Thousands of farmers are filing insurance claims this year after drought and triple-digit temperatures burned up crops across the nations Corn Belt, and some experts are predicting record insurance losses exacerbated by changes that reduced some growers premiums. G.A. “Art” Barnaby, a Kansas State University Extension specialist in risk management, estimates underwriting losses on taxpayer-subsidized crop insurance will hit nearly $15 billion this year. He expects a staggering $25 billion in crop insurance claims to be filed by growers across the nation, driven primarily by one of the worst droughts in the U.S. decades. His loss estimate is based on a loss ratio of $2.50 for every dollar paid in premium.
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