CAP Some Letters
National farm subsidies are no substitute for CAP shake-up
Sir: Only one thing could be worse than the Common Agricultural Policy - and that would be to have 25 separate agricultural policies, each with its own competing subsidies, each with its own protectionist measures (”Let every country subsidise its own farmers”, Andreas Whittam Smith, 13 June) . That would ultimately cost the economy, the taxpayer and the environment far more.
It’s far better to pursue further reforms of the CAP - reforms which we have already made a start on, and where we have had a significant measure of success, for the first time in thirty years.
RICHARD CORBETT MEP
(LABOUR, YORKSHIRE & THE HUMBER) LEEDS
Sir: Sir Michael Franklin asks: “Do we want subsidised French exports unfairly competing with our own farmers?” (letter, 15 June). Of course not, but there is an easy answer. Each EU member state should be free to subsidise its farmers in order to supply its home market, but produce leaving the country should be subject to an export duty so the Government recovers its subsidy and avoids “dumping”.
If subsidies were contained within national borders they would become a purely domestic issue, and therefore amenable to democratic control within each country.
DR D R COOPER
MAIDENHEAD, BERKSHIRE
Sir: There is no better back-up for Denis MacShane’s call to start talking to Europe (Opinion, 14 June) than the sight of Tony Blair, visiting George Bush, arriving in Washington in the rain without a formal welcome and leaving in a hurry with little accomplished.
We have been used to support the Iraq debacle and divide Europe and now we are being dropped like unwanted packaging. There is a lesson here for the rampant British nationalists who think we can go it alone and drive forward using the rear-view mirror. We have a say in Europe and none in the US, and it’s time to say it.
ROY E BENNETT
HACKBRIDGE, SURREY
Sir: All these arguments as to why Britain should reduce its £3bn European rebate are persuasive, but I’m reminded of the words of the late Tommy Cooper. After moaning about losing a few shillings he’d left on the bar of a pub, he said: “It’s not the principle, it’s the money.”
ALAN CLEAVER
WINCHESTER





























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