Takaful for Microfinance

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        Takaful for
      Microfinance
 1st International Conference on

Inclusive Islamic Financial Sector

           Development


    Overview of presentation

 Insurance and Poverty Alleviation

 Challenges providing microinsurance

 Opportunities and need for microtakaful

 Microtakaful in practice


  Can insurance assist poverty
             alleviation?

 The poor are the most vulnerable

 The impact of losses are more severe

 They have minimum means of recovery

 Success of microfinance schemes show

 the poor can and want to save

 Savings and credit are used

 unproductively

 The poor need a safety net to escape

 poverty


“Insurance is now

recognized as an
important tool for
poverty alleviation”


    Microinsurance products

 Loan protection

 Disability and Sickness

 Savings

 Health

 Funeral

 Property

 Agriculture


     Providing microinsurance
             The challenges

 Coverage

 Regulation

 Moral hazard and Fraud

 Adverse selection

 Education and trust

 Technical expertise

 Affordability

 Retention

 Sustainability

 Penetration


      Key success factors for
   introducing microinsurance

 Organized group

 Existing financial infrastructure

 Trust

 Need

 Understanding

 External support


    Providing microinsurance
           The possibilities

 The cooperative microinsurance model

  History of organising the poor
  Operate for the interest of members by
   members
  Trust
  Ownership and loyalty
  Peer pressure
  Surplus reinvested or redistributed


    Providing microinsurance
            The possibilities

 The partner agent model

  No-risk fee for microinsurance provider
  Better coverage for policyholder
  Access to new market
  Pooling of risks between informal and formal
   sector


    Providing microinsurance
           The possibilities

 The donor agent model

  Access to expertise
  Financial sustainability
  Guiding hand


Opportunities and need

  for microtakaful


        Principles of Takaful

 Solidarity and joint guarantee

 Self reliance and self sustaining for community

 well being

 Assist those that need assistance

 Community pooling system

 Shari’ah approved investments and products

          “Bear ye one another’s burden”


   The Global Takaful sector

 1979 First Takaful Company established

 1996 – 30 Institutions transacting Takaful

 2002 – 50 Takaful operators and four Retakaful

 providers

 2004 – 80 Takaful operators, 200 Takaful windows

 and 12 Retakaful providers

Source: IBB Solicitors, UK – (2005)


   The need for microtakaful

 Social services inadequate or unavailable

 Large sectors of poverty in many Muslim

 countries

 Over half of world’s lowest developed countries

 have a majority Muslim population

 Increasing inequality in Middle East and Gulf

 countries

 Religious considerations are important in villages

 and small communities

 Established Takaful sector neglecting low

 income sector


“Takaful is the
 second most

important social

 institution to

counter poverty

and deprivation”

          Omar Fischer
       1999


Possibilities for microtakaful

 Establish community based microtakaful

 schemes

 Involvement of NGOs, zakat funds, donor

 agencies

 Support from Takaful sector

   Technical expertise
   Financial assistance
   Partner-agent model


   Microtakaful in practice

 Agricultural Mutual Fund - Lebanon

 Amana Takaful – Sri Lanka

 Takaful Ikhlas

 Takmin - Indonesia


                 Summary

 Microtakaful can succeed

 Microtakaful can compliment microfinance

 Microtakaful is imperative to ensure productive

 use of assets for the poor.

 It is key to ensuring the long-term self

 sustainability of the individual and his family to
 stay above the poverty line.

 Existing Takaful operators have a responsibility

 to take a lead in this area in accordance with
 the basic principles and philosophy of takaful
 which is to “bear one another’s burden”.


  The case of a microtakaful
             policyholder

 Ibu Iwit, 50 years, farmworker, earning

 one dollar a day.

 Took out a 6 month loan of 55 USD from

 local Baitul mal Wat Tamwil

 Insurance premium was taken out with

 Takmin at 0.16 USD

 Ibu Iwit passed away a couple months

 later

 Her husband, Amad, age 60 years, no

 income


A Global reach for

 local strength
      Thank you
    www.takaful.coop