The Committee on Agriculture and Rural Development adopted the own-initiative report by Angélique DELAHAYE (EPP, FR) on CAP tools to reduce price volatility in agricultural markets.
The report recalled that instability and price volatility have always characterised agricultural markets. Price volatility is damaging to farming and the agri-food sectors, which is detrimental to investment, growth and employment.
Current situation and objectives: the European Union does not currently have a genuine safety net to curb market volatility. Noting that farmers will be increasingly exposed to price volatility, Members deemed it necessary to adopt a more incisive and coherent policy, with targeted instruments at EU and national level.
In this regard, they recommended that current second-pillar measures be reinforced in order to enhance the competitiveness of European agriculture and to involve producers organisations closely in the implementation process.
The Commission is called upon to:
Members underlined the importance of maintaining decoupled direct aids under the current CAP together with the single area payment scheme, which constitute compensation for public services and a vital component in securing the income of farmers and providing them with a degree of financial stability.
Sectoral organisation and contractual systems: Members considered that primary producers are the weakest link in the food supply chain and must be permitted to come together in bodies such as cooperatives, producers organisations, or their own associations or inter-branch organisations.
Members called on the Commission to facilitate the introduction of contractual systems by adjusting EU competition policy to the specific needs of the agricultural sector, with uniform rules and implementation in all Member States.
The negotiating power of producers must be strengthened through collectively negotiated contracts, in order to place farmers in a position to counter unfair trading practices, improve their income stability, generate added value and invest in innovation.
The Commission is called upon to:
Moreover, Members considered that price volatility can also be managed at national level, and invited the Member States to take into account market volatility in their tax rules by allowing farmers to create individual provision mechanisms that could be tax-free.
Agricultural market and price observatories: the report stressed that agricultural markets must be transparent, which can principally be achieved by making the publication of existing information on prices and costs more timely, easily accessible and useful to all stakeholders in the supply chain, from production to distribution, thus limiting price speculation and price volatility.
Members also:
Crisis prevention and management tools: Members stated that the traditional CAP crisis management tools (public intervention and private storage) are not sufficiently effective in a globalised economy. Therefore, they called on the Commission to:
Lastly, the report regretted the low use of the crisis reserve and to the discretion that the Commission enjoys when it comes to releasing funds from the reserve. Therefore, it called for the crisis reserve to be constituted outside the EU budget and for it to serve as source of funding for crisis management tools.