Managing Risk With Crop Insurance
The Federal Crop Insurance Reform and Department of Agriculture
Reorganization Act of 1994 (1994 Reform Act) and the Agricultural
Marketing Transition Act of 1996 eliminated much of the risk
protection the Federal Government provided, including deficiency
payments. This legislation dramatically changed the Government's
role and shifted the responsibility of risk management to producers.
USDA's Risk Management Agency (RMA) is the lead agency in providing
producers current information on crop insurance programs and
the available risk management tools.
This summary is for general illustration purposes only.
Please contact a crop insurance agent for information specific
to your operation.
Types of Coverage
Comprehensive Protection
- Multiple Peril Crop Insurance (MPCI) provides comprehensive
protection against weather-related causes of loss and certain
other unavoidable perils. Coverage is available on over 76 crops
in primary production areas throughout the U.S. at 50 to 75 percent
of the actual production history for the farm. An indemnity price
election from 60 to 100 percent of the Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation (FCIC) expected market price is selected at the time
of purchase. Minimum Catastrophic Risk Protection (CAT) coverage
is available for an administrative fee of only $60 per crop per
county. MPCI coverage provides protection against low yields,
poor quality, late planting, replanting costs and prevented planting.
- Group Risk Plan (GRP) insurance is based on the county
expected yield rather than individual farm yields. A GRP policyholder receives an indemnity payment only when the National
Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) county yield is less than
the yield selected.
- Revenue Products pilot programs with limited availability
provide revenue guarantees instead of MPCI yield guarantees.
Revenue policies protect a grower's loss of revenue resulting
from low prices, low yields, or a combination of the two.
- Income Protection (IP) policies pay when the harvested
and appraised production to count, multiplied by the harvest
price, is below the IP guarantee. The harvest price is an average
of daily futures market closing prices for the crop during the
month of harvest. If a yield loss is offset by a price increase,
or vice versa, no indemnity is paid. The insurance unit is the
grower's share of all acres of the insured crop in the county.
- Crop Revenue Coverage (CRC) was developed by Redland
Insurance and is reinsured by FCIC. A loss results when the calculated
revenue is less than the final guarantee. The difference between
these two figures times the insured's share results in a payable
indemnity. Losses are based on the minimum or harvest guarantee
(whichever is higher) and the calculated revenue. Additional
CRC features include: optional units, quality adjustment and
high value replacement protection (insurance guarantee can increase
if the harvest price exceeds the base price).
- Revenue Assurance (RA) was developed by Farm Bureau
Mutual Insurance Company and is reinsured by FCIC. An indemnity
is payable when the production to count (any combination of harvested
and appraised yield) multiplied by the county harvest price is
less than the unit revenue guarantee. Added RA features include
basic, optional, enterprise, and whole units; and quality adjustment.
Supplemental Protection to MPCI
- Replacement Cost Coverage (RC) provides for a payable
indemnity when the unit has a yield shortfall and the harvest
commodity price exceeds the FCIC indemnity price. RC manages
risk of forward contracting when the crop is short and the producer
has to buy and deliver more expensive grain.
- Fixed Price Indemnity provides a producer's election
to choose a fixed price increase (e.g.:, 10¢, 25¢,
50¢) above the FCIC market indemnity price.
- Increasing Payment Rate pays after a low yield threshold
is reached and carries a reduced deductible.
Named Peril Protection
- Stand-Alone Policies provide protection against specifically
named perils (e.g., hail, freeze, fire) and are paid based on
a percent of damage multiplied by the liability or protection
purchased less the deductible.
Where Can Coverage Be Purchased?
All insurance policies are available from private insurance
agents. A list of crop insurance agents is available at all county
U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency offices.
Mention of product names or firms does not
necessarily constitute endorsement by the Risk Management Agency
or the U.S. Department of Agriculture over others not
mentioned, and is for information purposes only.