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Moral hazard and subsidized crop insurance
Authors:Shenan Wu  Barry K Goodwin  Keith Coble
Institution:1. PenFed Credit Union, McLean, Virginia, USA;2. Department of Agricultural Economics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA;3. Department of Agricultural Economics, Mississippi State University, Starkville, Mississippi, USA
Abstract:Along with adverse selection, moral hazard is one of the major hurdles that private and public insurance plans must contend with. Moral hazard occurs if risks are endogenous to a producer's behavior and if the insurer is unable to properly monitor the insured. We review the role of moral hazard in the US crop insurance program. We conduct an empirical analysis of one important aspect of the US crop insurance program—prevented planting. This provision provides indemnity payments if conditions are not suitable for planting. The program has been the subject of considerable controversy, especially during 2019, when the rate of claims is expected to be especially high. Because loss adjustors may encounter difficulties in assessing the weather conditions associated with prevented planting claims, the program is susceptible to moral hazard. We consider the extent to which prevented planting claims may be endogenous to prices. We find significant evidence of moral hazard. The likelihood of prevented planting claims increases as the expected market price decreases or as fertilizer costs increase for corn and soybeans in the Prairie Pothole Region and for grain sorghum and cotton in all states.
Keywords:crop insurance  LASSO estimation  logistic regression  moral hazard  prevented planting  Q14  Q18
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