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    Europe farming wealth gap sows anger

    By Julian Shea in London | China Daily | Updated: 2024-11-22 08:59
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    A farming union representative takes part in a protest against the EU-Mercosur deal in Agen, France, on Tuesday. THIBAUD MORITZ / AFP

    New data from the European Commission's Farm Accountancy Data Network and statistics organization Eurostat suggest that farmers have been making record profits recently.

    However, a closer inspection shows the divide between the rich and poor in European agriculture is bigger than it has been for many years.

    Across the continent, many farmers are feeling a relentless economic squeeze, which is being expressed in despair, angry demonstrations, and volatile voting.

    Analysis by the UK newspaper The Guardian showed that during the last 15 years, the wealth gap has doubled, at the same time as the number of small farms has fallen by a quarter, with a study by an environmental group in October 2024 summing up the choice facing farmers as "go big or go bust".

    There are many reasons for the changing, challenging nature of farming, one of which is technology, as mechanical innovations increasingly favor larger-scale production.

    Sebastian Lakner, an agricultural economist at the University of Rostock in Germany, said a "technological treadmill" of productivity had been created, with inevitable consequences.

    "You need to grow," he said. "Those farms who cannot grow — and who cannot afford the big tractors, the innovative technologies — need to drop out."

    Coen van den Bighelaar, who has a 60-hectare family dairy farm in the Netherlands, told The Guardian that economies of scale surrounding new rules regarding herd emission reduction made life difficult.

    The necessary innovations, he said, were more affordable for those with more livestock.

    "For small farms and middle-size farms, it's way harder to join in this transition," he said. "We want to join … but it's not possible for us because our size is too small."

    A report published by the Robert Schuman Institute in February 2024, titled "The Various Causes of the Agricultural Crisis in Europe", noted how tension had been building for years.

    In the Netherlands, a revolt began in June 2022, against plans to cut livestock numbers to reduce nitrogen emissions, leading to the creation of a political party called the Farmer-Citizen Movement.

    Farmers in Slovakia, Hungary and Romania have felt the impact of an influx of imports from Ukraine and Poland with the issue resulting in the country's agriculture minister resigning in April 2023.

    "Other grievances have been added to the increase in taxes on diesel," the Schuman report continued. "Notably, the growing environmental obligations under the Green Deal of the European Union and hostility to the free trade agreements under negotiation with (South American trade bloc) Mercosur, Australia, and New Zealand."

    Wide protests

    Protests earlier this year in Germany and France were fueled by the diesel issue, as well as Ukrainian imports. But it appears to be the Mercosur deal that is now firing up an end-of-year protest season in France.

    Arnaud Rousseau, leader of France's main farming union, the FNSEA, told television station BFM TV that thousands of farms were already struggling, and Jordan Charransol, head of the Young Farmers of Vaucluse, called the deal "a catastrophe for French agriculture".

    If the deal, which was reached in principle in 2019, finally comes into effect, farmers warn of a flood of cheaper imports produced with pesticides and chemicals banned in Europe.

    France's farmers are well known for demonstrating and at the start of the year, they were angry about Ukrainian imports, fuel subsidies, and the Mercosur deal.

    The government relented on the fuel issue, but nearly a year later the anger has returned.

    "We have the same demands as in January, nothing has changed," Armelle Fraiture, a dairy farmer from outside Paris, told Reuters.

    Where there is anger, there is opportunity for populist politicians.

    When the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD party, tried to latch onto protests at the start of 2024, sociologist Matthias Quent warned, "The farmers who are protesting must also ensure that their protests cannot be instrumentalized and exploited."

    At the European Parliament elections in June, the right wing made significant gains, with AfD finishing well clear of the governing coalition parties in Germany.

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