Can you help shape our future priorities? Take a five minute survey now. Survey closes on 8 July.

Opinion

Livestock insurance in southern Ethiopia: calculating risks, responding to uncertainties

Published on 11 August 2023

Masresha Taye

Postgraduate Researcher

This blog is based on the seventh chapter of the newly published book Pastoralism, Uncertainty and Development edited by Ian Scoones.

Insurance is often proposed as a way of offsetting risks and responding to disasters. Index-based livestock insurance (IBLI) has been offered to pastoralists in Borana zone in southern Ethiopia over the past few years. This aims to pay-out before the disaster strikes based on a predictive assessment of the season derived from satellite-based estimates of livestock forage availability. It sounds like a good solution, but does it work and for whom? Livestock insurance has a number of assumptions embedded in the design. These include that the coming season can be reliably predicted; that the effects play out uniformly over an area; that the drought strikes as a single event and that livestock are held individually and responses are individualised.

This article is from PASTRES, a research programme that aims to learn from pastoralists about responding to uncertainty and resilience, with lessons for global challenges. PASTRES is co-hosted by IDS.

Read the full story on the PASTRES website

Disclaimer
The views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author/s and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of IDS.

Share

About this opinion

Region
Ethiopia

Related content

Working Paper

Mining Legitimacy: Governing the Politics of Resource-Based Green Industrial Policy

IDS Working Paper 623

3 July 2025

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.