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dc.contributor.authorDonnellan, Trevor*
dc.contributor.authorHanrahan, Kevin*
dc.contributor.authorRiordan, Brendan*
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-26T11:53:53Z
dc.date.available2017-07-26T11:53:53Z
dc.date.issued2005-04-01
dc.identifier.citationDonnellan, T., Hanrahan, K., Riordan, B. Econometric modelling of the EU agri-food sector through co-operation with partners in the EU-AG-MEMOD Project, End of Prokect Report, Teagasc, 2005.en_GB
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11019/1220
dc.descriptionEnd of Project Reporten_GB
dc.descriptionThe research of the AG-MEMOD Partnership was supported by public funds from the European Commission, through the Fifth Framework Programme (QLRT-2000-00473).
dc.description.abstractThis research project set out to build an EU agricultural policy modelling system involving participants from right across the enlarged EU. Policy Analysis is conducted at an aggregate commodity level for the main sectors of EU agriculture. The work summarised here took place over the period 2001 to 2004. The implementation of the Luxembourg Agreement and the Enlargement of the EU will lead to significant changes to the way in which agriculture operates in the EU25. Under the reform, direct payments that have been linked to production are to be decoupled to varying degrees across the Union. Enlargement will mean that agriculture in several New Member States (NMS) will come under the EU system of payments, supply constraints and market price supports for the first time. In light of the above, the most common current approach to agriculture commodity modelling and policy analysis - that which treats the entire EU as a single entity - faces a considerable challenge. Given the heterogeneity of EU agriculture and agricultural policy across the enlarged EU, it is increasingly the case that ‘the devil is in the detail’. From a scientific perspective, country level policy analysis is important in order to capture the consequences of this heterogeneity. Moreover, at a political level, policy makers realise that policy proposals either sink or swim on the basis of the perception of their expected future impact at a national level. Hence, it is important to be able to inform and facilitate a debate on the relative merits of particular reform proposals by having national (or even sub-national) level analysis to hand. The case for national level modelling across the EU is easily made, but few practitioners have taken up the challenge it presents.i Key problems include funding constraints, the absence of reliable national data sources, difficulties in agreeing and co-ordinating a consistent modelling approach and, perhaps most importantly, the absence of an integrated network of economists with knowledge of local level agriculture and agricultural policy across the enlarged EU.en_GB
dc.description.sponsorshipEuropean Unionen_GB
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherTeagascen_GB
dc.relation.ispartofseriesEnd of Project Reports;
dc.subjectEconometric modellingen_GB
dc.subjectEU-AG-MEMOD Project.en_GB
dc.subjectAgricultural policyen_GB
dc.subjectAgricultural commoditiesen_GB
dc.titleEconometric modelling of the EU agri-food sector through co-operation with partners in the EU-AG-MEMOD Projecten_GB
dc.typeTechnical Reporten_GB
dc.identifier.rmis4932
refterms.dateFOA2018-01-12T08:32:06Z


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