Here are some actual numbers from AFSC.
I do not carry crop insurance, because I cannot see any way to get my money back with these numbers:
80% coverage on canola for my area, including Hail endorsement, and spring price protection would be $48.27. for max liability of $320.73. And the 80% yield would be 30 bushels, even in the worst hail, drought, flood, frost, snow years, we have never been that low.
CPS $47.42 for $374 liability
Barley 25.79 for $218.88 liability.
It would get better with experience as we would build our yield up, but would have to spend a lot of money to get there. Money better spent on improvements so we can avoid many of those problems.
The theory that crop insurance is 2/3 paid for by government just doesn't seem to trickle down to the producer. By AFSC's own numbers, they paid out 37% of the total premiums collected last year. So if farmers paid 33.3% of the premiums, that means administration ate up 63% of the premiums(or it went into reserves?) And farmers got 10% more back than they put in, which isn't a bad ROI, but I can't seem to find anyone who has accomplished that positive ROI.
I do not carry crop insurance, because I cannot see any way to get my money back with these numbers:
80% coverage on canola for my area, including Hail endorsement, and spring price protection would be $48.27. for max liability of $320.73. And the 80% yield would be 30 bushels, even in the worst hail, drought, flood, frost, snow years, we have never been that low.
CPS $47.42 for $374 liability
Barley 25.79 for $218.88 liability.
It would get better with experience as we would build our yield up, but would have to spend a lot of money to get there. Money better spent on improvements so we can avoid many of those problems.
The theory that crop insurance is 2/3 paid for by government just doesn't seem to trickle down to the producer. By AFSC's own numbers, they paid out 37% of the total premiums collected last year. So if farmers paid 33.3% of the premiums, that means administration ate up 63% of the premiums(or it went into reserves?) And farmers got 10% more back than they put in, which isn't a bad ROI, but I can't seem to find anyone who has accomplished that positive ROI.
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