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Crop Insurance: Federal Program Faces Insurability and Design Problems

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Report Type Reports and Testimonies
Report Date May 24, 1993
Report No. RCED-93-98
Subject
Summary:

The federal crop insurance program, which offers farmers protection from such risks as flooding and drought, was revised in 1980 to achieve, among other things, actuarial soundness and widespread participation so that other forms of disaster relief could be eliminated. Because the program is not achieving those goals, GAO examined how well the program meets basic conditions of insurability, which help promote actuarial soundness, and how efforts to expand participation have affected actuarial soundness. GAO found that the program does not meet three basic conditions of insurability: (1) some crop insurance risks are not independent, which means that many farms can be stricken by the same disaster and require relief all at once; (2) the government does not have enough farm-level information to differentiate among farmers' risks and therefore may charge similar premiums to high-risk and low-risk farmers, which can result in higher numbers of high-risk farmers covered by the program; and (3) the government cannot detect moral hazard when an insured farmer's actions increase the chance or extent of loss. Program efforts to widen participation by making crop insurance more attractive to farmers have inhibited actuarial soundness; also, with these efforts the program has failed to achieve a 50-percent national participation rate, Congress' goal.

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