spurred to enter the rural insurance market in a significant manner, the business targets have to be raised substantially by IRDA.
The experience of government supported and subsidized crop insurance and the recent
entry of private insurers, raise questions about the coexistence of government and private agriculture insurance. One view is that the private sector will be unable to compete with government insurance, given the subsidies and access to the administrative machinery for delivering insurance. An alternative view is that given only 15 percent coverage
by government insurance, the private sector can carve out a reasonable market for itself based on improved efficiency, better design and superior services. Here one can even think of public-private partnership in providing agriculture insurance as against public-private competition. However, it is possible only when crop insurance can be run in a more professional manner with clear objectives.
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