The Impact of Insurance Literacy and Marketing Treatments on the Demand for Health Microinsurance in Senegal: A Randomized Evaluation
07.03.2013
07.03.2013
12:00 - 13:00
Milan
Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei
Corso Magenta 63
20123 Milan
***
Video-conference
at FEEM Venice
h. 12.00 Seminar
Jacopo Bonan, Department of Economics, Quantitative Methods and Business Strategy – University of Milan-Bicocca
Seminars Office, seminars@feem.it
Authors: Jacopo Bonan, Olivier Dagnelie, Philippe LeMay-Boucher, Michel Tenikue
Mutual health organizations (MHOs) have been present in the city of Thiès in Senegal for years. Despite their benefits, in some areas take-up rates remain low. We offer an insurance literacy module, which communicates the benefits of health microinsurance and the functioning of MHOs to a randomly selected sample of households in the city of Thiès. The effects of this training and three cross-cutting marketing treatments, are evaluated using a randomized control trial. The results from our various marketing treatments indicate that although liquidity constraints significantly reduce demand, they have a positive and significant effect on health insurance adoption, increasing take-up by around 35%. The insurance literacy module has a negligible impact on the take up decisions and we attempt to provide different contextual reasons for this result.
Attachments
1.
The Impact of Insurance Literacy and Marketing Treatments on the Demand for Health Microinsurance in Senegal: A Randomized Evaluation
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