Initial Market Assessment : Country Note--Vietnam
Responding appropriately to the country’s high exposure and vulnerability to natural disasters, and capitalizing on a well-functioning insurance industry, Vietnam has embraced insurance mechanisms in disaster risk management and agriculture more vi...
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24788554/initial-market-assessment-country-note-vietnam http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22425 |
Summary: | Responding appropriately to the
country’s high exposure and vulnerability to natural
disasters, and capitalizing on a well-functioning insurance
industry, Vietnam has embraced insurance mechanisms in
disaster risk management and agriculture more vigorously
than most developing countries. But some initiatives like
the disaster risk reduction (DRR) strategy’s mandate to
implement disaster risk insurance are yet to be conceived,
while others such as the agriculture insurance scheme have
been launched but experienced unsustainable outcomes and
need strengthening. Technical assistance to guide this
process can have substantial impact, and could include the
consolidation of available risk modeling and hazard maps and
closing major gaps these may have. Appropriate insurance of
public assets will further strengthen the property insurance
sector and justify investment in risk models and
underwriting expertise that will subsequently be available
for businesses and households. A public private partnership
pursuing flood insurance for the urban poor in collaboration
with existing community-based Disaster Risk Management
programs could capitalize on the nascent micro-insurance
market and further strengthen inclusive insurance. Vietnam
has strong appetite for agriculture and catastrophe property
insurance, and the governance structure as well as insurance
industry to secure the desired impact of investments. Better
incorporating agriculture and catastrophe property insurance
principles in social safety net programs could increase the
protection of larger populations. |
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