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Health insurance is designed to reduce economic difficulties following illness or injury. However, in developing countries few companies market health insurance to poor households. Insurance companies do not target poor consumers for many reasons, ranging from their inconsistent incomes, which may lead to missed premium payments, to the relatively high transaction costs of servicing an inexpensive insurance policy. These problems are similar to those faced by the credit industry in developing countries, which led to the creation of micro-finance. Micro-health insurance agencies have followed the lead of micro-finance and have started to offer insurance to this previously unserved population.
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Last issues
- Impact Analysis n°7 | Impact of Microcredit in Rural Areas of Morocco: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation
- Impact Analysis n°6 | Analysis of the Determinants of the Demand for Financial Services in Rural Morocco
- Impact Analysis n°5 | Randomized Controlled Evaluation of SKY Health Insurance in Cambodia, Survey Protocol
- Impact Analysis n°4 | Assessing the Effects of Health Insurance: The SKY Micro-Insurance Program in Rural Cambodia
- Impact Analysis n°3 | Etudes d’impact des programmes d’électrification rurale en Afrique subsaharienne
- Impact Analysis n°2 | Poverty, Access to Credit and the Determinants of Participation in a New Micro-credit Program in Rural Areas of Morocco
- Impact Analysis n°1 | Coton et pauvreté en Afrique de l’Ouest : analyse comparée des conditions de vie des ménages au Mali et au Burkina Faso

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