Title: Adjusted Gross RevenueLite AGRLite
1Adjusted Gross Revenue-Lite (AGR-Lite)
- Dr. G. A. Art Barnaby, Jr
- Kansas State University
- Phone (785) 532-1515
- Email abarnaby_at_agecon.ksu.edu
- Check out our WEB at
- AgManager.info
2Adjusted Gross Revenue-Lite (AGR-Lite)
- A Whole Farm Revenue Protection Plan
- Provides protection against loss of revenue from
natural and named disasters and/or market
fluctuations - Approved for Producers in States of
- AK, CT, DE, ID, MA, MD, ME, NC, NH, NJ, NY, OR,
PA, RI, VA, VT, WA, WV - States approved to proceed with rating
- AZ, CO, HI, KS, MN, MT, NM, NV, UT, WI, WY
3Adjusted Gross Revenue-Lite (AGR-Lite)
- Developed by PA Dept. of Agriculture (under
section 508h of the crop insurance law) to make
protection available to almost all producers. - Expanded to other states through respective State
Depts. of Agriculture. - Kansas is working with Frontier Farm Credit
(FFC), KS State Department of Agriculture, Topeka
RMA, KFMA, and Kansas State University. - Approved and backed by USDA.
4Adjusted Gross Revenue-Lite (AGR-Lite)
- STAND-ALONE POLICY covering the whole farming
operation - OR
- UMBRELLA TYPE POLICY selected crops can also be
protected by Multiple Peril or revenue crop
policies. -
- Note Loss payments from other insurance count
towards AGR-Lite revenue guarantee.
5What is covered under AGR-Lite
- Eligible Commodities Include
- Most Crops
- Animal Production (includes aquaculture)
- Animal Products (milk, honey, wool, etc.)
- Greenhouse Production
- Organic Production
6Kansas Insurance Profile
- Kansas produced 8.75 billion in agricultural
products in 2002. - 98.8 (8.65 billion) derived from
- Cattle and calves - 5.7 billion
- Grains - 2.1 billion
- Hogs - 297.5 million
- Milk and other dairy - 248.5 million
- Hay and other production - 225million
- Nursery and greenhouse - 55.5 million
- 74 of agricultural production currently without
risk protection.
7Top Uninsurable Commodities with Acreage
- Cattle/Calves
- 6,650,000 (Head)
- Hogs Pigs
- 1,780,000(Head)
- Dairy
- 111,000(Head)
- Sheep
- 106,000 (Head)
- Grass 5,621,672
- Alfalfa 908,218
- Rye 53,175
- Triticale 37,641
- Millet 25,512
- Clover 23,977
- Lespedeza 23,303
- Mixed Forage 6,546
- Pecans 2,953
- Peas 2,597
8What is covered under AGR-Lite
- Insurable Causes of Loss
- unavoidable natural disasters, that occurs during
the current or previous insurance year - including but not limited to, adverse weather,
fire, insects, disease, wildlife, earthquakes,
volcanic eruption, or failure of irrigation water
supply, if applicable, - market fluctuation (annual price change) that
causes a loss in revenue during the current
insurance year
9Coverage Choices Limits
Must meet minimum income requirements.
Commodity Grouping is available for the
80-percent coverage level. The Maximum Annual
Income represents the maximum approved farm
revenue at each coverage level and payment rate
to be eligible for AGR-Lite due to the 1,000,000
maximum liability allowed.
10AGR-Lite Protection Example( With 1 or more
commodity producing revenue)
- 5 year avg. revenue 300,000
- 75 coverage level 225,000 loss trigger
- Revenue produced 100,000
- Revenue loss 125,000
- 90 payment 112,500 loss
payment
11AGR Pilot vs AGR-Lite
12How is Coverage Established?
- Federal Income Tax Records
- Usually Schedule F
- Current Years Farm Plan
- Cash Flow Budget
13How are Claims Calculated?
- Federal Income Tax Records reflect sales
- Beginning and End of year inventories are used to
determine change in value allocated to current
year.
14Where AGR-Lite makes sense
- Otherwise uninsurable commodities are covered
- Organic production is protected at realistic
prices - Direct Marketed production is protected at
realistic prices - Umbrella over selected individual crop coverages
- Bottom line for operation from severe economic
loss - Individual protection based on personal yield,
quality and price history plus low price
protection, - Provide an alternative for farmers with reduced
APH caused by multiple years of drought.
15Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- AGR-Lite does not adjust for feed purchased.
- If it turns dry, and producers purchase hay to
cover lost forage this loss may not be covered.
This will lower Net Income but not Gross. - If producers normally sell excess hay, then it is
covered because there will be reduced hay sales.
16Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- AGR-Lite does not include indemnity payments when
calculating 5 years average Gross Income that
will set future guarantees. - This has no impact on current years indemnity
payment but it lowers future guarantees reducing
the effectiveness of AGR_Lite as a risk
management tool for multiple year droughts.
17Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- Currently cull cows are counted in the sales to
count against the AGR-Lite guarantees and the 5
year average tax return revenue. If the cows are
sold as part of a herd reduction then the sales
do not count against the guarantee.
18Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- Market loan gains count against the AGR-Lite
indemnity and are included in the 5 year average
tax return revenue. This is a consistent policy.
However, LDP payments are not included in the 5
year average nor do they count against the
guarantee.
19Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- Currently the counter cyclical payment does not
count against the AGR-Lite guarantee nor does it
count in the 5 year average tax return revenue.
This works in the favor of farmers because it
does not reduce AGR-Lite payments in a loss year
caused by lower prices.
20Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- Currently AGR-Lite liability and premium is
reduced by the amount of the APH or similar
products liability and premium. This is
consistent because it reduces AGR-Lite claims.
However, GRIP and GRP products do not have the
same effect because all of the liability is
likely not at risk.
21Major Issues with AGR-Lite
- Underwriting Rule. AGR-Lite should require
submission of tax returns for all entities that
buy, sell, or produce agricultural products that
an insured has a financial interest. - This would include entities that are not insured
under an AGR-Lite policy in addition to the
insured entity.
22Example AGR-Lite1
1Prepared by Andrew Saffert (Graduate Student),
Dr. Jeffery R. Williams, Dr. G. A. (Art) Barnaby,
Jr., and Dr. Michael R. Langemeier, Professors,
Department of Agricultural Economics, K-State
Research and Extension, Kansas State University,
Manhattan, KS 66502, Risk Profit August 17
18, 2006, Phone 785-532-1515, e-mail
Barnaby_at_ksu.edu, or Andrew Saffert
asaffert_at_mail.agecon.ksu.edu.
2The expected income is generated from the
annual farm plan similar to a cash flow budget
for the upcoming year.
23Example AGR-Lite
24Example AGR-Lite1
1Prepared by Andrew Saffert (Graduate Student),
Dr. Jeffery R. Williams, Dr. G. A. (Art) Barnaby,
Jr., and Dr. Michael R. Langemeier, Professors,
Department of Agricultural Economics, K-State
Research and Extension, Kansas State University,
Manhattan, KS 66502, Risk Profit August 17
18, 2006, Phone 785-532-1515, e-mail
Barnaby_at_ksu.edu, or Andrew Saffert
asaffert_at_mail.agecon.ksu.edu.
2The expected income is generated from the
annual farm plan similar to a cash flow budget
for the upcoming year.
25Example AGR-Lite1
1Prepared by Andrew Saffert (Graduate Student),
Dr. Jeffery R. Williams, Dr. G. A. (Art) Barnaby,
Jr., and Dr. Michael R. Langemeier, Professors,
Department of Agricultural Economics, K-State
Research and Extension, Kansas State University,
Manhattan, KS 66502, Risk Profit August 17
18, 2006, Phone 785-532-1515, e-mail
Barnaby_at_ksu.edu, or Andrew Saffert
asaffert_at_mail.agecon.ksu.edu.
2The expected income is generated from the
annual farm plan similar to a cash flow budget
for the upcoming year.
26What is GRP GRIP
- GRP is a put option on expected county yield
- GRIP is a put option on county revenue
- Farmer has the basis risk, difference between
county yield change and farm yield change
27KS Counties without a Wheat GRP/GRIP Offer
28Does GRP GRIP Fit Great Plains Agriculture?
- GRP/GRIP Does Provide Reasonable Protection
for - Drought
- Freeze
- Excess Moisture
29Does GRP GRIP Fit Great Plains Agriculture?
- GRP/GRIP Does NOT Provide Reasonable Protection
for - Hail
- Flood
- No Prevented planting
- No Re-plant
- No Quality Loss adjustment
- Any spot Loss
30Does GRP GRIP Fit Great Plains Agriculture?
- If APH is low caused by multiple year crop losses
- Low APH causes low guarantees and higher premium
costs - If the APH is real low then there is very little
protection. GRP is based on at least a 30 year
history, so coverage maybe much higher with lower
premium. - Trend yields that set expected county yield is
the key.
31Cheyenne Wheat
32Rawlins Wheat
33Ottawa Wheat
34 Compare Cheyenne, Rawlins Ottawa
35 Compare Cheyenne, Rawlins Ottawa
36Warning NOT a K-State Slide
37Warning NOT a K-State Slide
38Warning NOT a K-State Slide
392007 exp yield as of 33-year average yield no
practice specified
40GRP/GRIP Summary
- Little/no Protection for Hail, wind, flood or
other spot losses - No Prevented Planting or Re-plant Protection
- GRP insured growers worried about Rust may want
to change to APH - Farmer can suffer a total loss and receive no
payment, maybe a lender concern.
41Policy Issues
- The Corn Belt has generated underwriting gains
- Those gains allow RMA to hit the targeted loss
ratio - If the those farmers shift from APH to GRIP, then
RMA may (will ?) lose a major region with
consistent underwriting gains - Farm Bill based on a GRIP type program?
42Thank You DR. G. A. ART BARNABY, JR. KANSAS
STATE UNIVERSITY PHONE 785-532-1515 EMAIL
abarnaby_at_agecon.ksu.edu Check out our WEB page
at http//www.AgManager.Info