The First 85 Years Of Federal Crop Insurance
Federal crop insurance has undergone many revisions since its establishment by
The Federal Crop Insurance Act, passed in 1938 initially was an experiment designed to help agriculture recover from the double whammy of the Great Depression and Dust Bowl years. The act created the
Before
The intent of the
"It keeps farmers in business," said
"It makes it so they can farm again another year."
Federal crop insurance also provides stability to farmers lenders, said Olson, who is based at AgCountry Farm Credit Services in
"It's crucial to protect risk. With the cost of everything, I don't how you don't take it out," Richards said.
In 2011, a year after Richards started farming with his father, for example, participating in the program covered input and other costs when his crops were destroyed by separate rain and hail events.
"It's one of those things that might happen once out of 10 years, but once out of 10 years can make or break a farmer, especially a young farmer," Richards said.
Before the program evolved to where it is today, though, it went through many revisions.
The program remained an experiment, covering only a limited number of crops, for 42 years until the Federal Crop Insurance Act of 1980 expanded it to include a wide variety across
The act was intended to encourage farmers to buy federal crop insurance to protect themselves from planting and yield losses instead of relying on the free disaster coverage that had been offered under Farm Bills in the 1960s and 1970s, according to the
Instead of providing the free coverage, which had competed with the experimental program, the 1980 FCIC Act authorized a subsidy that was equal to 30% of the crop insurance premium, which was linked to the dollar amount at 65% coverage.
While many farmers participated in the FCIP program after that act was passed, it didn't achieve the level
The CAT coverage, which was a precursor to today's revenue protection, was a big "plus," Olson said.
"Now you had yield protection, and not just price protection," he said. The revenue protection allowed farmers to forward price their crops because they know if they have a crop loss they can buy the bushels they need to fill the contract.
"That was just a huge positive for the farmers," Olson said In 1996
As the FCIP has evolved, it has become increasingly complex.
For example, in 1993, when
The 2023
The revisions, though, also have resulted in an improved FCIP, said Hagel, who worked for RMA from 1993-2014.
"The cost of it increased for farmers and producers, but it became a much better product," he said.
Despite the increased complexity of the FCIP, participation in crop insurance significantly increased after the Federal Crop Insurance Act of 1994 and remains strong.
Farmers insured more than 90% of planted
Farmers enrolled a record high of 379.9 million acres in federal crop insurance, which they purchased from 16 companies.
That crop year, farmers purchased more than 2 million policies and insured crops and livestock valued at
The FCIP provided coverage for a total of 124 commodities and offered 19 types of insurance policies, the
The acreage numbers would be smaller if farmers didn't participate in the FCIP because some wouldn't want to risk planting them, Olson said.
For example, farmers in northern
Keeping farmers on the land to grow crops on those acres is important to national food security, Olson said.
Fewer acres of corn and soybeans would result in higher prices for feed, leading to a reduction in livestock production, and, ultimately, higher prices at the grocery store.
A drought-induced reduction on the cattle on feed in
"It wouldn't take too many bad years or weather years or drought, it would take a lot of people out. You're going to run into a shortage pretty quick," he said.
Federal crop insurance also ensures that children will have food that is used in school lunch programs, Richards believes.
"It goes more than to the grocery stores; it goes to the kids at school," he said.
The Federal Crop Insurance Program is key to food security because it assures farmers will be able to stay in business when weather causes crop damage and disaster, Hagel believes.
"You're dealing with Mother Nature, and we've all begun to see across the country what Mother Nature can do," he said. "I think



Crop Insurance Insider Sees Program As 'Private-Public Partnership'
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