Insurers Argue Proposed Crop Insurance Cuts Are Too Deep
2009年4月24日 - 4:20AM
Dow Jones News
A proposal to cut government payments to the private insurers
that administer the U.S. crop insurance program could cause some
insurers to drop out, said the chief of their trade group.
Insurers "are going to have to take a hard look at the financial
wall that is before them," said Bob Parkerson, president of
National Crop Insurance Services, a trade group that represents the
16 private insurers that participate. Crop insurance is backed by
the Department of Agriculture and covers about 80% of the land
tilled in the U.S.
The Department of Agriculture pays insurers an administration
fee of around 19% of premiums, and subsidizes about 40% of the
premiums farmers pay. Premiums are eventually split between the
government and insurers based on underwriting profits, if there are
any. The business has been profitable for insurers, but the 2008
Farm Bill cut insurer payments substantially.
Now a Senate budget resolution could cut another $70 million in
each of the next five years from insurer payments.
The 16 participating insurers together earned pretax net income
of $1.36 billion for the 2007 crop year, the most recent figures
available. Parkerson said the 2008 Farm Bill cuts will begin for
the 2008 crop year.
The crop insurance program has grown substantially over the
years and has become an integral part of the farming business,
Parkerson said. Lenders frequently require crop insurance when
lending to farmers.
In the 2008 crop year, farmers paid total premiums of $9.9
billion, and so far a total of $8.2 billion has been paid out in
claims.
Insurers "are being punished for doing a good job," Parkerson
said. He attributed some of the negative sentiment towards insurers
to the financial services bailout, despite the fact that
property/casualty insurers have for the most part rejected
government bailouts.
Evan Greenberg, chief executive of Ace Ltd. (ACE), one of the
largest crop insurers, has publicly argued against government
bailout money steered to insurers, but Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC)
another large provider, has been the recipient of TARP funds.
Neither breaks out earnings for their crop insurance partnerships,
which is a small line of business for both. Ace also offers its
own, unsubsidized rain and hail coverage for farmers and said that
the 2007 crop year resulted in a net pre-tax benefit to income of
$61 million.
The Obama administration's proposed budget called for $5.2
billion in cuts to the program over the next decade, but did not
specify whether the cuts would be to farmer subsidies or insurance
company payments.
Congress rejected the proposed budget, and a current Senate
budget resolution calls for a $70 million annual cut to the
program, which Parkerson said is intended to come entirely from
fees paid to insurers. The House budget process currently calls for
no cuts to the crop insurance program, but Parkerson said it is too
early in the process to draw any conclusions about what the final
budget will look like.
-By Lavonne Kuykendall, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750 4141;
lavonne.kuykendall@dowjones.com