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Distribution of farm subsidies: The French experience

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Title: Distribution of farm subsidies: The French experience


1
Distribution of farm subsidiesThe French
experience
  • Pierre Boulanger
  • Groupe dEconomie Mondiale
  • Association of Swedish Chambers of Commerce
  • The German Marshall Fund of the United States
  • Groupe dEconomie Mondiale (GEM), Paris
  • Brussels, 23 June 2009

2
1. Introduction1.1. The agricultural policy
cycle (OECD, 2008)
  • Formulation of policy objectives
  • Evaluation of the performance of the current
    policy Adequate information on the cost and
    benefits Are the desired objectives achieved?
    Are some adjustments or a new policy needed?
  • Establishing characteristics of adjustments or a
    new policy set
  • Implementation
  • Monitoring and evaluation
  • Getting the process right removing obstacles to
    change
  • ? Evaluation of the distribution of support in
    France

3
1. Introduction1.2. Evolution and breakdown of
CAP budget France, 1992-2006, million euros
Data French MAP
4
2. The unequal distribution issue in
France2.1. Preliminary considerations
  • The September 2008 and April 2009 releases of
    nominative data on farm subsidies recipients are
    shedding some light on an unequal redistributive
    mechanism
  • Individual data extraction from French MAF
    website done by Farmsubsidy.org
  • 378,812 recipients of direct payments (Pillar 1)
  • 133,839 recipients of rural development measures
    (Pillar 2)
  • 16.5 of farms receive half of total direct
    payments
  • No difference between Pillars I and II Gini
    coefficients of inequality for Pillar 1 (national
    average 0.524) and for Pillar 2 (national
    average 0.508) are roughly similar at the
    national level with a wide dispersion between
    départements (standard deviations 0.088 and
    0.061 respectively)

5
2. The unequal distribution issue in
France2.2. Policy objectives and equity
  • Equity is an important factor to ensure that
    public support goes to holdings which
    need/deserve it
  • If the objective is to support farm income,
    equity matters
  • If the objective is to pay for positive
    externality (or public goods / non-market
    commodities) generated by farm activities, equity
    matters less since the more externalities are
    provided, the more public support is deserved
  • Present support tends to mainly be income
    support. It is based on yields (past price
    policy) and shows no significant redistribution
    between farm structures, sectors and geographic
    areas
  • The historical decoupling model implemented in
    2006 has frozen the French allocation of
    support

6
3. Empirical analysis of French distribution3.1.
Definitions
  • Spearman and Pearson coefficients of correlation
    (not causality)
  • -1 means perfect negative (inverse) correlation
  • 0 means no correlation
  • 1 means perfect positive correlation
  • Data description (micro level, 2007, source
    French MAF)
  • Data cover 92 French départements (exclude
    overseas départements, Seine-Saint-Denis, Val de
    Marne, Hauts-de-Seine and City of Paris)
  • Pillar 1 subsidies per annual work unit (AWU)
    single farm payment, arable crop payment
    (including set-aside payment), suckler cow
    premium, slaughter premium, ewe and she-goat
    premium
  • Pillar 2 subsidies (agri-environmental measures)
    per annual work unit (AWU) compensatory
    allowance for natural handicaps,
    agri-environmental grass premium, sustainable
    agriculture and territorial management contracts,
    other agri-environmental measures

7
3. Empirical analysis of French distribution
3.2. The income support issue
  • There is a positive correlation between Pillar 1
    support and
  • labour productivity
  • income evolution
  • These correlations are negative for
    agri-environmental support

8
3. Empirical analysis of French distribution
3.3. The concentration support issue
  • There is a positive correlation between Pillar 1
    support and the share of holding larger than 100
    ha
  • There is a negative correlation between Pillar 1
    support and the share of holding smaller than 20
    ha

9
3. Empirical analysis of French distribution
3.4. Consistency in distribution of Pillar 2
agri-environmental measures and Pillar 1 direct
payments
  • There is a negative correlation between the
    distribution of support under Pillars 1 and 2,
    especially single farm payments (SFPs) and arable
    crop payments
  • But suckler cow and ewe and/or she-goat premium
    distribution is positively correlated with
    agri-environmental support

10
3. Empirical analysis of French distribution
3.5. Main results
  • Single Farm Payments influence market-commodity
    output
  • Some Pillar 1 coupled subsidies follow a
    distribution path similar to agri-environmental
    ones suckler cow and ewe and/or she-goat
    premium. There are indirectly coupled to
    territories (handicap or mountainous areas,
    grassland)
  • The dichotomy Pillar 1 / Pillar 2 results from
    historical and budgetary considerations, not from
    market / non-market commodity or broad-based /
    targeted policy considerations
  • These results help to explain the French strategy
    as regards the 2008 CAP Health Check adjustments
    which should prepare the post 2013 CAP

11
4. The redistribution issue within the Health
Check4.1. New tools, further flexibilities in
national/regional implementation
  • Full decoupling for arable, hops, durum wheat,
    olive oil, energy crops payments (2010)
  • Full decoupling for beef and veal (except
    suckler cow), nuts, seeds and protein crops
    (2012)
  • "À la carte" reorientation tools
  • Article 63 (-67) shifting funds within Pillar 1
    (redistribution of support from further
    decoupling)
  • Article 68 (-72) shifting funds within Pillar 1
    (redistribution of up to 10 of national direct
    payment ceiling towards specific types of
    targeted measures)
  • Compulsory increase in modulation shifting funds
    from Pillar 1 towards Pillar 2 (progressive
    increase up to 10, with one threshold 4 for
    payments over 300,000 euros)

12
4. The redistribution issue within the Health
Check4.2. French options (March 2009)Deadline
for final (full) decision August 1, 2009
  • Partial decoupling of suckler cow premium (25),
    full decoupling of present she-goat premium with
    the setting up of a new coupled and more valued
    premium (cf. below)
  • Use of Article 63 (-67) new aids for productive
    grassland (700 million euros), potatoes and field
    vegetables (30 million euros), fodder (30 million
    euros)
  • Modalities of SFPs' alteration are not closed
  • Use of Article 68 (-72) sheep and goats (135
    million euros), milk in mountain areas (45
    million euros), durum wheat in traditional areas
    (8 million euros), suckling calves (4.6 million
    euros), proteaginous crops (40 million euros),
    maintenance of organic farming (50 million
    euros), risk management tools (140 million euros)
  • Main shift of the budget towards grass-based
    livestock producers extensive, less-favoured
    area based and/or environment friendly farm
    holdings
  • New coupling dimension and strategy

13
5. Concluding remarksThe French strategy in the
context of policy reform
  • The partial redistribution of support resulting
    from the Health Check shows that France is
    moving the future CAP will be different than the
    past broad-based one
  • A re-legitimised CAP is a way to preserve direct
    payments (and related budgetary flow). As a
    result, France develops an hybrid historical
    model when attempting to renew with a strong
    Pillar 1 mostly through targeted subsidies (and
    not SFPs)
  • France grants to Pillar 1 a rural development
    dimension (and magnifies related-responsibilities
    attributed to national authorities without
    bearing the co-funding principle)
  • Many questions about the post 2013 CAP are still
    not answered starting with a new 27 Member
    States consensus on common objectives

14
Thank you for your attention
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