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Single Payment Scheme delays examined

Summary

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Rural Payments Agency spent £122m implementing the European Union Single Payment Scheme which replaced Common Agricultural Policy subsidies.

This Report ‘The Delays in Administering the 2005 Single Payment Scheme in England’ (HC 893) examines the problems encountered in administering the payments.

The aim was that 96% of the £1,515m due to farmers claiming the grants would be paid out by the end of March 2006. However, only 15% of payments had been made by that date and some 3,000 claimants were still unpaid at the end of October 2006, causing stress, anxiety and financial hardship in the farming sector.

The House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts reviewed the impact of the payment delays, why implementation failed, the Department’s role, and the changes being put in place to rectify the mistakes made.

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Law-Making Explained

This is a House of Commons Paper (HC 1633-I): it is a report from the House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts.

Find out more about House of Commons Papers.

How does it affect me?

If you work in the agricultural sector, this affects you.

Edward Leigh MP, Chairman of the Committee, said:
“The Single Payment Scheme is relatively small, but its implementation last year to a near-impossible timetable was a master class in bad decision-making, poor planning, incomplete testing of IT systems, confused lines of responsibility, scant objective management information and a failure by the management team to face up to the unfolding crisis.”

Have Your Say Now

See more on agricultural policy on the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs website.

Read more about the work of the Rural Payments Agency.

Find out more about the Single Payment Scheme on the European Commission website.


Find out how to have your say