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Crop Insurance Coverage Tops 500 Million Acres


by Ryan Hanrahan

Published: Friday, June 14, 2024

The following is from Ryan Hanrahan, farm policy news editor for the University of Illinois.

FERN's Ag Insider reported Monday that "farmers and ranchers bought crop insurance policies on more than 500 million acres of land last year, the largest amount ever, driven by the surging popularity of forage policies. Overall enrollment in crop insurance was up 85% in the seven years from 2016, according to USDA data."

"In 2021, insured acreage had grown to 444.5 million acres and 40% of it was covered by a forage policy. Enrollment rose to 493.8 million acres in 2022 and to 539.5 million acres in 2023. There are nearly 880 million acres in U.S. farms," FERN's reported. "A decade ago, crop insurance covered around 290-295 million acres annually and field crops accounted for more than 75% of insured acres. 'Forage crops now make up an increasing portion,' wrote economists Dylan Turner and Francis Tsiboe in USDA's digital magazine Amber Waves."

The increases in crop insurance coverage over the last few years have been driven largely by the increase in covered forage crops acreage. The USDA Economic Research Service's Dylan Turner and Francis Tsiboe reported at the beginning of June that "in 2016, field crops represented 78% of total insured acres, and forage crops represented 16%. By the 2021 crop year, field crop coverage declined relative to other categories, representing 52% of insured acres, and forage crops increased to 40% of insured acres."

"Although crop insurance plans have been available for forage crops since the early 2000s, traditional policies are designed for crops that have a defined planting and harvesting window, making it easy to measure production across years. Alternatively, forage grows differently depending on location, and the same pasture or rangeland can be grazed or cut multiple times in a crop year, making it difficult to measure productivity for purposes of setting an insurance guarantee," Turner and Tsiboe reported. "The Pasture, Rangeland and Forage plan, which was introduced in the 2007 crop year, solved some of the issues associated with applying traditional crop insurance plans to forage production."

"However, the plan's increasing contribution is comparatively small when participation is measured by looking at the value of the insured commodity—called the insured liability— instead of by acreage," Turner and Tsiboe reported. "Forage crops had insured liabilities of $1.79 billion in 2016, which represented about 1.8% of insured liabilities for that year. By 2021, insured liabilities for the Pasture, Rangeland and Forage plan had grown to $4.3 billion but still represented about 3% of total insured liabilities."

FERN's Ag Insider reported that "also growing in volume was farmer participation in insurance programs for livestock. Insured liability through Livestock Risk Protection, Livestock Gross Margin, and Dairy Revenue Protection plans, at $32 million so far this year, was more than double the 2021 total of $14 million in 2021. Some $1.2 billion was paid in indemnities in 2023, compared to $150,269 in 2021."

FERN's reported that "taxpayer-subsidized crop insurance is the largest USDA support for agriculture, with outlays projected by CBO at $125 billion over 10 years, compared to $61 billion for traditional crop subsidies. The government pays roughly 62 cents of each $1 in premium and farmers pay the rest. Some $16 billion has been paid to date in indemnities on 2023 production."

"Farm bill fireworks have exploded over proposals, most prominently by House Republicans, to increase the so-called reference prices that trigger crop subsidy payments while crop insurance has been a secondary issue. All sides call for a stronger insurance program although disagreeing on what to bolster," FERN's reported. "The bill approved by the House Agriculture Committee would offer larger premium subsidies on higher levels of coverage and allow premium assistance to beginning and veteran farmers for 10 years. Senate Agriculture chairwoman Debbie Stabenow says she would make crop insurance more affordable and accessible, particularly for beginning farmers and specialty crops."

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