|
declines if he increases his coverage level because of
the premium. The maximum effective coverage is at 75% and then declines
starting with 80% coverage.
So it must be fraud, waste and abuse.
The farm’s yields for this unit and the county yields for continuous
cropped wheat are reported in table 2. This farmer did not farm the land
before 2002 and he planted this unit to milo in 2005. In any case his zero
crop wheat yields were also in years when the county yield was approaching
zero. The simple average county yield for 1980-2006 is 27.1 bushels for
continuous crop wheat. So if this is fraud, waste and abuse then all
farmers in this county must be doing the same thing. If it does not rain
then there is no wheat produced and in Kansas that can be near zero yield at
the county level; the top wheat producing state in most years.
Comparing this farmer’s 65% APH coverage offer versus
85% APH coverage, he would receive an extra $24.50 in coverage but pay an
extra $31.20 in premiums. How would the reader like to write the extra
coverage as a supplemental contract?
No one would pay more than 100% premium rate for
additional coverage; would they? Yes they might because if they have a unit
that looks like this one but the rest of their aph’s are in better shape and
they buy 75% or 80% coverage. If they purchase 75% coverage they must also
purchase the same coverage on this unit. This farm’s average aph on the
other units is 38.1 bushels, probably plus or minus 10 bushels.
The RA without the harvest price option has a lower
premium rate than the APH but the premium cost per acre is higher (table 3).
The reason is the price election on RA is $5.88 versus $4.90 for APH and
the higher price election generates more dollars of coverage. So why would
the premium rate be lower for revenue insurance? This is possible if there
is a negative price yield correlation. When yields are low then prices tend
to increase. If prices increase then it requires a larger yield loss under
RA to trigger payments than is required under APH.
Farmers who add the Harvest Revenue Option to their RA
contact will always be paid more than they would receive under an APH
contract. If prices increase RA-HPO will trigger payments at the same yield
loss as APH. Last year for each guaranteed bushel lost RA-HPO paid $6.02
while APH paid $3.90 for the same yield loss.
The CRC contract has the “HPO” built in to the contract
but has a price limit of $2. If the price were to increase from $5.88 to $8
next summer RA-HPO would pay $8 for each lost bushel while CRC would be
capped at $7.88. Also CRC has a downside limit of $2 on price. In the past
one did not worry about the downside price limit because if prices fell by
$2, farmers were covered with the marketing loan. However in today’s market
if price were to fall to $3, the CRC has a cup at $3.88 while RA is
unlimited and would continue to pay the price loss.
Comparing RA-HPO with CRC on this unit is an easy
decision (Tables 4 and 5). The CRC premiums are higher than RA-HPO at all
levels. At the 85% level, CRC cost $10.19 more per acre than RA-HPO that
has no price limit. Clearly this does not make sense but one would clearly
select RA-HPO over CRC. Also one would not buy not buy RA-HPO above 75%
coverage because the additional premium cost will exceed the additional
maximum payment. It looks like the best option for this grower is RA-HPO or
RA at the 70% coverage level.
Subsidy Effect. The subsidy can cause
unusual out comes. For example if this growers increases his coverage from
65% to 85%, then his subsidy rate is 38% of the premium for the additional
coverage, but the subsidy rate on the bottom 65% coverage is also 38% (the
38% subsidy applies to the premium for all of the coverage from 0 to 85%).
He loses the advantage of the higher 59% premium subsidy on the 65%
contract because the 38% subsidy rate applies to the entire premium for the
85% coverage, not just the additional coverage.
Therefore, it is easier to compare premiums before
subsidies are added. For example the unsubsidized premium per acre for APH
at the 65% coverage level is $39.29. If the grower increases coverage to
70% the increase in coverage is $7.66 per acre. If we assume the grower has
claim rate of 100% and severity of loss of 35% or greater then the
additional indemnity payment will be $7.66 every year and the premium to
cover the clam will be $7.66 in order to maintain a 1.0 loss ratio.
Assuming the 65% APH contract is rated correctly (historically, RMA started
with 65% APH coverage as their base point for setting rates, and they may
still use this method) then the maxmium unsubsidized premium is $45.37 per
acre for 70% coverage. This premium rate assumes the grower will collect
all of the coverage above the 65% level every year and the rate on the
additional coverage is 100%. However, RMA charges $46.90 or an over charge
of $1.53 per acre and that assumes a total loss of the added coverage above
the 65% level every year!
