Menu

Read the detailed instrument sheet by clicking on the link below.

open pdf

Overview

Parametric insurance provides pre-agreed payouts triggered by measurable events (e.g., rainfall, wind speed, earthquake magnitude), rather than loss assessments.

Risks addressed

Credit risk
Liquidity risk
Market risk


 Applications

  • Provides fast liquidity for disaster response, stabilizing budgets and reducing emergency borrowing.
  • Complements rather than replaces traditional indemnity insurance, filling coverage gaps for governments, insurers, and vulnerable sectors.
  • Payouts typically occur within days to weeks, supporting fiscal resilience and protecting social spending.

Types of instruments and providers

Commercial: Bespoke parametric products for weather, agriculture, and catastrophe risks.

Concessional/public:

  • CCRIF: Regional sovereign risk pool for the Caribbean and Central America.
  • Africa Risk Capacity (ARC): AU-backed drought and flood cover.
  • World Bank Cat DDO: Contingent credit line with disaster triggers.
  • KfW–BOAD Shock-Resilient Loans: Combine concessional lending with parametric triggers.
  • Technical assistance: ADB, IMF, World Bank, UNDP.

Debt sustainability

  • Direct: Provides liquidity without adding new debt, reducing reliance on emergency loans.
  • Indirect: Supports debt-service continuity and credit ratings but may increase fiscal burden if premiums are high or poorly budgeted.

Internal capacity requirements

MinimumAdvancedPathway
Authority to purchase and manage insurance; Capacity to interpret hazard data and verify triggers; Coordination across finance, agriculture, and disaster agencies.Modeling and actuarial capacity to assess exposure and design multi-trigger policies;  Integration of premiums and payouts into debt-sustainability and DRF strategies.Join regional pools → develop national teams → build full in-house risk-modeling units.

Regulatory capacity requirements

MinimumAdvancedPathway
Legal authority to hold insurance contracts; Oversight of product design and consumer protection.Supervisory standards for index design, trigger approval, and cross-border coordination; Integration of parametric products into financial-stability oversight.Pilot or sandbox → regulatory framework → regional harmonization.

Pathways to adoption based on financial market readiness

  • Shallow: Join regional risk pools; use donor-subsidized premiums and simple triggers.
  • Emerging: Combine parametric and indemnity products; build data-sharing platforms.
  • Mature: Innovate with IoT, satellite, and fintech tools to expand coverage and reduce basis risk.

 Pricing considerations

  • Premiums depend on hazard frequency, data quality, and administrative costs. Concessional finance (through donor capitalization or premium subsidies) reduces costs and expands access in low-income contexts.
  • ODA-eligible premium support strengthens fiscal resilience and incentivizes uptake.

Average time to deploy

  • Initial policy design: 6–12 months (faster if joining existing pools).
  • Payouts: Typically, within 10 hours to 30 days of a trigger event.
up