Dairy Margin Coverage Program Numbers Low

 

The signup deadline for the Dairy Margin Coverage Program is coming up on December 11th, and the American Farm Bureau says the number of dairy operations signed up is lower than expected. So far, 7,846 operations have enrolled in the program, covering about 64 billion pounds of milk.

Those numbers account for just under one-third of the total number of U.S. operations and the total volume of milk.

Approximately 68% of the country’s licensed operations with established production histories have not signed up for the program.

Next year’s 7,846 operations enrolled is more than 23,000 fewer operations than signed up in 2019, when 13,468 dairy farms enrolled in the program.

The drop in 2020’s dairy enrollments was due in part to somewhat positive expectations for the dairy industry going into 2020.

The low level of signups just days before the deadline is surprising, given the benefits of enrolling for 2021.

A rally in commodity prices may be helpful to many farmers, but it does make feed costs higher for dairy producers.

The rising price of feed will squeeze the margins of dairy farmers, and that should make programs like the DMC more attractive to producers.

Coverage is available from as low as $4 per hundredweight to as much as $9.50 per hundredweight.