Farmers covered by federal crop insurance may not only have had their losses
covered and avoided financial devastation during this year’s drought, but might
have made more money than they had predicted in March, said a University of
Missouri Extension economist.
“Insured farmers had a pretty good year,” said Ray Massey earlier this
month at the MU Extension Agriculture and Natural Resources Annual Conference at
the MU Bradford Research Center.
In 2012, approximately 70 percent of Missouri farm acres were
revenue-protected by the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC), Massey said.
Another 13 percent had insurance based on yield protection.
“In a tough year like 2012, crop insurance is the difference between
financial hardship and getting the crop into the ground next year,” said FCIC
manager William J. Murphy.
Over a 10-year period in Missouri, $1.80 in federal crop insurance
indemnities was paid out for every $1 paid in premium by farmers, said Ron
Plain, MU Extension economist and professor of agricultural economics at MU’s
College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources. “For the state of Missouri,
it’s a good investment.”
Massey said most farmers did not take crop insurance until after 1990, when
participation was a prerequisite to take part in other federal programs.
The federal government subsidizes crop insurance to give farmers an
incentive to purchase it and to reinsure insurance companies that might have
large losses from years like this one.
The USDA Risk Management Agency sets the costs, which vary by the level of
coverage the farmer chooses. Because the cost is the same from agent to agent,
Massey recommends that farmers choose an agent based upon their service.
Farmers who receive indemnities totaling more than $200,000 should expect
to be audited by FCIC, he said.
For more information:
- Missouri Crop Resource Guide: Marketing and Risk Management: crops.missouri.edu/marketing.
- Information on APH and T yields: crops.missouri.edu/marketing/insyields.htm.
- USDA Risk Management Agency: rma.usda.gov.
- Missouri Department of Insurance: insurance.mo.gov.
- “Crop Insurance in Missouri,” MU Extension publication MP749: extension.missouri.edu/MP749.
- USDA drought assistance page: www.usda.gov/drought.
About the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
FCIC, administered under the USDA Risk Management Agency, decreases
production risk associated with adverse weather conditions, fire and pests in
addition to price risks associated with fluctuating commodity markets.
Federal crop insurance is a public-private partnership that allows farmers
to manage risk while shielding taxpayers from farm disaster bailouts by
guaranteeing farmers a percentage of predicted crop revenue.
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