24.08.2020 Views

Report - Risk Management in Brazilian Agriculture

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

2. Brazil’s Primary <strong>Risk</strong> <strong>Management</strong> Instruments and Policies<br />

PSR<br />

PROAGRO<br />

Notes: Products ordered by premium volume from PSR + PROAGRO. Data considers crop, livestock<br />

and forestry <strong>in</strong>surance.<br />

Source: Climate Policy Initiative with data from MAPA and SICOR<br />

Figure 20 shows the number of municipalities reported <strong>in</strong> PROAGRO, PSR, and SUSEP <strong>in</strong><br />

2018, consider<strong>in</strong>g all <strong>in</strong>surance types described <strong>in</strong> Table 1. 10 SUSEP has contracts <strong>in</strong> almost<br />

all <strong>Brazilian</strong> municipalities (5,375 of the 5,570 <strong>Brazilian</strong> municipalities). Of those, 2,127<br />

municipalities have contracts subsidized by PSR (which can only benefit crop, livestock, and<br />

forest <strong>in</strong>surance). PROAGRO covers 3,256 municipalities and has a relevant superposition<br />

with PSR coverage. Overall, 141 <strong>Brazilian</strong> municipalities did not have any rural <strong>in</strong>surance<br />

contracts <strong>in</strong> that year.<br />

10 Crop <strong>in</strong>surance, livestock <strong>in</strong>surance, forest <strong>in</strong>surance, rural pledge <strong>in</strong>surance, farm owners’ multiple peril, and rural producer life <strong>in</strong>surance.<br />

27

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!