Improving humanitarian response to slow-onset disasters using famine indexed weather derivatives
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Chantarat, S.; Turvey, C.G.; Mude, A.G.; Barrett, C.B. 2008. Improving humanitarian response to slow-onset disasters using famine indexed weather derivatives. Agricultural Finance Review 68(1):169-195.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/910
Abstract/Description
This paper illustrates how weather derivatives indexed to forecasts of famine can be designed and used by operational agencies and donors to facilitate timely and reliable financing, for effective emergency response to climate-based, slow-onset disasters such as drought. We provide a general framework for derivative contracts, especially in the context of index insurance and famine catastrophe bond, and show how they can be used to complement existing tools and facilities in drought risk financing through a risk-layering strategy. We use the case of arid lands of northern Kenya, where rainfall proves a strong predictor of widespread and severe child wasting, to provide a simple empirical illustration of the potential contract designs.
CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
Andrew Mudehttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4903-6613
Notes
Andrew G. Mude is ILRI author

