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Abstract: Urban poverty in Kenya remains a persistent development concern despite the expansion of financial inclusion, growth in mobile money, and ongoing reforms in social protection and health financing. Urban households are exposed to frequent financial shocks arising from illness, accidental injury, death of a breadwinner, disability, informal employment, debt obligations, inflation, and high costs of housing, food, transport and education. This article reviews the role of selected non-indemnity insurance products in poverty alleviation among Kenyan urban households. For purposes of analytical precision, the discussion is confined to Personal Accident policies and Life Assurance policies, specifically Ordinary Life, Endowment, Whole Life and Unit-Linked policies. The study is anchored on Social Protection Theory, supported by Risk Management Theory and Financial Inclusion Theory. It argues that non-indemnity insurance products can reduce poverty vulnerability by offering predetermined benefits that stabilize household consumption, protect dependants, support education continuity, preserve household assets, improve resilience aftershocks and encourage long-term savings. The article further develops rich conceptual literature on each policy, including its structure, suitability, poverty-reduction relevance, advantages and limitations in the Kenyan urban context. The review shows that while these products can contribute to poverty alleviation, their impact is constrained by low insurance literacy, affordability barriers, irregular incomes, mistrust of insurers, policy lapses, inflationary erosion of benefits and weak product customization. The article recommends simplified product design, flexible premium payment, consumer education, digital distribution, stronger market conduct supervision, faster claims settlement and deliberate integration of insurance into urban poverty-reduction strategies. DOI: https://doi.org/10.51505/IJEBMR.2026.10516 |
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