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Department of Economics SURE Farm Program North Central Iowa Crop & Land Stewardship Clinic Iowa Falls, Iowa December 30, 2009 Chad Hart Assistant Professor/Grain Markets Specialist chart@iastate.edu 515-294-9911
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Department of Economics Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments Program (SURE) Part of the 2008 Farm Bill Permanent disaster assistance Provides payments to producers in disaster counties for crop losses Run by the Farm Service Agency, USDA Covers the 2008-2011 crops
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Department of Economics Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments Program (SURE) Based on crop insurance program, non- insured crop assistance program, and disaster declarations Whole-farm revenue protection, not commodity-specific
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Department of Economics SURE Triggers Declared “disaster county” by Secretary of Agriculture or contiguous to one Farm with losses exceeding 50% of normal production (value) in a calendar year At least one crop must have a 10% (or greater) production loss
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Department of Economics All Crops Must Be Covered But there are some exceptions Pasture Crops with an expected value of less than 5% of the total expected value of production on the farm Value = Crop insurance price X yield Crops on which the producer has received a waiver
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Department of Economics SURE Settings Participation and revenue guarantee tied to crop insurance Farm revenue, including some government payments, used to determine payment Payments set as 60% of the difference between guarantee and actual revenue Limited to $100,000 per producer Payments not known or paid until the end of the marketing year
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Department of Economics SURE Guarantee for 2008 Farm guarantee is the sum of 120%*Crop insurance price election*Crop insurance coverage level*Planted acres* Max(APH or CCP yield), for insurable commodities 125%*NCAP price election*Planted acres* Max(NCAP or CCP yield), for non-insurable commodities For an individual crop, the guarantee can not be greater than 90% of the crop’s expected revenue Crop insurance coverage level minimum = 70%
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Department of Economics SURE Guarantee for 2009 and Beyond Farm guarantee is the sum of 115%*Crop insurance price election*Crop insurance coverage level*Planted acres* Max(APH or CCP yield), for insurable commodities 120%*NCAP price election*Planted acres* Max(NCAP or CCP yield), for non-insurable commodities For an individual crop, the guarantee can not be greater than 90% of the crop’s expected revenue
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Department of Economics SURE Expected Farm Revenues Expected farm revenue is the sum of Max(APH or CCP yield)*Planted acres*100% of the crop insurance price for insurable commodities 100% of NCAP yield*100% of NCAP price*Planted acres for non-insurable commodities
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Department of Economics
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SURE Increases Guarantees Adds 20% to value of crop insurance guarantee if signed up by March 2008; else 15%. Minimum for 2008 is 80.5% (equivalent of 70% guarantee x 115%) Maximum is 90% Crop insurance guarantee 2008 SURE guarantee 2009-11 SURE guarantee 65%80.5%74.75% 70%84%80.5% 75%90%86.25% 80%90% 85%90%
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Department of Economics SURE Actual Farm Revenues Actual farm revenue is the sum of Harvested acres*Farm yield*National season- average price for all commodities 15% of direct payments All CCP or ACRE payments All marketing loan benefits All crop insurance or NCAP payments Net of premiums (to a minimum of $0) Any other disaster assistance payments
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Department of Economics 2008 SURE Map
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Department of Economics 2009 SURE Map
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Department of Economics SURE Payment Guarantee minus actual revenue aggregated for all crops x 60% Limit of $100,000 per year per payment limitation
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Department of Economics Example Crop insurance (RA) 75% guarantee 160 bu/acre APH yield $5.40 indemnity price $648 per acre guarantee for RA $16 per acre premium SURE guarantee 120% of $648 = $778 / acre guarantee No additional premium
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Department of Economics Example Crop insurance Actual yield was 140 bu. per acre (12% loss) Harvest crop insurance price was $3.74 Actual revenue was $524 per acre Crop insurance payment was $648 - $524 = $124 per acre
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Department of Economics Example SURE Actual yield = 140 bu/acre 2008 marketing year price = $4.06/bu Market revenue = 140*4.06 = $568.40/acre Crop insurance benefit = $124 - $16 = $108 15% of direct payment = $3 Total revenues = $679.40 Shortfall = $778 - $679.40 = $98.60/acre Payment = 60% * $98.60 = $59.16/acre
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Department of Economics Will I get a SURE payment? Are you in an eligible county or have a 50% or greater production loss Do you have a 10% production loss on at least one crop Price declines matter Corn $5.40 to $4.06 = 24.8% Soybeans $13.36 to $9.97 = 25.4% So, even higher yields, up to 120% of the APH yield, on other crops could still result in a SURE payment.
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Department of Economics Source: Dr. William Edwards, ISU
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Department of Economics SURE Payment per Acre for 2008 (50% corn, 50% soybeans) Insurance Guarantee 10% Yield Loss RA CRC 20% Yield Loss RA CRC 85%$ 7 $25$33 $46 80%$17 $35$43 $56 75%$27 $45$53 $66 70%$26 $44$51 $65 65%$36 $44$61 $75 Source: Dr. William Edwards, ISU
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Department of Economics What to do? Find out if you are in an eligible county for 2008 and 2009 Estimate potential payments Ag Decision Maker calculator at www.extension.iastate.edu/agdm/ www.extension.iastate.edu/agdm/ Watch for FSA announcements
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Department of Economics Information Needed Yields submitted for crop insurance, for all land farmed Crop insurance payments received USDA commodity payments received RMA will turn over yield and acre data to FSA FSA will aggregate data across farms
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Department of Economics Summary of SURE SURE provides 15 to 20% added coverage above the crop insurance guarantee (up to 90%). All crops must be insured (except crops that are less than 5% of total crop value). All crops and all farms per producer are added together to calculate coverage and losses. Payment is 60% of loss.
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Department of Economics Decision Points for SURE If all crops will be insured anyway, there is no added cost for SURE. If additional crops have to be insured, there is an added cost. $300 per crop for catastrophic coverage $250 per crop for NAP coverage Standard APH or revenue insurance at a low level could be cheaper for small areas
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Department of Economics How will SURE affect my crop insurance decision? May have to insure minor crops Higher or lower levels of crop insurance give a higher or lower SURE trigger Producers who insure at the 80% or 85% level get less additional coverage due to 90% cap
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Department of Economics How will SURE affect my crop insurance decision? SURE is for all crops and all acres together SURE pays only 60% of the revenue loss
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Department of Economics 2008 SURE Map
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Department of Economics 2009 SURE Map
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Department of Economics SURE Sign-up Sign-up for the 2008 crop year starts Jan. 4, 2010 See your local FSA office to sign-up Sign-up will likely conclude by Mar. 1
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Department of Economics Thank you for your time! Any questions? My web site: http://www.econ.iastate.edu/faculty/hart/ Iowa Farm Outlook: http://www.econ.iastate.edu/outreach/agriculture/periodicals/ifo/ Ag Decision Maker: http://www.extension.iastate.edu/agdm/
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