healt insurance avto insurance
healt insurance insurance
 
  car insurance
 
insurance
insurance
Life Insurance
insurance
insurance
insurance
Health Insurance
insurance
insurance
insurance
Auto Insurance
insurance
 
insurance
insurance
Car Insurance
insurance
insurance
insurance
Medical Insurance
insurance
insurance
insurance
Site Map
insurance
Main
life insurance
life insurance quotes auto insurance quotes travel incurance pet incurance
  mutual insurance
insurance patents   insurance cargo
education insurance
vehicle insuranceCROP INSURANCE
home insurance
credit insurance
liability insurance property insurance

Crop insurance is purchased by agricultural producers, including farmers, ranchers, and others to protect themselves against either the loss of their crops due to natural disasters, such as hail, drought, and floods, or the loss of revenue due to declines in the prices of agricultural commodities.

The two general categories of crop insurance are called crop-yield insurance and crop-revenue insurance:

  • Crop-yield insurance.  There are two main classes of crop-yield insurance:
    • Crop-hail insurance.  Is generally available from private insurers (in countries with private sectors) because hail is a narrow peril that occurs in a limited place and its accumulated losses tend not to overwhelm the capital reserves of private insurers. The earliest crop-hail programs were begun by farmers cooperatives in France and Germany in the 1820s.
    • Multi-peril crop insurance (MPCI).  Covers the broad perils of drought, flood, insects, disease, etc., which may affect many insureds at the same time and present the insurer with excessive losses. To make this class of insurance, the perils are often bundled together in a single policy, called a multi-peril crop insurance (MPCI) policy. MPCI coverage is usually offered by a government insurer and premiums are usually partially subsidized by the government. The earliest MPCI program was first implemented by the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC), an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in 1938. The FCIC program has been managed by the Risk Management Agency (RMA), also a U.S. Department of Agriculture agency, since 1996.
  • Crop-revenue insurance.  Is a combination of crop-yield insurance and price insurance. For example, RMA establishes crop-revenue insurance guarantees on corn by multiplying each farmer's corn-yield guarantee, which is based on the farmer's own production history, times the harvest-time futures price discovered at a commodity exchange before the policy is sold and the crop planted. There is a single guarantee for a certain number of dollars. The policy pays an indemnity if the combination of the actual yield and the cash settlement price in the futures market is less than the guarantee.
    Crop-revenue insurance covers the decline in price that occurs during the crop's growing season. It does not cover declines that may occur from one growing season to another. That would be called "price support", and would raise a series of complex agricultural-policy and international-trade issues.
education insurance
vehicle insuranceSPECIALTY CROPS
home insurance
credit insurance
liability insurance property insurance

A farmer or grower may desire to grow a crop associated with a particular defined attribute that potentially qualifies for a premium over similar commodity crops, agricultural products, or derivatives thereof. The particular attribute may be associated with the genetic composition of the crop, certain management practices of the grower, or both. However, many standard crop insurance policies do not differentiate between commodity crops and crops associated with particular attributes. Accordingly, farmers have a need for crop insurance to cover the risk of growing crops associated with particular attributes.

medical insurance
travel incurance education insurance vehicle insurance property insurance
casualty insurance