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Agricultural Policy: Decoupled direct payments make agriculture more productive

TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH

PRESS RELEASE

Analysis of subsidies in the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy

Decoupled direct payments make agriculture more productive

  • Farmers adapt successfully to market developments with decoupling.
  • Despite higher productivity, there is no increase in the environmental impact.
  • Decoupling might be a way to meeting the growing demand for food and raw materials for the bioeconomy.

Better alignment with the market is one of the goals pursued by the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) in recent decades. One of the measures used to achieve this was to decouple direct payments from production. Agricultural economists at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have now found that this form of direct payments makes farms more productive. Despite higher productivity, the environmental impact remains at a comparable level.

With a reform of the CAP, the EU restricted the member states’ ability to link direct payments to production, for example to the cultivation of certain crops, from 2005. Since then, funding has been based primarily on the acreage. Farmers should be more aligned with the market as a result. However, recently, EU countries have once again increasingly opted for coupled direct payments as a reform in 2013 gave them more options to do so.

More productive agriculture, better alignment with the market and more diverse farms – without a larger environmental footprint

TUM agricultural economists Dr. Philipp Mennig and Prof. Johannes Sauer have now studied how premiums affect the productivity of farms. The results show that farms become more productive as a result of decoupling. This is primarily due to economies of scale and the increased use of technical innovations. With decoupled premiums, farmers adapt successfully to what is going on in the market and seize development opportunities.

Although productivity increased, the environmental impact remained at a similar level as before decoupling. “An increase in productivity can certainly be environmentally neutral, it is not per se linked to intensified production,” says agricultural economist Mennig. Another effect was that farmers diversified their farms as a result of decoupling. One possible reason for this is that they diversified their farms to mitigate the higher price risk due to market conditions. Another explanation is that farmers are increasingly generating non-agricultural income.

Subsidies: Decoupling as the key to the efficient use of resources

The analysis shows what decision-makers should consider in future agricultural policy reforms. According to this, farmers successfully identify the right strategy for their business and therefore use resources efficiently. “This is relevant because with dwindling resources the efficient use of resources and an increase in productivity in the agricultural sector at a global level are essential in order to feed the growing world population and provide sufficient raw materials for the bioeconomy,” continued Mennig. Coupled direct payments, on the other hand, prevent agricultural goods from being produced with the best possible use of resources.

The results also provide information on how the Common Agricultural Policy could be further developed with regard to sustainable agriculture. When agri-environmental measures are promoted, this is currently often linked to certain production practices. However, this does not allow them to develop their full potential. In future, more flexibility and a focus on results with the measures could ensure that farmers produce ecosystem services in line with market demand. However, knowledge about how the markets for environmental goods could be structured is currently still limited.

Researchers compared the impact of agricultural policy in depth

The study is the first of its kind to take into account the diversity of farms, assess their performance holistically in terms of ecological and economic criteria and have a clearly defined alternative scenario. The researchers’ study compared French and British arable farms. The two countries decoupled direct payments at different speeds: While the UK fully decoupled from 2005, France started one year later and retained the maximum possible share of coupled payments until 2010. For their analysis, the researchers used panel data that contained, for example, farm-specific information on the agricultural goods produced and the use of input, as well as socio-economic indicators such as the age, education and household income of the farm managers. These covered the period from 2003 to 2008. They compared similarly structured French and British farms on this basis.

Publication:

Philipp Mennig & Johannes Sauer (2023) Revisiting the impact of decoupled subsidies on farm performance: a counterfactual analysis using microdata, Applied Economics, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2023.2266601

Further information:

  • The Chair of Agricultural Production and Resource Economics conducts research into economic and business management aspects of the agricultural sector in the key areas of farm management, innovation, bioeconomy, resources and food security (www.ep.mgt.tum.de/en/pur).
  • The Hans Eisenmann Forum for Agricultural Sciences links around 30 university chairs at TUM that are oriented towards agricultural sciences. It provides a platform for communication within the university, with external partners from various fields of agricultural science and economics as well as with society (www.hef.tum.de/en).

Additional information for editorial offices:

Photos for download: https://mediatum.ub.tum.de/1728661

Scientific contact:

Dr. Philipp Mennig

Technical University of Munich

Chair of Production and Resource Economics

philipp.mennig@tum.de

www.ep.mgt.tum.de/en/pur

Contact at TUM Corporate Communications Center:

Magdalena Eisenmann

Press Officer

Tel. +49 8161 71-6127

presse@tum.de

www.tum.de/en

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) is one of Europe’s leading research universities, with more than 600 professors, 50,000 students, and 11,000 academic and non-academic staff. Its focus areas are the engineering sciences, natural sciences, life sciences and medicine, combined with economic and social sciences. TUM acts as an entrepreneurial university that promotes talents and creates value for society. In that it profits from having strong partners in science and industry. It is represented worldwide with the TUM Asia campus in Singapore as well as offices in Beijing, Brussels, Mumbai, San Francisco, and São Paulo. Nobel Prize winners and inventors such as Rudolf Diesel, Carl von Linde, and Rudolf Mößbauer have done research at TUM. In 2006, 2012, and 2019 it won recognition as a German "Excellence University". In international rankings, TUM regularly places among the best universities in Germany.

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