Adverse Selection in Crop Insurance: Actuarial and Asymmetric Information Incentives
Adverse selection is often blamed for crop insurance indemnities exceeding premiums plus subsidies. However, nationwide empirical evidence has been lacking or based on inadequate county-level data. This article uses nationwide farm-level data on corn and soybeans to decompose incentives for participation in U.S. multiple peril crop insurance into a risk-aversion incentive (the conventional justification for insurance), an actuarial or subsidy incentive (reflecting government subsidization), and an asymmetric information incentive (which reflects farmers' information advantage). Results show that the risk-aversion incentive is small. Farmers participate in crop insurance primarily to receive the subsidy or because of adverse selection possibilities. Copyright 1999, Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
1999
|
---|---|
Authors: | Just, Richard E. ; Calvin, Linda ; Quiggin, John |
Published in: |
American Journal of Agricultural Economics. - Agricultural and Applied Economics Association - AAEA. - Vol. 81.1999, 4, p. 834-849
|
Publisher: |
Agricultural and Applied Economics Association - AAEA |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Adverse Selection in Crop Insurance: Actuarial and Asymmetric Information Incentives
Just, Richard E., (1993)
-
Adverse selection in crop insurance : actuarial and asymmetric information incentives
Just, Richard E., (1999)
-
Just, Richard E., (1994)
- More ...