By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- An ongoing case of rice insurance policies changing
after they were purchased has demonstrated why farmers
should be more careful than ever in protecting themselves
from crop loss. American
Agrisurance Co. recently reduced a special offer on Crop
Revenue Coverage after the deadline had passed to buy
insurance for spring planted crops. Farmers who had bought
this insurance package, known as CRC-Plus, now had much less
coverage than they were promised, and with the purchasing
deadline expired, have no way to increase the
coverage. Dr. John
Robinson, agricultural economist with Mississippi State
University's Extension Service, said the company announced
the decision after massive response to the offer meant they
took on too much risk. "The
problem is farmers may be mad at the company and not want to
deal with them anymore, but they'll have a problem getting
insurance from another company," Robinson said. Minor
relief was offered when, at U.S. Department of Agriculture
prompting, American Agrisurance Co. agreed to give farmers
until March 19 to cancel the entire CRC-Plus
policy. With
these deadlines passed as well, farmers still have a few
options. Farmers still have until April 7 to cancel the
-Plus portion of their policy. Those who have canceled
policies have until April 28 to purchase minimal
catastrophic, or CAT, coverage. Dr. Joe
Street, MSU rice specialist at the Delta Research and
Extension Center, said planned rice acreage jumped when the
policy was offered, but dropped when it changed. "People
have been canceling their policies and reducing their rice
acres since the change," Street said. "Rice acreage won't be
as high without the insurance as it would have been with
it." Rex
Morgan farms rice and some soybeans, corn and catfish on
Morgan Farms in Cleveland. He purchased the CRC-Plus
coverage for his rice acreage, and dropped the policy when
the coverage was reduced. "They
cut about $60 to $70 an acre out of the coverage, and the
premium was lowered by about $4 an acre," Morgan said. "When
you lower the coverage by that much, then what you're
insuring is very close to the loan amount on the same volume
of rice, so it doesn't make a lot of sense for a rice farmer
to buy insurance for the amount of the loan." The
federal government already has a long-standing loan program
in place to support the prices of commodities such as rice
if market prices fall too low. This
situation emphasizes why farmers should carefully evaluate
the products they buy. "There's
going to be lot of innovation coming to insurance policies
and farmers need to evaluate the products and do business
with companies they trust," Robinson said. "If you thought
it was hard to keep up with such things as new herbicides
now, it's going to be even more challenging, but necessary,
to keep up with all the changes in insurance coverage in the
future." Released:
March 22, 1999
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Insurance Change
Shows Need For Careful Decisions
Contact: Dr. John Robinson, (601) 325-7992
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:12
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an99/990322jr.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.