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Public Inquiry
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Voltaire Network
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EU grants curb deals new blow to farmers

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Thursday January 09, 2003 12:19author by eurocrap Report this post to the editors

I wonder if the farmers 'leaders thought about this before they voted yes to Nice

EMBATTLED Irish farmers are to have their incomes further cut by Brussels.

Despite fierce opposition from politicians and the agricultural lobby, the European Commission is to announce that a radical shake-up of farm payouts will go ahead.


It will bring an end to headage payments and hasten planned reforms of the cereal and dairy sectors. It will also cut incomes by around 8pc over six years.


It will be several years before the policy starts to bite, but the news could not come at a worse time for farmers here as their tractorcade protest continues on its way to Dublin for a planned rally in front of Government Buildings on Friday.


Some 450 tractors drove through Cork yesterday causing disruption while 200 drove to Limerick and hundreds more rallied in Waterford, Roscommon, Galway, Longford and Donegal.


IFA General Secretary, Michael Berkery, warned that the tractorcade will be just the opening salvo in a campaign if the Government does not address a broad range of issues which are hitting farm incomes.


But the news from Brussels suggests that, in real terms, farm incomes are more likely to fall than rise in the coming years.


Sticking to the fundamentals of his original plan, the Farm Commissioner, Franz Fischler, intends soon to flesh out the controversial review of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) announced last year, arguing the current complex system of payouts is untenable and must be abolished.


Mr Fishler will defend his most radical change - to pay farmers for doing nothing - offering them a reduced annual payout based on accumulated cheques but without any requirement to produce any crops or livestock.


According to the latest proposals, which have been seen by the Irish Independent ahead of their publication in two weeks, Mr Fischler insists that not only must the headage system of payouts end but also that reform in the cereal and dairy sector be speeded up.


This would end the system of paying farmers a set amount for every cow or sheep they rear and replace it with a simpler system.


In the draft legislation, this would be calculated on the "historic" payment to farms, which would be based on the years between 2000 and 2002.


As part of its defence, the commission will also publish impact studies which will show that although overall production may drop farmers will get paid more for higher quality produce (possibly up to €1,500 extra per farmer) and will also have clear income stability for the first time.


Last night, a spokesperson for Mr Fischler refused to comment, saying the plans could change before the 20 commissioners are asked to approve them.


The commission accepts it must delay the reforms by three years to 2007. It will also limit the gradual cuts to direct farm supports - dropping by 1pc annually, not 3pc as first suggested.


This would reduce the impact of the commission's original plan which would have cut farm incomes by as much as 20pc.

Conor Sweeney, European Editor in Brussels

author by Pat Cpublication date Thu Jan 09, 2003 13:54author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Any further payments to farmers will come from the pockets of PAYE taxpayers. This farmers protest is to protect the existing scheme wherby the big famers get the lions share of the handouts.

Joe Higgins has stated that small farmers are the backbone of the farmers protest which is heading to Dublin. If this is the case then they are being used as cannonfodder by the big farmers.

What is needed is a campaign for existing supports to be directed towards working small farmers. I know there is only so much Joe can get across in a soundbite; so maybe the SP could post a fuller statement on the issue here.

author by MGpublication date Thu Jan 09, 2003 15:15author address author phone Report this post to the editors

If a farm is family-run and below an agreed size limit, then the farmer should receive some form of support. If a farm is above an agreed size limit and run as a solely for-profit business organisation, the owner/owners should be left to fend for themselves like businessmen in all other sectors. They should also receive the same bankruptcy protection as other businessmen. A change to this system would also have to include some mechanism to avoid excessive profiteering by meat processors, dairy firms, etc and to ensure that an acceptable proportion of the end price goes to the producer (i.e. the farmer).

 
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