1989 | OriginalPaper | Chapter
French Agriculture and the Failure of its European Strategy
Authors : Pierre Coulomb, Hélène Delorme
Published in: The International Farm Crisis
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Included in: Professional Book Archive
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Like the policies introduced by the leading industrial nations between the 1930s and the post-war restructuring, the primary aim of French agricultural policy is to prevent the market instability that is inherent in the competitive character of a sector made up of many different producers. Although the conditions of these policies may vary in different States, the underlying principle is the same and rests on the old law of economics that emerges from the observations made by King on the price of wheat in eighteenth-century England: slight overproduction can bring about a marked fall in market prices, just as conversely, a slight shortage can lead to a strong increase in prices. It is necessary and sufficient, therefore, to withdraw excess production from the market by either destroying or stockpiling any surpluses or, a better solution since it can also be profitable, by exporting them in order to reestablish the normal price level. Conversely, stocks should be run down and supplies imported when there is a shortage and market prices have risen excessively. These operations are the essence of the activities of the Commodity Credit Corporation created in 1934 in the United States, of the French FORMA of 1953, and the European FEOGA since 1962.