Empirical Evidence of the Distributional Effects of the CAP in the New EU Member States. Factor Markets Working Document No. 58, August 2013


Autoria(s): Ciaian, Pavel; Kancs, d'Artis; Pokrivčák, Ján
Data(s)

01/08/2013

Resumo

This study, carried out in the context of the Factor Markets research project, investigates the impact of the SAPS (Single Area Payment Scheme) on farmland rental rates in the new EU member states. Using a unique set of farm level panel data with 20,930 observations for 2004 and 2005 we are able to control for important sources of endogeneity. According to our results, the SAPS has a positive and statistically significant impact on land rents in the EU. However, the estimated incidence is smaller than predicted theoretically. Land rents capture only 19 cents of the marginal SAPS euro, and around 10% of the SAPS benefit non-farming landowners through higher farmland rental prices. As the share of rented land is higher in corporate farms than individual ones, family farms benefit more from the SAPS than corporate farms do.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aei.pitt.edu/58597/1/Factor_Markets_58.pdf

Ciaian, Pavel and Kancs, d'Artis and Pokrivčák, Ján (2013) Empirical Evidence of the Distributional Effects of the CAP in the New EU Member States. Factor Markets Working Document No. 58, August 2013. [Working Paper]

Relação

http://www.ceps.eu/book/empirical-evidence-distributional-effects-cap-new-eu-member-states

http://aei.pitt.edu/58597/

Palavras-Chave #agriculture policy
Tipo

Working Paper

NonPeerReviewed