Present crop insurance programs are inadequate to sustain agriculture in many areas of Western Canada. A more dollars per acre coverage would eliminate all other government emergency and ad hoc programs for grain and oilseed farmers.
At present all crop insurnace programs in Western Canada are operating with a farmer premium surplus and have done so for the past few years, (or so my information has it). These stats would lead me to believe that we could increase are per acreage coverage by 80% to 100% over our present coverage with vary little increase in our premiums. Over a period of 20 years I believe it would be in a surplus far more times than it would be in a deficit situation. An if governments had to add to the insurance fund it would be far less money than they are spending today and it would be WTO friendly.
Now the big problem with $160 or $170 per acre coverage is that farmers will farm the system unless you put some checks into prevent this from happening. My theory is you take your direct imput cost (that is your fertilizer, chemical and seed cost) and increase it by 80% to 100% to arrive at your coverage per acre. Example $80 worth of direct input cost would give you $144 to $160 per acreage coverage.
Now coverage can not be collected by a farmer without producing direct input cost receipts and submitting to a production measurment.
Indirect Cost ( such as machinery, fuel and other farm overhead cost) will not be considered because it will vary considerably from farm manager to farm manager.
Compare it to unemployment insurance, it is sustainable but it will not make you any money.
The federal and provincial govenments are looking to change our coverage on crop insurance maybe we should be discusing it to some length in this thread to plant the seed for a better and a more economical sustainable farming industry in Western Canada.
Please comment and add any suggestions you may have... The Kernel
At present all crop insurnace programs in Western Canada are operating with a farmer premium surplus and have done so for the past few years, (or so my information has it). These stats would lead me to believe that we could increase are per acreage coverage by 80% to 100% over our present coverage with vary little increase in our premiums. Over a period of 20 years I believe it would be in a surplus far more times than it would be in a deficit situation. An if governments had to add to the insurance fund it would be far less money than they are spending today and it would be WTO friendly.
Now the big problem with $160 or $170 per acre coverage is that farmers will farm the system unless you put some checks into prevent this from happening. My theory is you take your direct imput cost (that is your fertilizer, chemical and seed cost) and increase it by 80% to 100% to arrive at your coverage per acre. Example $80 worth of direct input cost would give you $144 to $160 per acreage coverage.
Now coverage can not be collected by a farmer without producing direct input cost receipts and submitting to a production measurment.
Indirect Cost ( such as machinery, fuel and other farm overhead cost) will not be considered because it will vary considerably from farm manager to farm manager.
Compare it to unemployment insurance, it is sustainable but it will not make you any money.
The federal and provincial govenments are looking to change our coverage on crop insurance maybe we should be discusing it to some length in this thread to plant the seed for a better and a more economical sustainable farming industry in Western Canada.
Please comment and add any suggestions you may have... The Kernel
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