How Important is Crop Insurance to Oregon?

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Legislators and advocacy groups are in the middle of negotiations related to the 2023 Farm Bill, and the federal crop insurance program is a big part of the discussion. Crop insurance is the largest farm program in the Farm Bill and is both a major tool for farm-level risk management as well as a significant subsidy program. There are calls for reductions in crop insurance program spending, and other legislators and producer groups are working hard to defend the program and grow it in strategic ways. With this context, I thought it would be interesting to pull together some information on Oregon’s participation and experience with the federal crop insurance program over the last 10 years. Farmer participation in the crop insurance program depends heavily on the farm’s crop mix and where they are located, with specialty crop producers much less likely to participate than producers of the largest commodity crops. The figures and statistics that follow are generated from the USDA-RMA Summary of Business (SOB) data that is publicly available (but can be difficult to wrangle).

One way to think about Oregon’s “return” from the crop insurance program is to look at the total amount received by Oregon farmers net of their insurance premiums. Figure 1 below shows the difference between the amount that Oregon farmers received from the crop insurance program in indemnity payments and the amount that they paid into the program in premiums over the past 10 years. The last three years, and 2021 in particular, had large crop losses and high indemnity payments, but in most of the last decade the state’s farmers netted between $10 and $30 million from the crop insurance program.

Figure 1. Oregon farmers’ net return from crop insurance program by year.

The average “return” from crop insurance to Oregon is roughly $48 million per year, which is not much compared to states that are stronger in crops with higher crop insurance participation rates. Figure 2 shows Oregon’s 10-year average annual net subsidy compared to those received by the 10 largest recipient states. The list is dominated by states producing major commodity crops, with California making the top ten because of the scale of their agriculture industry rather than particularly high rates of participation in insurance programs.  

Figure 2. Average net return to farmers from crop insurance participation from 2013-2022.

Though crop insurance plays less of a role in Oregon than in many other states, many Oregon farms benefit from the risk management provided by the program. Figure 3 shows the liabilities by crop for Oregon in 2022. This number is the total crop value that is insured. The top two crops are wheat, along with pasture/rangeland/forage. For producers of crops that are not insurable on an individual basis, or diversified farms for whom it would be cumbersome to insurance all crops separately, whole-farm revenue protection can be a viable option, and the product had more than $50 million in liability in 2022.

Figure 3. Insurance liability by crop, Oregon 2022.

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