eMKambo Vibes – 29 May 2017
Using market evidence to protect smallholder farmers from price variability That most African smallholder farmers can produce enough commodities for household consumption and surplus for the market is now beyond question. The majority of committed farmers have mastered the art of producing almost any commodity. What remains outside their control are market dynamics such as prices as well as supply and demand trends. The situation is worse in informal agricultural markets through which more than 70 percent of agricultural commodities pass en route to diverse consumers.
While African insurance companies have started getting excited about insuring agriculture against weather-related parameters like hail, frost or drought, they are still to craft uniquely market-related insurance products. For commercially-minded farmers, insuring agricultural commodities against weather is meaningless if unpredictable market prices result in huge losses. Agricultural markets re becoming too volatile such that even if commodities are insured against weather, failure to insure against price variability and supply trends derails the whole farming business.
Towards an agricultural market insurance index Based on data and evidence gathered in agricultural markets across Zimbabwe over the past six years, eMKambo has started exploring a market insurance index that can cushion farmers against negative market dynamics. Lessons from this initiative can be scaled out to other countries. So far, market trends from diverse agricultural commodities signal that an appropriate market insurance product can focus on the following parameters: 1. The break-even price for commodities to be insured: The insurer and farmers will have to agree on what is considered a break-even price. If the break-even price for tomatoes is US$2 per box, anything above U$2 becomes a profit for farmers. Farmers will have to focus on minimizing costs of production. Depending on type of commodity, there will be a minimum area of production for farmers to break-even. 1