Applied Risk Analysis Section Track Sessions
1007
Advances, Updates, and Practical Issues in US Crop Insurance Premium Rating Methods
Monday, 9:30 AM–11:00 AM
Washington State Convention Center, Level 3, Room 304
Agricultural Finance and Management (AFM) and Applied Risk Analysis (ARA) Track Session
Crop insurance programs have moved from the periphery to the core of U.S. federal risk support for crop producers. Not only has the program grown in participation, but coverage levels and revenue products have increased. Further the rating system for the program has been the subject of significant research over the past decade. The upshot is that a considerable evolution in rating has occurred. This session will provide an update of current rating procedures and provide an overview of the research that led to the current system. Finally, Tom Worth, Chief Actuary of USDA/RMA will provide an overview of the challenges and future directions for program rating.
Organizer: Keith H. Coble, Mississippi State University
Moderator: Roderick M. Rejesus, North Carolina State University
Presentations:
A primer on the RMA Rating system and how we got here.
Thomas O. Knight, Texas Tech University
At the Nexus of Economics and Actuarial Science: A joint project to evaluate crop insurance loss history
Keith H. Coble, Mississippi State University
Its not just APH: Current approaches to rating revenue insurance and area-designs
Barry K. Goodwin, North Carolina State University
Updates, Challenges, and Future Directions in RMA Premium Rating
Thomas W. Worth, USDA RMA
1041
Managing Assigned Risk in Food: Mitigation and Indemnification
Monday, 1:00 PM–2:30 PM
Washington State Convention Center, Level 3, Room 310
Applied Risk Analysis (ARA) and Food Safety and Nutrition Section (FSN) Track Session
Food safety is something we all desire and yet there are numerous challenges and issues that need to be addressed today and as the systems we depend on continue to evolve. Implementing strategies and assigning responsibilities within the systems that produce and deliver the basic foods we require to sustain life (and a large portion of several economies) necessitate we address the risks and mitigation protocols for various agents. This session will start with a 5-minute overview of The Food Safety Modernization Act from discussant Sandy Hoffmann, followed by a sequence of four papers on how producers, food companies, consumers and others will be directly impacted by new programs and standards regarding foods. Presentations from those researching food safety protocols will provide additional insights and frame questions for continued research through examination of producer indemnification for food safety events and the role of private standards; the management of zero-tolerance rules when detection can be impractical or impossible; and the costs of adopting food safety programs at the farm-level.
Organizer: Samuel M. Funk, Doane Advisory Services
Moderator: Sandra Hoffmann, USDA-Economic Research Service
Discussant: Sandra Hoffmann, USDA-Economic Research Service
Presentations:
Attributing Foodborne Illness to Foods Using Time Series Data on Food Consumption and Foodborne Illness
Peter Berck, University of California, Berkeley; Dana Cole, Center for Disease Control; Sandra Hoffmann and Jessica E. Todd, USDA-Economic Research Service
Producer Indemnification for Food Safety Events and the Role of Private Standards
Peyton M. Ferrier, USDA-Economic Research Service
Zero-Tolerance Rules and the Challenge of Detection: Lessons from gluten-free products
Norbert L.W. Wilson and Michelle R. Worosz, Auburn University
Costs of Adopting Food Safety Programs for Lettuce Growers - Large and Small
Linda Sue Calvin, USDA-Economic Research Service; Helen H. Jensen, Iowa State University; Karen Klonsky, University of California, Davis
1065
Transforming Climate Information for Production Decision-making: The U2U Project
Monday, 4:30 PM–6:00 PM
Washington State Convention Center, Level 3, Room 304
Applied Risk Analysis (ARA) and Extension Section (EXT) Track Session
Weather and climatic conditions are major sources of uncertainty in agricultural production. Climate science, computer modeling and agricultural technologies hold promise for better managing the uncertainty associated with weather. This symposium highlights some of the work being done to transform weather and climate information into more usable products for farmers. USDA-NIFA has recently funded the integrated research and extension project Useful to Usable (U2U): Transforming Climate Variability and Change Information for Cereal Crop Producers. This project is examining the interaction of weather and climate variables in agricultural production decisions across a twelve state region encompassing the Corn Belt. The three presentations for this symposium outline three different aspects of the U2U project. The first presentation will provide a corn production weather/climate-driven decision calendar to assist the above-mentioned stakeholders in connecting intra-seasonal and inter-seasonal agricultural weather/climate information. The second presentation will present preliminary results of on-going crop modeling efforts and the adaptive strategies for maximizing agronomic productivity and farm profitability while reducing the impact of climate-related risks. The third presentation will present the fieldwork days data and illustrate its incorporation into a decision support tool for a crop production decision such as fertilizer management. After the 3 presentations, the moderator will lead an audience discussion of the concepts presented. The objective will be to discover oversights in the current program and to garner insight into how weather and climate information can be transformed to create decision support tools through the outreach component of the project.