Assuming a claim rate of 100% and a severity loss of
100% on all coverage above the 65% level under an 85% CRC contract would
have a maximum premium of $95.25 per acre. This is after adding the
additional liability of $42.50 to account for price increase up to $2. In
order to meet the condition of a 100% claim rate and severity of loss for
coverage above the 65% level, it not only requires the yield loss but prices
will need to increase by the full $2. A $2 price increase at harvest has
never happened, so it very unlikely that one would collect all of the
liability above the 65% level every year. Even assuming a 100% claim rate
and severity of loss the CRC 85% coverage level is overrated by $13.34 per
acre.
If RMA wants to argue the higher level contracts are
rated correctly then the 65% contract is extremely underrated.
Farm Bill debate over “excessive” underwriting
gains. This not only affects Kansas wheat farmers but is a part of
the Farm Bill debate over “excessive” underwriting gains by insurance
companies. RMA defines underwriting gains as premiums exceeding indemnity
payments. In the long run (20 years are more) the premiums are required by
law to equal indemnity payments, while in the short run anything can happen.
Seldom does one end up with such a clear example of
excessive rates but for those extreme crop insurance critics who claim crop
insurance can be delivered though the public sector cheaper than the private
sector, is there any reason to believe the rating will improve under public
sector delivery? Increasing the quota share to the government has no effect
on rates and therefore farmers will receive no benefit from a quota share.
If the rates were adjusted where there are “excessive” underwriting gains,
then farmers would benefit. Just retaining a quota share by RMA does not
fix any underling rating problems. Some would argue this is very bad public
policy because it reduces any incentive by RMA to address the rates if they
retain a quota share.
It is likely there will be cuts in the Administrative
and Operating fees (A&O) paid to the crop insurance companies. The crop
insurance critics have argued crop insurance could be provide better and
cheaper though USDA than through private crop insurance agents. Cheaper
probably depends on who is doing the accounting, but better service? Often
times farmers have less than two weeks to make their crop insurance decision
because that is when the price election and volatility factors are released
for revenue insurance. That means all farmers would need to be process
though a county office in less than two weeks (government offices are not
open on the weekends and after 5 p.m. but crop insurance agent are open).
What did the real farmer do? He decided
not to plant wheat on this unit and will plant it to grain sorghum next
spring. He purchased 70% RA on his wheat. Apparently RMA could not get him
to bite on paying the extra $2.69 premium per acre for CRC so that he would
have a $2 price cup and cap on any payments! Any one who thinks farmers
don’t understand insurance have not spent much time with them. He paid less
and received a contract that has no limits on price moves. Must be
abuse………..
Summary. It is not unusually for an
additional dollar of coverage above the 80% level to cost 25 cents or more.
Collecting the additional dollar of coverage does not require one to have a
zero yield; it only requires a yield loss greater than 20% to collect the
extra coverage. In the case of RA without the Harvest Price Option it
requires a 20% decline in revenue, which can either be caused by lower
prices or lower yields.
The 20% decline in revenue also applies to CRC and
RA-HPO from the minimum revenue coverage. If prices increase then the
coverage for CRC and RA-HPO also increase. Under the condition of higher
harvest prices it will require a 20% yield loss and requires a market price
increase by the full $2 limit in CRC in order to capture all of the
additional coverage. RMA does not report the full liability in CRC, which
is the guaranteed bushels times the base price plus the $2 limit.
RA-HPO does not have a price limit so one would need to
use an estimated maximum liability ($2 in this analysis). It is clearly not
correct to omit the liability generated from HPO as RMA does when it reports
CRC and RA-HPO coverage. As last year demonstrated the additional liability
is clearly at risk because both CRC and RA-HPO paid losses at the higher
harvest price. If one does not include the full liability that includes the
additional price liability, then the analyst will over state the rate per
$100 for additional coverage under CRC and RA-HPO. If one does not adjust
for the additional liability for the upside price risk, i.e. does not adjust
the liability reported by RMA for the additional price liability; then it is
possible to generate a rate of more than 100% on the additional coverage, so
it is necessary to include the price liability to correctly evaluate the
additional coverage.
Because the higher coverage provides indemnity payments
on smaller losses it will generate higher unsubsidized premiums. The added
premium may be justified at 100% if the additional price liability is not
included. Also one then needs to evaluate the decision after subsides are
applied because at the higher coverage levels farmers receive a lower
subsidy rate on the additional coverage but they also lose the higher
subsidy rate on the bottom end coverage (70% coverage or less).
This example demonstrates why the declining aph causes
such a large financial hit on farmers. This farmer had a short yield
history (even 10 years is not a large number of observations) and
unfortunately he had crop failures in the same years that county yields were
also very low. The yield plugs keep the approved aph “near” the long run
average yield for the county but the increase in rates starts to make the
coverage “unaffordable”. So when farmers say declining aph’s are a problem,
the real problem is significantly higher rates when yield plugs are used. |