being one of the major drivers of the economy, its consumption of
insurance service is very minimal contributing 1.45 percent to the Gross
Premium Written (GPW) for the period January to June 2020,” he said.
Karonga added that the
Covid-19 pandemic, lack of insurance products that address the needs of
smallholder farmers, mistrust in insurance services, and reliance on traditional
self-insurance in risk and loss management are some of the factors affecting
the uptake of agricultural insurance in the country.
“Thin profit margins in the
sector, particularly for small-scale commercial and subsistence farmers and
lack of knowledge on the benefits of insurance and risk management services,
are other factors inhibiting the uptake of agricultural insurance for crops and
livestock,” he added.
True to Karonga's
assertions, Makoni is skeptical about insuring her crops and livestock, citing
inadequate information on agriculture insurance and its importance.
"I am not aware of
agriculture insurance and its importance," she told insure263.co.zw.
"I think those who are involved in selling agriculture insurance are not
reaching out to smallholder farmers in remote areas."
Conversely, ICZ – an
independent self-governing association of short-term insurers and reinsurers in
Zimbabwe duly registered by IPEC – said it is carrying out public awareness and
educational campaigns on insurance products and services as one of its key
activities.
“We are urging insurers to
offer community-based agriculture insurances for the smallholder farmers,
taking advantage of economies of scale concept,” Karonga said.
He added that IPEC, as the
regulator of the insurance sector, is working on a framework to introduce
weather index-based agriculture insurance aimed at boosting the uptake of
agriculture insurance for crops and livestock in the country.
For agricultural extension
officer, Lissom Ngwazani, agriculture insurers should increase their branch
network in all farming areas to enhance the uptake of their products and
services.
“Communication is key,” he
said. “Agriculture insurers should invest in communication and solicit feedback
from farmers on a continued basis to consistently meet customer needs and
enhance service delivery.”
Ngwazani also urged
agriculture insurers to collaborate with financial institutions that provide
agricultural finance to boost efficiency in service delivery.
“For instance, as financial
institutions assess financed agricultural projects, they can also be collecting
data relevant for insurance underwriting; at the same time, insurance premiums
can be paid through the banks and policies issued within bank premises.
Insurers and financial institutions can thus benefit from each other’s client
base,” he added.
To Information Technology
(IT) expert, Mike Sakupwanya, the use of new media tools in promoting
agricultural insurance has the potential to facilitate client uptake, reduce
transaction costs, and improve the efficiency of the insurance process.
He, therefore, urged
smallholder farmers like Makoni and others in the country to take advantage of
mobile phone-based insurance products such as Moovah Crop Insurance cover and
Moovah Livestock Insurance cover respectively.
Moovah Crop Insurance covers
crop destruction by windstorms, uncontrollable pests, stray animals, fire, and
frosts while Moovah Livestock Insurance covers livestock from death, accidental
injuries, or theft.
Kenya-based insurance
practitioner, David Kimwei said while Covid-19 affected the uptake of
agricultural insurance in Kenya and other African states, the pandemic has made
agricultural insurers to adopt online platforms to issue policies and enhance
customer service delivery.
“The insurance sector in
Africa, which was slow in adopting technology, embraced online platforms not
only to fight the pandemic, but also to improve efficiency and enhance customer
service delivery,” he said.
Kimwei continued: “The
mantra was clear: adapt, embrace, and grow or remain stagnant and perish. The
agricultural insurance sector in Africa adapted and embraced technology to make
their services and products more accessible to new and existing customers and
to build and improve insurance products and service models.”
IPEC Insurance Director,
Sibongile Siwela said while Zimbabwe’s insurance sector lacks robust
operational information technology (IT) systems, the insurance sector has invested
in technology to flatten the Covid-19 curve, reach new markets, make insurance
accessible to existing customers, and leverage cross-industry collaborations.
“Insurance companies are
using digital platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, and
webinars (Zoom and Microsoft teams) to fight the Covid-19 pandemic as well as
to optimise costs, decrease premiums, and allow many of the uninsured to take
up insurance tailored to their socio-economic and geographic circumstances,”
she said.
Sharing the same sentiments,
Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (POTRAZ)
Director-General, Gift Machengete added that digital technologies have ensured
business continuity at a time mobility was restricted in Zimbabwe and other
countries.
“Businesses embraced digital
technologies for information dissemination and for forecasting. They held
virtual meetings, cutting on costs associated with physical meetings,” he said.
IT specialist, George
Magombeyi, however, bemoaned the low uptake of agriculture insurance in rural
areas and blamed it on low internet penetration in rural and peri-urban areas
in Zimbabwe.
"This low internet
penetration is caused by poor Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
infrastructure, connectivity issues, expensive data bundles, and digital
illiteracies," he added.
Magombeyi also said IT
security measures of most insurance companies in the country exclude remote
systems access and this restricts access to e-platforms for all aspects of the
insurance business.
He, therefore,
encouraged agriculture insurers and other players in the insurance sector
to be mindful of asymmetric market power, cyber-crime, online misinformation,
data privacy, and platform dominance if they are to benefit from digital
platforms.
Twitter: @lazarussauti
@insure263
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