DISTRIBUTIONAL ASPECTS OF THE UK COSTS OF THE COMMON AGRICULTURAL POLICY

Citation
Aw. Renwick et Lj. Hubbard, DISTRIBUTIONAL ASPECTS OF THE UK COSTS OF THE COMMON AGRICULTURAL POLICY, Food policy, 19(5), 1994, pp. 459-468
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Economics,"AgricultureEconomics & Policy","Food Science & Tenology","Nutrition & Dietetics
Journal title
ISSN journal
03069192
Volume
19
Issue
5
Year of publication
1994
Pages
459 - 468
Database
ISI
SICI code
0306-9192(1994)19:5<459:DAOTUC>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
Although the various costs of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) of the European Union have been well documented, little attention has bee n directed at distributional considerations. This paper focuses on the way in which some of these costs are distributed amongst food consume rs and taxpayers in the United Kingdom. Average cost figures hide larg e differences in the burden of agricultural support between individual s. Moreover, recent reform measures, entailing a move from artificiall y high market prices to the use of direct income payments, represent a shift in the cost of support from the consumer to the taxpayer, with concomitant distributional implications. Results suggest that transfer ring the entire consumer cost component to taxpayers would lead to a d ecrease of around 1% in the income of those in the top income quintile , and an increase of almost 2.5 per cent in the income of those in the bottom quintile. However, the impact on overall income inequality in the UK would be trivial.