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PLC: Corn Payment Potential

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Presentation on theme: "PLC: Corn Payment Potential"— Presentation transcript:

1 PLC: Corn Payment Potential
Reference Price = $3.70 per bushel Payment Yield = 150 bushels per acre Marketing Year Price ($/bu) PLC Payment Rate ($/bu) PLC Payment ($/base acre) $3.10 $0.60 $76.50 $3.20 $0.50 $63.75 $3.30 $0.40 $51.00 $3.40 $0.30 $38.25 $3.50 $0.20 $25.50 $3.60 $0.10 $12.75 $3.70 $0.00 For PLC, the payment rate is the difference between the reference price and the maximum of either the marketing year average price or the loan rate (if the difference is negative, then the payment rate is zero). Take the payment rate times the payment (or base) yield times 85% to get the PLC payment per base acre. Notes: PLC payments are made on 85% of base acres.

2 ARC-CO: 2014 Corn Revenue Guarantee
Year Yield MYA Price ARC Price 2009 157.0 $3.55 $3.70 2010 186.0 $5.18 2011 187.0 $6.22 2012 163.0 $6.89 2013 156.0 $4.46 Oly. Ave. 168.7 $5.29 Here’s the 5 years of price and yield data for Hardin County, Iowa corn. The red numbers are the high and low ones that are not used in the Olympic average (remember the Olympic average throws out the high and low). Also, the price used in the average can not be below the reference price specified in the farm bill (in this case, $3.70 for corn). So as the black circle above shows, the price in 2009 was replaced by the reference price. So the 5-year Olympic average yield is bushels per acre. The 5-year Olympic average price is $5.29 per bushel. Combine the two to get the benchmark revenue of $ per acre. The ARC revenue guarantee is 86% of the benchmark, so it’s $ per acre. Benchmark Revenue = $ per acre ARC Revenue Guarantee = $ per acre Notes: Revenue Guarantee equals 86% of Benchmark.

3 ARC Payment Rate Payment rate = Max(0, Min(10% of Benchmark revenue,
Actual crop revenue – ARC guarantee)) So the basic payment structure is the same as it was under ACRE

4 PLC pays, ARC does not Neither pay Both pay ARC pays, PLC does not
The choice depends on where you expect prices and yields to be over the next 5 years. There are price/yield combinations where PLC pays and ARC does not. There are also price/yield combinations where ARC pays and PLC does not.


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