Organizer: Raymond E. Massey, University of Missouri
Moderator: Otto C. Doering, III, Purdue University
Presentations:
Decision Calendar to Connect Intra- and Inter-seasonal agricultural weather/climate information
Raymond E. Massey, University of Missouri
Adaptive Strategies for Maximizing Productivity and Profitability while reducing the Impact of Climate-Related Risks
Chad E. Hart, Iowa State University
Field Workdays Decision Support Tools
Benjamin Gramig, Purdue University
2014
Practical Issues of Agricultural Insurance Programs in Developing Countries
Tuesday, 10:00 AM–11:30 AM
Washington State Convention Center, Level 6, Room 602
Applied Risk Analysis (ARA) Track Session
Producers in developing countries tend to be more vulnerable to production risks because they are more dependent on agriculture and often lack access to insurance products. The paucity of insurance instruments could be contributor to the existence of poverty traps. Production shocks impact various aspects of rural economies, and households that own few assets can be pushed toward an (often irreversible) downward spiral into destitution. Systemic risks are of particular importance, since losses due to extreme events as a proportion of GDP in these countries have been historically higher than in developed countries. Design and implementation of insurance programs for developing countries face a variety of challenges. Among these, the most common are the lack of reliable historical data, information asymmetry, and lack of appropriate institutional infrastructure. The proposed session presents three papers which deal with specific practical issues encountered in the development, analysis, and/or implementation of insurance programs in developing countries.
Organizer: Dmitry V. Vedenov, Texas A&M University
Moderator: Oscar Vergara, Air Worldwide
Discussant: Barry J. Barnett, Mississippi State University
Presentations:
Can Farmers’ Insurance Under-Report Behavior Be Considered Cheating
Hong Holly Wang, Purdue University; Yuehua Zhang, Zhejiang University
Modeling Agricultural Risk in China
Oscar Vergara and Gerhard Zuba, Air Worldwide; Tina Zhang, Matt Harrigan, and Jack Seaquist, AIR Worldwide; Heidi Wang, Air Worldwide
Practical Issues in Designing Index Insurance Products for Ecuador Rice Producers
Dmitry V. Vedenov and Leonardo F. Sanchez, Texas A&M University
2066
Is Subsidizing Farm Crop and Revenue Insurance Economically Justified?
Tuesday, 4:00 PM–5:30 PM
Washington State Convention Center, Level 3, Room 303
Invited Paper Session
Subsidized crop insurance has become the major farm program. Crop insurance subsidies already amount to about $6 Billion per year and current proposals for replacing direct payments with “shallow-loss protection” would raise the levels of subsidized protection and increase the cost of the program. The economic justification for subsidizing farming in this way deserves continued critical public examination.
Organizer: Richard G. Heifner, Retired
Moderator: Richard G. Heifner, Retired
Discussant: Gary D. Schnitkey, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Presentations:
Why Has Subsidizing Crop Insurance Become the Farm Program of Choice?
Joseph W. Glauber, USDA-Office of the Chief Economist
What Harm is Done by Subsidizing Crop Insurance?
Barry K. Goodwin, North Carolina State University
What Benefits Accrue from Subsidizing Crop Insurance?
Keith H. Coble, Mississippi State University