Title: EU agricultural policy
1EU agricultural policy
- Lecture outline and objectives
- To explain the objectives of EU intervention in
agricultural markets - To describe the mechanisms of EU agricultural
policy and some of the problems caused by these
mechanisms. - To outline the various pressures to reform EU
agricultural policy - To explain the way recent reforms of the CAP
address these problems and pressures
2Objectives of the Common Agricultural Policy
- Article 39 objectives
- to increase agricultural productivity
- to ensure a fair standard of living for the
agricultural community - to stabilise markets
- to ensure the availability of supplies
- to ensure that supplies reach consumers at
reasonable prices - Instruments of the CAP
- - price and markets policy (FEOGA Guarantee
Section) - - socio-structural and rural development policy
(FEOGA Guidance Section)
3Rationale for agricultural policy
- instability of agricultural markets
- cobweb models of price instability
- food security
- structural falling behind of farm incomes
- low price and income elasticities of demand
- supply shifts due to technological advances cause
relative farm prices to fall - limited labour mobility because resources are
trapped in agriculture - maintenance of the rural population
- environmental and landscape benefits - the
multifunctionality of agriculture
4Pre-GATT Uruguay RoundCAP mechanisms
target price
threshold price
intervention price
variable levy
export subsidy
world price
world price
Import
Internal
Export
5Problems of agricultural price policy
- an uncommon market
- a single agricultural market was created, but ...
- green currencies kept prices different and...
- veterinary and plant health rules kept the market
fragmented - growing overproduction and intervention overload
... - leading to growing budget costs
- the inefficiency of CAP price policy
- large transactions costs incurred to transfer
income support - the inequity of CAP price policy
- larger farmers benefit at the expense of low
income consumers - environmental costs of the CAP price policy
- higher prices encouraged intensification and
greater input use
6Welfare cost of CAP price support to EU
P
Welfare effects
Consumers -a-b
a
c
Producers abc
b
d
Taxpayers -b-c-d
Overall -b-d
Q
7Welfare cost of CAP price support to Ireland
P
Welfare effects
Trade transfer
Budget transfer
Consumers -a-b
a
c
e
Producers abce
b
d
Overall ce
Note Net gain to Ireland arises from EU
financing of export surpluses
Q
Intra-EU exports
Extra-EU exports
8World market effects of the Common Agricultural
Policy
- Because the EU is a large player in world
markets, the welfare analysis must be augmented
by a terms of trade effect (gain for imported
commodities, loss for exported ones) - Higher internal prices lead to depressed world
prices - More stable internal prices lead to more volatile
world prices - Preferential agreements (Cotonou, previously
Lome, Convention, Europe Agreements) allow some
privileged exporters to benefit from higher
internal prices, through the rents often accrue
to importers.
9Pressures for change (1)- International pressures
- EU agricultural policy attacked for its effects
on other exporters - Disciplines on agricultural support policies were
a key negotiating item in the Uruguay Round of
trade negotiations launched in 1986 - Final agreement 1994
- Converted import barriers into tariffs and
reduced them by 36 - Set limits on the volume and value of export
subsidies - Set and bound ceilings on the total amount of
trade-distorting support each country could
provide to its farmers - - Doha round of trade liberalisation
negotiations - prospects after Cancun?
10Post-GATT Uruguay RoundCAP mechanisms
target price
threshold price
intervention price
export subsidy
Domestic support capped and reduced over time
world price
world price
Import
Internal
Export
11Pressures for change (2)- internal momentum for
change
- Driven initially by rising budget costs and the
need to control production - MacSharry reforms in 1993 cut support prices for
cereals (29) and beef (15) in return for
increased direct payments as compensation to
farmers - The Agenda 2000 agreement continued this approach
with further cuts in support prices for cereals
(15), beef (20) and, for the first time, milk
(15), again with increased compensation to
farmers - More CAP resources shifted into the accompanying
measures agri-environment schemes,
afforestation and rural development
12Pressures for change (3)- Impact of the wider EU
agenda
- Introduction of the single market led to
elimination of border controls and technical
barriers to trade, which were particularly
prominent in trade in food and agricultural
products - Need to adjust the CAP to accommodate the entry
of central and east European countries with large
agricultural sectors led to the Agenda 2000
agreement to cut support prices further - Growing pressures to modify the CAP to take on
board food safety (especially in the light of the
BSE crisis), animal welfare and environmental
concerns.
13The CAP Mid-Term Review 2002
- Rationale
- Public expectations and demands of farmers are
changing - To prepare EU agriculture for enlargement and
next WTO round - Decoupling
- Direct payments to be paid to farmers
irrespective of the level of production on
farms.. - leading to lower production, less environmental
stress and more efficient income transfer - Environmental conditionality
- Farmers must adhere to environmental, food
safety, animal welfare standards, otherwise
payments can be reduced - Modulation
- Refers to the transfer of money from direct
payments (Pillar 1) to rural development (Pillar
2) by reducing payments to larger farms over 6
years
14EU agricultural policy current challenges
- Absorbing the new member states
- Implementing CAP income support mechanisms
- Safeguarding the single market in food products
- Continuing the process of internal reform
- Sugar, Mediterranean products yet to be covered
- Future of dairy quotas
- Pillar 1 agricultural budget now fixed until 2013
- The Doha Round
- Is the Mid-Term Review sufficient to allow the EU
to conclude a Doha Agreement?