An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms

Agricultural policy continues to play a large role in risk reduction for agricultural producers in the United States. However, current budget deficits and growing national debt has many policy makers looking for ways to change the farm safety net. The interactions of current and new policy tools inc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Knapek, George M
Other Authors: Richardson, James W
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149555
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-1495552013-10-05T04:02:24ZAn Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative FarmsKnapek, George MFarm ProgramsFarm PolicyRiskAgricultural policy continues to play a large role in risk reduction for agricultural producers in the United States. However, current budget deficits and growing national debt has many policy makers looking for ways to change the farm safety net. The interactions of current and new policy tools including crop insurance and representative farms were examined in a simulation model for four representative farms. Various outcomes were examined with attention primarily focused on (1) magnitude and frequency of farm program payments, (2) government costs and farmer return on insurance premiums paid, (3) coefficient of variation of farm revenue and probability of negative ending cash, and (4) Stochastic Efficiency with Respect to a Function (SERF) analysis. Results indicated that Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO) and Stacked Income Protection Plan (STAX) programs provide high farmer returns and positive mean payments. However, SCO, STAX, and crop insurance provided lower levels of protection when both the base and harvest price decline by the same amount. Overall, the House farm bill was preferred by all four farms for every scenario. Additionally, the results for Alternative 4, which examined different insurance coverage levels, showed that it was possible for a representative farm to lower its insurance coverage and improve its financial position. The results indicate how farm programs cover various types of potential losses faced by producer which makes the results meaningful to both producers and policy makers alike.Richardson, James WOutlaw, Joe LKlinefelter, DannyDozier, Monty2013-10-03T15:08:46Z2013-10-03T15:08:46Z2013-052013-04-23May 20132013-10-03T15:08:46ZThesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149555en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Farm Programs
Farm Policy
Risk
spellingShingle Farm Programs
Farm Policy
Risk
Knapek, George M
An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms
description Agricultural policy continues to play a large role in risk reduction for agricultural producers in the United States. However, current budget deficits and growing national debt has many policy makers looking for ways to change the farm safety net. The interactions of current and new policy tools including crop insurance and representative farms were examined in a simulation model for four representative farms. Various outcomes were examined with attention primarily focused on (1) magnitude and frequency of farm program payments, (2) government costs and farmer return on insurance premiums paid, (3) coefficient of variation of farm revenue and probability of negative ending cash, and (4) Stochastic Efficiency with Respect to a Function (SERF) analysis. Results indicated that Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO) and Stacked Income Protection Plan (STAX) programs provide high farmer returns and positive mean payments. However, SCO, STAX, and crop insurance provided lower levels of protection when both the base and harvest price decline by the same amount. Overall, the House farm bill was preferred by all four farms for every scenario. Additionally, the results for Alternative 4, which examined different insurance coverage levels, showed that it was possible for a representative farm to lower its insurance coverage and improve its financial position. The results indicate how farm programs cover various types of potential losses faced by producer which makes the results meaningful to both producers and policy makers alike.
author2 Richardson, James W
author_facet Richardson, James W
Knapek, George M
author Knapek, George M
author_sort Knapek, George M
title An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms
title_short An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms
title_full An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms
title_fullStr An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms
title_full_unstemmed An Economic Analysis of U.S. Farm Programs Including Senate and House Farm Bills on Representative Farms
title_sort economic analysis of u.s. farm programs including senate and house farm bills on representative farms
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149555
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