Microinsurance Comes of Age

The Christian Science Monitor has an article on how microinsurance is becoming more widely available in the developing world. Modeled on microfinance to some extent, microinsurance also aims to bring financial services within the reach of those with more modest means. Mentioned here are trends in the spread of microinsurance that have led to its expansion in Latin America after first gaining recognition as a financial solution in Asia and Africa. As the stakes for low-income families are rather higher in the event of an unforeseen circumstance, microinsurance shows promise:


Adela Amaya Chavez never considered life insurance. In fact she had no idea what it was. But on a recent day when inquiring about a loan at Banco Azteca to repair the leaky drains in her home in Mexico City, she was told that if she paid an additional $2 a week her family would receive $6,000 if she were to die. Her first thought: the death of her nephew in a car accident in 2003 and the devastation it caused his family. “It was so sudden,” says Ms. Amaya Chavez, who cleans office buildings for a living. She signed up. Once just a safeguard for the middle and upper classes, insurance is finding its way to all sectors of Mexico. For the poorest, microinsurance policies – often simple plans worth tiny sums of money – are giving protection to those Mexicans who work in the informal economy, often don’t have bank accounts, and never dreamed of the luxury of having a Plan B. Asia and Africa have pioneered microinsurance coverage for everything from death to droughts. But a new government-sponsored plan to promote such micropolicies in Mexico – with its sophisticated banking sector and second-largest population in Latin America – could have a ripple effect in the region, experts say. The plan is the first of its kind in Mexico and will focus first on basic life insurance, and later target health and property. What began as a community-based and nonprofit effort is now moving to a commercial venture expected to grow quickly – and could lead millions of Mexicans one step further away from poverty. “Microinsurance can change tremendously the financial stability of these people,” says Alfredo Honsberg, the CEO of Seguros Azteca, which offers tiny policies that cost from 50 cents to $3 a week for clients who take out loans at Banco Azteca or buy products on credit at Elektra electronic stores, where branches of the bank are housed. “The financial impact [of a tragedy] can be devastating to a low-income family. Even kids cannot go to school because they have to work…”
“They’ve never been exposed to any insurance in the past. These people don’t have any bank relationship,” says Daniel Garduno, the CEO of Seguros Banamex, which has offered life insurance to clients of Compartamos, Mexico’s largest microfinance institution, since November 2006. That coverage, which has reached 640,000 clients, is worth $1,400. The group has also launched a pilot program to purchase additional coverage, in increments of $1,400, for $1 to $7 a month. So far Banamex considers it a success: Of all of those offered the product, 50 percent have signed on, or 17,000 individuals. Officials expect to launch the program nationally in August. “The beauty of this is giving access to insurance protection to hundreds of thousands who would never have dreamed of buying an insurance policy,” says Jorge Hierro, executive director of institutional relations at Banamex. Now the government is setting up new standards for microinsurance, to make it easier for institutions to reach the uninsured and to make sure they are protected. Officials hope to have new regulations in place by next month. “We expect massive growth,” says Norma Alicia Rosas, the vice president of studies and analysis at Mexico’s National Insurance and Finance Commission. “Those with few means should be just as protected as the rest.

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