Risk and the Extent of Insurance

This paper proposes measures of income risk that households face, and of the extent of insurance effectively delivered by the various coping mechanisms those households use to minimize the consequence of that risk by (1) contrasting the expected utility of consumption an individual has with the utility that she would have from consuming her income in each period, adjusted to account for the price of these coping mechanisms; (2) detailing the steps necessary to apply these measures to panel data of household income and consumption; and (3) measuring income risk, consumption risk, and insurance using the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS). Expected consumption represents on average 65 percent of the expected income for the IFLS households, suggesting households remain willing to forgo a non-negligible amount of consumption in order to smooth it. Comparing risk and insurance across households highlights geography and education as key determinants of the cost of risk for households.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Genicot, Garance, Ligon, Ethan
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-11-12
Subjects:insurance, risk, risk reduction, risk coping, risk avoidance, diversification, savings, borrowing, transfers,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16332
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spelling dig-okr-10986163322021-04-23T14:03:28Z Risk and the Extent of Insurance Genicot, Garance Ligon, Ethan insurance risk risk reduction risk coping risk avoidance diversification savings borrowing transfers This paper proposes measures of income risk that households face, and of the extent of insurance effectively delivered by the various coping mechanisms those households use to minimize the consequence of that risk by (1) contrasting the expected utility of consumption an individual has with the utility that she would have from consuming her income in each period, adjusted to account for the price of these coping mechanisms; (2) detailing the steps necessary to apply these measures to panel data of household income and consumption; and (3) measuring income risk, consumption risk, and insurance using the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS). Expected consumption represents on average 65 percent of the expected income for the IFLS households, suggesting households remain willing to forgo a non-negligible amount of consumption in order to smooth it. Comparing risk and insurance across households highlights geography and education as key determinants of the cost of risk for households. 2013-12-02T19:28:57Z 2013-12-02T19:28:57Z 2013-11-12 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16332 en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic insurance
risk
risk reduction
risk coping
risk avoidance
diversification
savings
borrowing
transfers
insurance
risk
risk reduction
risk coping
risk avoidance
diversification
savings
borrowing
transfers
spellingShingle insurance
risk
risk reduction
risk coping
risk avoidance
diversification
savings
borrowing
transfers
insurance
risk
risk reduction
risk coping
risk avoidance
diversification
savings
borrowing
transfers
Genicot, Garance
Ligon, Ethan
Risk and the Extent of Insurance
description This paper proposes measures of income risk that households face, and of the extent of insurance effectively delivered by the various coping mechanisms those households use to minimize the consequence of that risk by (1) contrasting the expected utility of consumption an individual has with the utility that she would have from consuming her income in each period, adjusted to account for the price of these coping mechanisms; (2) detailing the steps necessary to apply these measures to panel data of household income and consumption; and (3) measuring income risk, consumption risk, and insurance using the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS). Expected consumption represents on average 65 percent of the expected income for the IFLS households, suggesting households remain willing to forgo a non-negligible amount of consumption in order to smooth it. Comparing risk and insurance across households highlights geography and education as key determinants of the cost of risk for households.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
topic_facet insurance
risk
risk reduction
risk coping
risk avoidance
diversification
savings
borrowing
transfers
author Genicot, Garance
Ligon, Ethan
author_facet Genicot, Garance
Ligon, Ethan
author_sort Genicot, Garance
title Risk and the Extent of Insurance
title_short Risk and the Extent of Insurance
title_full Risk and the Extent of Insurance
title_fullStr Risk and the Extent of Insurance
title_full_unstemmed Risk and the Extent of Insurance
title_sort risk and the extent of insurance
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2013-11-12
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16332
work_keys_str_mv AT genicotgarance riskandtheextentofinsurance
AT ligonethan riskandtheextentofinsurance
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