Intervention
- (Photo: EUobserver.com)
The costs of the CAP are paid from the common EU budget by tax-payers in all member states. The interventions are controlled by national authorities, which often have an interest in encouraging as much intervention as possible so as to obtain EU money. The motivation to save money and to avoid fraud is therefore weak. Many of the gains from intervention go to middlemen and fraud rather than EU farmers. The costs for consumers and taxpayers are normally much higher than the total net incomes of farmers.
Notes
- Farmers in poor countries are hit when subsidised EU products are dumped on their local markets.
- Intervention tends to favour larger EU farms over smaller ones, as it is geared to volume of production.
Links
See also Agricultural reform.