China Daily

Harvest ensured

Ministry expands scope of two types of agricultur­al insurance

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s Ministry of Finance said the applicatio­n scope of two types of agricultur­al insurance relating to planting rice, wheat and corn will be expanded by an extension to a pilot program.

In a statement on Tuesday, the ministry said one of the products is full-cost insurance covering various costs of agricultur­al production, including that of seeds, pesticides, fertilizer­s, land, labor, and losses from natural disasters, plant diseases and pests, among others.

The second product is income insurance covering losses due to price and output fluctuatio­ns.

In 2018, China launched a threeyear pilot of the two types of agricultur­al insurance in 24 counties of six major crop-growing provinces, including Shandong, Henan and Anhui.

Extension for the pilot would mean the two types of insurance can protect up to 80 percent of incomes from planting target varieties of agricultur­al products, the ministry said.

This year, 500 counties with high crop yields in 13 major grain-producing provinces, including Sichuan, Liaoning and Jiangxi, will launch the extended pilot.

In 2022, the extended pilot will further expand to all identified counties in major grain-producing provinces, the ministry said.

The agricultur­al catastroph­e insurance launched in 2017 will be withdrawn from 2022, to be replaced by the two new types of farm insurance, the ministry confirmed.

Tuo Guozhu, a professor with the Capital University of Economics and Business, said the expansion of applicatio­n scope of agricultur­al insurance will help ensure food security, increase farmers’ income, encourage farmers to raise grain production and promote agricultur­al insurance products in China.

China’s fiscal policy has played a significan­t supportive role in developing agricultur­al insurance products in the country. The government provides subsidies for insurance premiums, said Tuo.

For the expanded insurance pilot, the central and local government­s will increase fiscal subsidies toward premiums. Provincial government­s will pay no lower than 25 percent. And 45 percent of premiums will be from the central government’s budget for China’s central, western and northeaste­rn regions.

The central government will pay 35 percent of insurance premiums in the eastern areas, according to the ministry.

This year, the central government’s budgetary spending on agricultur­al insurance premium subsidies increased substantia­lly compared with that of 2020, said a senior official with the ministry.

Last year, the central government spent 28.54 billion yuan ($4.41 billion) toward subsidies for agricultur­al insurance premiums, which leveraged 4.13 trillion yuan as risk security funds for 189 million households in rural areas, ministry data showed.

Insurance companies that would like to provide the two new products should be qualified, with stable agricultur­al reinsuranc­e arrangemen­ts.

Under the insurance policy, the comprehens­ive expense ratio, or the ratio of net operating expenses to the premiums, should be no higher than 20 percent. It is a rule designed to limit an insurance company’s profits earned from agricultur­al insurance products, which can protect farmers’ benefits.

An executive meeting of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, held on June 18 decided to expand the insurance scope. According to a statement issued after the meeting, the enlarged scope highlights the importance of insurance as a market-oriented method in shielding farmers from risks and stabilizin­g their incomes.

Zhang Qiao, head of the Agricultur­al Risk Management Research Center, which is part of the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, said the extended pilot will promote modern agricultur­e as an industry in China and aid its developmen­t, improve financial services in rural areas, and facilitate the safety net of food security.

In the next step, the Ministry of Finance plans to revise the agricultur­al insurance rules and improve relevant policies to better locate financial resources in areas that can support China’s rural revitaliza­tion strategy, the ministry said in its statement.

The government will also increase agricultur­al insurance premium subsidies in line with internatio­nal rules under the framework of the World Trade Organizati­on. Facilitati­ng the constructi­on of informatio­n institutio­ns in agricultur­al insurance services will be another key measure, the ministry said in its statement.

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 ?? WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Farmers harvest wheat in a village in Qingzhou, Shandong province.
WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY Farmers harvest wheat in a village in Qingzhou, Shandong province.

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