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CAPRI Common Agricultural Policy Regional Impact

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A tool to support policy makers and the public ... Silage. 70. 30. Durum wheat. 70. 30. Grandes cultures. Farm Premium. Grassland. Arable land ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CAPRI Common Agricultural Policy Regional Impact


1
CAPRICommon Agricultural Policy Regional Impact
Impact analysisof the Luxembourg
Agreementimplementation optionsCAPRI
results Wolfgang Britz Ignacio
Perez University Bonn
2
CAPRICommon Agricultural Policy Regional Impact
  • Outline
  • What is CAPRI ?
  • How are decoupled premiums presented in CAPRI ?
  • What implementation options are considered ?
  • Which are the main results ?
  • What may we learn from the results ?

3
What is CAPRI ?
  • Common Agricultural Policy Regionalised Impact
  • A tool to support policy makers and the publicin
    assessing future impacts of agricultural policy
    reforms
  • on farm income, production, input use and the
    environmentat regional level (NUTS II, 200
    regions)
  • on prices, demand, consumer welfare at Member
    State level
  • on imports, exports, import and export prices,
    market interventions and FEOGA budget at EU level
  • Developed, maintained and applied by a network of
    European researchers
  • Mostly financed by DG-RSRCH since 1996

4
How are decoupled premiums presented in CAPRI ?
Plus premiums which continue to be coupled rice
premiums, energy crops, pulses ..
5
What options are analysed ?
  • In here, four implementation strategies are
    analysed
  • Full decoupling for all Member States
  • Plausible implementation (will be explained
    later)
  • Slaughter premiums fully coupled, rest fully
    decoupled
  • Crop premiums coupled as far as possible (Member
    State specific implementation), animal premiums
    fully decoupled
  • Implementation as farm premium

6
A plausible coupling ?
7
A plausible hybrid model ?(DE,DK,FI,UK)
8
Expected effects of decoupling
  • Farmers win if production program influencedby
    coupled premiums in Agenda 2000? more market
    orientation possible
  • Reduced production triggers price increases?
    further income gains for farmers
  • Higher prices hurt consumers
  • Environmental effects positive less negative
    externalities, negative effects of land
    abandonment dampened by cross-compliance

9
Main results
  • The Luxembourg Compromise
  • increases farm incomes
  • stabilizes the FEOGA budget
  • but hurts consumers due to higher prices
  • Welfare gain 1 Bio Euro(2009, compared to
    Agenda 2000 for the plausible implementation
    scheme)
  • 4.6 Bio Euro for farmers
  • -2 Bio Euro for consumers
  • -1.5 Bio Euro for the processing industry
  • Similar picture across all EU 15 Member States

10
Results for crop activities, EU15(2009, compared
to Agenda 2000 for the plausible implementation
scheme)
  • Reduced incentives for Grandes Cultures
  • More fallow land (8 or 800 th. ha)and
    pasture/fodder production (4 or 2.3 Mio ha)
  • Less cereals (-7.5 or -2.7 Mio ha ),oilseeds
    (-5 or -250 t ha), pulses (-5 or -220 t ha)
  • Sharp drop in durum wheat (-24 or -0.9 Mio ha)
  • Change in cropping pattern strong in marginal
    areas and where durum is important.

11
Change in cereal area
2009, Luxembourg compromise, probable
implementation scheme, compared to Agenda 2000
12
Change in durum wheat area
2009, Luxembourg compromise, probable
implementation scheme, compared to Agenda 2000
13
Results for crop markets, EU15(2009, plausible
implementation scheme compared to Agenda 2000)
  • Higher cereals (6) and oil seed prices (4)
  • Effects on EU-15 feed quantities
  • -4 for cereals
  • -5 for oil cakes
  • Feed composition in cattle changes
  • Less cereals (-6) and oil cakes (-8)
  • More own produced fodder (5 grass, 20 fodder
    from arable land)
  • Higher feed prices are reflected into higher
    prices for pork (1.4) and poultry (1.2)

14
Results for animal activities
  • Reduced incentives for beef and sheep production
  • Less suckler cows (-10), beef cattle (-7.5),
    sheep (-7.5)
  • Meat production drops beef -5, sheep -6
  • Beef (8) and sheep (12) meat prices increase
  • Shift to higher final weights
  • Demand changes are less pronounced,range of /-
    0.5 for different meat products
  • Beef exports drop by -22, imports increase by
    10
  • Changes in administrative prices for butterdo
    not impact on dairy cow herds (milk
    quota),butter prices drop around 4

15
Change in suckler cow herd
2009, Luxembourg compromise, probable
implementation scheme, compared to Agenda 2000
16
Results for environmental indicators
  • In overall positive
  • Smaller herds reduce ammonia and greenhouse gas
    emissions and potential leaching
  • Extensification in fodder production,lower
    stocking rates
  • But
  • Possible negative effects of increased idling
    land must be off-set by strict cross-compliance

17
Change in Nitrogen Surplus
2009, Luxembourg compromise, probable
implementation scheme, compared to Agenda 2000
18
Change in GHG Emissions (in CO2 Equivalents)
2009, Luxembourg compromise, probable
implementation scheme, compared to Agenda 2000
19
Change in farm incomeMio Euro, 2009, compared to
Agenda 2000
20
Change in farm income
2009, Luxembourg compromise, probable
implementation scheme, compared to Agenda 2000
21
Change in consumer welfareMio Euro, 2009,
compared to Agenda 2000
22
Change in cereals area2009, compared to Agenda
2000
23
Change in durum wheat area2009, compared to
Agenda 2000
24
Change in suckler cow herds2009, compared to
Agenda 2000
25
Possible conclusions
  • Partial compared to full decoupling leads
  • to welfare losses, especially for farmers
  • to higher pressure on the environment
  • to lower market prices ? more likelihood of
    market interventions
  • Complex mix of green and amber box
    instruments
  • But,
  • Overall only minor differences between
    implementation schemes
  • Pronounced effects only for some sectors such as
    suckler cows or durum wheat

26
Thanks for your attention Further information on
CAPRI or the results www.agp.uni-bonn.de/rsrch/c
apri/capri_e.htm orbritz_at_agp.uni-bonn.de
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