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2012 Farm Bill: Implications for Crop Insurance

This workshop in Ames, Iowa on November 5, 2012, explores the implications of the 2012 Farm Bill on crop insurance in Iowa's agriculture. Topics covered include common features, crop insurance ideas, conservation provisions, and the new Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO).

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2012 Farm Bill: Implications for Crop Insurance

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  1. 2012 Farm Bill: Implications for Crop Insurance Insuring Iowa’s Agriculture Workshop Ames, Iowa Nov. 5, 2012 Chad Hart Associate Professor/Grain Markets Specialist chart@iastate.edu 515-294-9911

  2. Farm Bill Progress? • Senate passed their version, S. 3240, on June 21 • House Ag. Committee passed their version, H.R. 6083, on July 11 • The full House never took up the farm bill • The 2008 farm bill expired Sept. 30, but remember crop insurance is permanently authorized • Right now, we are under the permanent legislation of the 1933 and 1948 farm bills

  3. Ideas on the Next Farm Bill • Let’s look at the common features • Both versions of the farm bill eliminate direct payments, countercyclical payments, ACRE, and SURE • The marketing loan program would continue • Livestock disaster programs would be reestablished • Some sort of revenue-based countercyclical program would be created

  4. Crop Insurance Ideas • Many crop insurance provisions are similar across the Senate and House proposals • Revenue insurance for peanuts • Whole farm coverage up to 85% • Standard Reinsurance Agreement savings to be reinvested in the crop insurance program

  5. Crop Insurance Ideas • Stacked Income Protection (STAX) for upland cotton • Revenue-based, area-wide policy • Pays indemnities when county revenue losses are greater than 10% of expected revenue • One new twist from the Senate • 15% subsidy cut for producers with high AGIs, $750K

  6. Crop Insurance Studies • Food safety and contamination loss coverage for specialty crops • Catastrophic disease coverage for hogs • Margin coverage for catfish • Business disruption coverage for poultry

  7. Conservation Provisions • Subsidy reduction for the 1st 4 years of coverage on native sod • House version would apply this only to the Prairie Pothole region (which covers part of Iowa) • Senate would remove subsidies for producers who go out of compliance with wetlands (immediately) and highly erodible land (within 5 years)

  8. But the Biggest Change Would Be… • The Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO) • An additional policy to cover “shallow losses” • Shallow loss = part of the deductible on the producer’s underlying crop insurance policy • SCO is county-level yield or revenue policy • Indemnities are paid when the county experiences losses greater than 10% of the expected yield or revenue level, but payments are not more than the original deductible

  9. SCO Availability • SCO is to be made available for all crops if sufficient data are available • Under the House, SCO can not used if the producer has STAX or the revenue-based countercyclical program • Under the Senate, if the producer has the revenue-based countercyclical program, the loss trigger increases to 21% of expected yield or revenue

  10. SCO Subsidies, Timing, and Administration • SCO premiums are to receive a 70% subsidy • SCO would begin for the 2013 crop year • RMA would run SCO and set the premiums

  11. SCO Examples Source: Congressional Research Service

  12. Thank you for your time!Any questions?My web site:http://www.econ.iastate.edu/~chart/Iowa Farm Outlook:http://www.econ.iastate.edu/ifo/Ag Decision Maker:http://www.extension.iastate.edu/agdm/

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