Safety Net Programs Work Together Through Market Cycles

ARC/PLC, marketing loans, and crop insurance each matter at different points in the price cycle — and the new Farm Bill strengthens the balance among them.

dead corn crop insurance_adobe stock.png

Adobe Stock

NASHVILLE, TENN (RFD-TV) — Farmers often ask why ARC and PLC matter when recent payments have been small compared to crop insurance. According to Dr. Joe Outlaw, Co-Director of the Agricultural and Food Policy Center at Texas A&M University, the question comes up frequently, and the answer is that the safety net was never designed to rely on a single program.

Instead, it rests on three coordinated parts: ARC/PLC, marketing assistance loans, and crop insurance. Each rises or falls in usefulness depending on prices, costs, and market cycles. While ARC and PLC have not kept pace with recent losses driven by low commodity prices and record-high input costs, marketing loans continue to help producers manage cash flow at harvest, and crop insurance — especially revenue protection — has remained the most consistently valuable tool in the downturn.

Outlaw notes that this balance will shift. The One Big Beautiful Bill significantly raises reference prices for ARC and PLC and strengthens ARC’s triggers, enabling payments to arrive sooner and cover larger potential shortfalls. Those changes boost the value of both programs going forward. At the same time, in today’s low-price environment, crop insurance becomes less effective because insurance guarantees are tied directly to futures prices during the discovery month. Losses are still covered, but indemnities will be based on much lower price levels than in recent years, even as production costs stay high.

Looking ahead, Outlaw says rising market prices would increase crop insurance guarantees but reduce the odds of ARC or PLC payments. Marketing loans would continue providing harvest-time flexibility when producers need cash but want to avoid selling into the seasonal low. In that environment, each part of the safety net plays a different role. None can replace the others, and no single program is built for all conditions, which is why the safety net was designed to work as a set.

Farm-Level Takeaway: ARC/PLC, marketing loans, and crop insurance each matter at different points in the price cycle — and the new Farm Bill strengthens the balance among them.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Market Specialist
Related Stories
As we continue our Countdown to Convention presented by Culver’s, we meet some of the people who help bring the event to life.
John Appel with the Farmers Business Network (FBN) joins us for a closer look at the 2026 Crop Protection Market Outlook Report.
Farmers display a unique optimism — planting with the expectation that weather, basis, and prices will improve by harvest — asserting that the profession is an identity, not just a job.
Stay alert for trade announcements—especially border reopening timelines, tariff threats, and developments in Brazil’s export flows.
Margin Protection and the new MCO add county-level margin tools — with earlier price discovery, input cost triggers, and high subsidy rates — to complement on-farm risk plans for 2026.
For aging operators and their rural neighbors, staying socially engaged is a practical strategy to preserve decision-making capacity and farm vitality.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

The new WOTUS proposal narrows federal jurisdiction, restores key agricultural exclusions, and gives farmers clearer permitting rules after years of regulatory uncertainty.
Here is a regional snapshot of harvest pace, crop conditions, logistics, and livestock economics across U.S. agriculture for the week of Monday, November 17, 2025.
Ethanol markets remain mixed — weaker production and blend rates are being partially balanced by stronger exports as winter demand patterns take shape.
Tariff relief may soften grocery prices, but it also intensifies competition for U.S. fruit, vegetable, and beef producers as cheaper imports regain market share.
Strong U.S. yields and steady demand leave most major crops well supplied, keeping price pressure in place unless usage strengthens or weather shifts outlooks.
Retail competition and improved supplies are helping offset food inflation, pushing Thanksgiving meal costs modestly lower despite higher prices for beef, eggs, and dairy.