Europe Has Unique Chance To Reform Farm Support

EUROPE - High commodity prices have made European farmers much less dependent on income support, offering cash-strapped governments a unique opportunity to reform the European Union’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), according to a new Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) report.
calendar icon 12 October 2011
clock icon 2 minute read

Evaluation of Agricultural Policy Reforms in the European Union shows that European support to farm incomes has decreased substantially over the past 20 years.

Farmers earned 22 per cent of total annual receipts from government support over the 2008-10 period, down from 39 per cent annually over the 1986-88 period.

The decline is due to many factors, including high commodity prices, which automatically push down income support, as well as 25 years of CAP reform outlined in the report.

Despite the decline, CAP expenditures nonetheless comprised close to 45 per cent of the total EU budget in 2010, or about EUR 53 billion. Overall farm support reached EUR 77 billion in 2010, as measured by the OECD’s Producer Support Estimate, which includes direct payments to farmers as well as the impacts of government policies on prices.

“Expected growth in demand and higher real commodity prices offer tremendous opportunities for farmers and government alike,” said Ken Ash, OECD director of Trade and Agriculture, during the report’s launch in Brussels.

“A window has opened for re-orientation of policy away from broad income support and towards investments in a strong and competitive agri-food sector.”

The OECD report details the major CAP reforms over the past 25 years, describes the main characteristics and structure of the current CAP and recommends paths for future reform, including:

  • The removal of remaining impediments to the functioning of input and output markets, more open access to the European market and transparent EU-wide markets for the sale and lease of land, production quotas and payment entitlements.

  • Greater investment in agricultural innovation.

  • Introduction at the EU level of an effective and comprehensive framework for risk management, steering clear of areas where private sector solutions exist, such as production contracts, insurance and futures contracts.

  • Targeted efforts to improve the environmental performance of agriculture, including direct payments to farmers, when necessary, for provision of environmental goods and services.

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