- Advising on the general policy and regulatory framework affecting rural finance, and particularly on financial sector policies and legislation;
- Advising on restructuring rural financial systems to include various types of institutions and ways of establishing more effective operational linkages between savings and credit and between informal and formal financial intermediaries;
- Advising on the appropriate role and methodology for crop insurance in overall agricultural development, with specific emphasis on risk management for credit-financed investment.
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Insurance of crops in developing countries
Risk management is of crucial importance of the investment and financing decisions of farmers in developing countries and in transition economies. Agricultural insurance, although one of the most often quoted tools for risk management, can only play a limited role in managing the risks related with farming. The applicability of insurance in any given situation is based on consideration of whether it is a cost-effective means of addressing a given risk. The acid test of developing and operating an insurance programme to complement other risk management measures depends on the cost/benefit ratio – to the farmer and to the potential insurance providers. The present publication is intended to provide insight into some of the more recent developments in terms of new insurance products and programmes.
Credit guarantees: an assessment of the state of knowledge and new avenues of research
Guarantee systems for loans, as substitutes for traditional collateral, have been proposed, planned and implemented in various countries. This book attempts to address the main issues relating to guarantee funds and to give examples from which lessons can be drawn. It comes to the broad conclusion that there are few instances in which a traditional loan guarantee service adds value in a sustainable way. New approaches to the guarantee concept are aired and proposals made as to how these innovative mechanisms could be implemented in different situations.
Inventory credit: an approach to developing agricultural markets
After liberalisation of agricultural marketing systems, private traders have taken over the marketing functions of government and parastatal bodies but frequently do not have ready access to finance for purchasing and storing the produce. Inventory credit offers one way of overcoming this problem. This paper examines requirements for successful inventory credit, drawing extensively on case-studies from Ghana, India, Mali and the Philippines. Legal issues are discussed in detail. The report cautions against targeting particular users and stresses that transactions should be profitable to both the lender and the borrower. In order to attract banks to inventory credit, it is essential to have reliable warehouse operators. The publication will be of interest to banks wishing to increase and diversify their clientele, companies involved in or interested in commercial warehousing, policy-makers concerned with trade and agriculture and donors.
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