The EU's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)

EM
21 Nov 2014

Agriculture is the only sector entirely funded from the EU budget, imposing no further burden on national budgets.

In 1985 70% of the EU budget was spent on agriculture. In the next EU budget CAP expenditure will represent about 30% of the EU budget (this decrease has taken place despite the EU having gone from 10 members in 1985 to 28 members today).

CAP has been continuously reformed since 1992, with financial assistance no longer linked to production and moving towards income-support for farmers and projects to stimulate economic activity in rural areas.

There are 13.7 million full time farmers in the EU with an average farm size of 12 hectares (the US has just 2 million farmers and an average size of 180 hectares). The farming and food sectors together provide 7% of all jobs in the EU.

The average EU farmer receives in public support less than half of what the average US farmer receives.

British farmers received about £3.3 billion pounds in assistance from CAP in 2007-2011.

418.530 jobs in the UK depend on the farm sector.

The CAP costs each EU citizen approximately €0.30 per day and represents less than 1% of all public expenditure of all EU Member States combined.

According to the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF), fraud accounted on average to only 0.02% of the CAP's budget in the period from 2006 to 2012.

20% of CAP goes to helping farmers modernise their farms and become more competitive while protecting the environment and helping rural communities.

EU food standards are the highest in the world and provide EU consumers with safer and better food. Over 1.000 foods carry an EU quality logo. Imported products must meet the same standards as foods produced by EU farmers.

The CAP helps provide a secure supply of affordable food. The average EU household devotes 15% of its budget to food, half as much as in 1960.

90% of CAP payments to EU farmers are classed by the WTO as non-trade-distorting.

The EU absorbs 71% of the farm exports of developing countries (worth around €59bn in 2008-10). This is more than the other five major importers combined (the US, Japan, Canada, Australia and New Zealand).

In 1991 the EU spent €10bn a year on export subsidies; in 2011 it spent just €160m. The EU has committed to eliminating export subsidies altogether by 2013, provided other developed countries commit to do the same.

The European Movement UK is Britain's longest standing pro-European organization, campaigning for decades to inform the debate around the benefits of EU membership.

We are a not-for-profit, non-governmental organization, funded exclusively by our members. Visit www.euromove.org.uk to see how you can join us and help keep Britain in the EU.

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