Farmers Shoulder Nearly $17 Billion in Losses in 2012
(OVERLAND
PARK, Kan.) — Before farmers received a single dime in crop insurance indemnity
payments, they shouldered $12.7 billion in losses as part of their deductibles
to crop insurance policies, according to a guest editorial published today by
Tom Zacharias, president of National Crop Insurance Services (NCIS).
“When
combined with the $4.1 billion farmers paid out of their own pockets to
purchase crop insurance last year, total farmer investment neared $17 billion,”
explains Zacharias in today’s edition of Roll Call/CQ.
Zacharias
noted that it was important to get those numbers out because of the ongoing
assault on the “the men and women who put food on our tables and clothes on our
backs” over their purchasing of crop insurance. “Critics called
crop insurance a farmer bailout and said things like farmers were ‘laughing all
the way to the bank’ and were ‘praying for drought, not praying for rain,’” the
article notes. “Farmers even have been compared to cheap drunks at
an open bar and told to pay their fair share.”
The article
points out that when assessing the value of crop insurance, there are
undisputed facts of what transpired after the worst drought our country has
seen in decades:
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Indemnities to farmers
cost about $17 billion, but “thanks to crop insurance’s design, these
indemnities were not completely borne by taxpayers because farmers and insurers
picked up a major portion of the costs and sustained significant economic
losses.”
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“This was the sixth time
since 1983 that crop insurers lost money. Compare that to the property
and casualty insurance industry, which has lost money only once as far back as
data is available.”
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“It is also important to
note that when crop insurance premiums exceed losses, the government sees
underwriting gains that help offset payments in bad years. In fact, the
government experienced nearly $4 billion in gains from 2001-2010.” And just as
importantly, “Congress was not asked to fund an ad hoc disaster bill
despite the historic devastation endured by our agricultural producers.”
Zacharias
welcomed reasoned debate on farm policies, but added that “lawmakers and the
American public deserve an intelligent conversation about the future of
agriculture that is kept to just the facts.”
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