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2013 : French position on CAP project. ALVES Paulo Mateus FURTADO Caio César LABAQUE German LE BELLEGUY Maxime RAMBAUD Mathis THIBAULT Benoït. ERASMUS IP Gödöllo Summer School. Introduction I. The CAP in France Aid distribution Production cost: France vs Mercosur
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2013 : French position on CAP project ALVES Paulo Mateus FURTADO Caio César LABAQUE German LE BELLEGUY Maxime RAMBAUD Mathis THIBAULT Benoït ERASMUS IP Gödöllo Summer School
Introduction • I. The CAP in France • Aid distribution • Production cost: France vs Mercosur • II. Analysis of CAP impacts • Socioeconomic • Environmental • What we expect about CAP? • Why to reform the CAP? • III. Possibles scenarios post 2013 • Keeping the same level of CAP subsidies • Decreasing the level of CAP subsidies • IV. Conclusion
Introduction General aspects: • Total area: 55 millions ha • Use land area: 32 millions ha • 62 % for crops production • 34 % for grassland • 2 % of vineyard
Agro-food economy • 3,5 % of the national GDP • 66,8 billion of € • 3,4 % of the employment • Half of the value come from cereals and wine production
Farms structures • 348 000 farms • Average of 73,3 hectares/ farm • 3 people for 100 ha
Different productions • Crops • Vegetables • Wine • Livestock • Dairy production • Beef • Pork • Poultry
A. Aid distribution Source: DG Agri
French CAP Subsidies Source: Agreste
B. Production cost France vs Mercorsur Source: Office-Elevage / EMBRAPA / INTA
II. Analysis of CAP impacts In which field can the CAP impact on?
A. Socioeconomic • 15,5 millions (25%) of French live in the countryside • 770 000 employs (3,4% of active population) • French culture (countryside without farmers is not countryside) • Agriculture: 3,5% of GDP 66,8 billions Euros • Cereals: • 70,2 million tons • Cattle: • bovins: 19,9 millions • Pork : 14,8 millions • Poultry: 182,9 millions • Tourism : Cheese, wine production, cattle, local products
Environment • Cereals: 94460 km2 (51% of arable land) • Cattle in mountains • Rural development: • improving the competitiveness of agriculture and forestry; • improving the environment and countryside; • improving the quality of life in rural areas and encouraging diversification of the rural economy.
C. What we expect about CAP? • Food security (quantity) • Food safety (quality) • Preservation of biodiversity • Landscape maintenance • Food price stabilisation • Profitable agriculture for farmers
D. Why to reform the CAP? • Take in account the environmental work of farmers • Reduce market food fluctuation prices • Favorise label and regional products • Favorise the competitiveness of farmers • Good relation between retailers/farmers • Invest more in R&D
III. Possibles scenarios post 2013 A. Keeping the same level of CAP subsidies B. Decreasing the level of CAP subsidies
A. Keeping the same level of CAP subsidies • To decrease the first pillar: 88 to 48% • To increase the 2nd pillar: 12% to 26% • To create a third pillar: 26% • To remunerate maintenance of public goods from farmers • To dynamise innovation
B. Decreasing the level of CAP subsidies Catastrophic scenario 30% 2013 - 2020 104 400 farms 9,6 millions ha 231 000 farmers go to unemployment 4,65 millions of rural exod 20,04 billions € GDP
Conclusion • Regarding the 2nd scenario we conclude that the socioeconomics and environmental problems generated by a possible reduction of CAP is too huge for France • A consensus has to be taken in order to keep food safety and food security in Europe against the emergence of third countries like Brazil & Argentina
Thank you for your attention !!! Don’t worry man!!! Good things will never disappear!!! Did’u see what they want to do with our agriculture?!