Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTheodore Copeland Modified over 9 years ago
1
Farm policy reform: the European experience Dan Rotenberg, Counselor - Agriculture Delegation of the European Commission to the U.S. Domestic and trade impacts of US farm policy November 15, 2007 – Holiday Inn Capitol
2
2 CAP has been radically reformed since 1992 Main stages: 1992 (Mac Sharry reform), 1999 (Agenda 2000) and 2003 (Fischler reform) On-going process: sugar, F and V, wine, “health check”… Reforms driven by both internal and external factors Internal: budget considerations, EU enlargement, environmental concerns. External: trade impact and WTO implications Outline
3
3 The CAP : from Past to Present More price cuts + compensation Identify EU Farm Model Rural development Protect environment Enlargement Competitiveness Price cuts + compensation Have an UR agreement Stabilise budget Protect income Competitiveness Price support Secure food supplies Improve productivity Stabilise markets Income support Production control Slow down expenditure Reduce international friction Reduce surpluses Single Farm Payment Market orientation Consumer concerns Environment Farm income DDA context Early years 1960’s Crisis years 70’s - 80’s 1992 CAP Reform Agenda 2000 2003 CAP Reform
4
4 From product price to direct producer support… – gradual elimination or reduction of support prices into safety-nets – partial compensation of product support drop by shift to producer support …to decoupling of direct aids… – single farm payment based on historical references… – …requiring compliance with set of existing statutory standards …and to a better balance of support – enhancement of Rural Development policy instruments to meet new standards – shift of funds from market support to rural development – financing new market reforms with redistribution of direct aids CAP reform at a glance
5
5 European model of agriculture a competitive EU agricultural sector environmentally friendly production methods quality products contribution to rural landscapes dynamic sustainable rural economy a minimized impact on world stage 2003 CAP reform – key objectives
6
6 2003 CAP reform and DDA negotiations: a pre-emptive action Decoupling of payments means shifting direct payments to the green box (non-trade distorting payments) Prices reduction means reduced need for export refunds The EU has done its homework with its CAP reform: -move on domestic support -move on export subsidies
7
7 The sugar case: reacting to international pressure EU25: key sugar player (production: 20 million MT; 14% of world production; net exporter: 4.7 million MT of exports and 1.9 million MT of imports; more than 300.000 producers in 21 MS) Key elements of support: intervention price, quota system, border protection, preferential access, export subsidies. But not sustainable: EBA (DFQF from 2009) and WTO challenge (sugar panel – April 2005).
8
8 Sugar reform and its impact Internal prices cut by 36% and abolition of public intervention Farmers partially compensated of income loss through direct payments (merged into the Single payment scheme) Restructuring fund to encourage uncompetitive producers to renounce to their quotas Impact: production to fall (6 millions MT), exports to disappear, imports to increase.
9
9 The effects of the CAP reform Internally Externally
10
10 The path of CAP expenditure EU-10EU-12EU-15 EU-25
11
11 Agricultural Budget: from 0.63% in 1990/92 to 0.45% in 2005/06 and 0.35% in 2013 The decline share of CAP budget - 46% Share of the EU agricultural expenditure in the Gross National Income of the European Union (1991-2013) - (constant 2004 price) 0.30% 0.35% 0.40% 0.45% 0.50% 0.55% 0.60% 0.65% 0.70% 19911992199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013 in % Share of CAP budget in the EU GNI
12
12 Reduction of export subsidies since 1992 -80%
13
13 EU agricultural trade structure balanced move from quantity to quality EU agricultural exports mainly (70%) in high value added products price-dependent bulk commodities represent just 7 % of EU exports Net export position of the EU decreased in key sectors most of this decline is driven by CAP reform most gains go to Southern Hemisphere (Brazil)… EU = largest market for developing countries EU = first importer and first exporter of agricultural products Evolution of EU role in world agricultural trade
14
14 EU net export share (reform impact) A declining share of EU net exports on world markets
15
15 EU net export share (pre-reform)
16
16 The EU domestic support impact on beef…
17
17 …and the evolution of EU beef trade!
18
18 Imports from developing countries (2005)
19
19
20
20
21
21
22
22 Conclusions on EU farm policy reform Key factors: - consumers concerns - budget pressure - WTO commitments - EU enlargement Key elements: - decoupling (ends subsidy hunting) - conditionality on payments Key lesson: ‘Farm policy reform is a marathon, not a sprint’
23
23 Thank you for your attention ! dan.rotenberg@ec.europa.eu www.eurunion.org
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.