DEFRA’s Common Agricultural Policy Vision
reviewed
Summary
In December 2005, the Government launched a “Vision for the
Common Agricultural Policy”, which was intended to stimulate debate and show
how the Common Agricultural Policy should change in 10-15 years.
This
Report
‘The
UK Government's vision for the Common Agricultural Policy’ (HC 546-I)
examines the proposals and finds them a lost opportunity.
Found this story interesting?
Spread the news by clicking
below to add it to your bookmarking service:
Law-Making Explained
This is a House of
Commons Paper (HC 546-I 2006-07): it is a Report from the Commons Environment,
Food and Rural Affairs Committee.
Find out more about Select Committees.
How does it affect me?
If you work in
the agricultural industry, this affects you.
The Committee finds that
the Government should have directed the debate towards scrapping the existing
CAP and replacing it with a Rural Policy for the European Union.
The
Committee suggests that there should be a new Vision document, launched in a
more subtle way so that allies for reform can be enlisted. The credibility of
the document depends on the Government providing full and detailed evaluation
of the impact of proposals on bio-diversity, the environment, markets for
agricultural goods and individual farm enterprises. It is recommended that this
be done by mid 2008.
In addition, the Committee states that, as the
long-term justification of the expenditure of taxpayers’ money is the provision
of public benefit, these public goods should be measurable and capable of
evaluation.

Find out more about the work of the
Commons
Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee.
Read more on
reform of the Common
Agricultural Policy
.